Most travel advice now starts and ends with a phone. Flight times, hotel bookings, boarding passes, maps, banking, translation and time zones all sit in the same rectangle of glass. In practical terms, that makes sense. A phone is useful. It is also the thing most travellers check too often, charge too often, misplace too easily and depend on far too much.
That is why the GMT watch still has a place.
A good GMT watch does one simple job extremely well. It lets you track more than one time zone at a glance. For anyone travelling abroad, working across countries, calling home from a different time zone or trying to keep some sense of routine while moving between airports, hotels and meetings, that is more useful than it first sounds.
It is not about rejecting technology. It is about having something clear, immediate and dependable on your wrist.
What is a GMT watch?
A GMT watch is designed to show a second time zone. Most use an additional hand on the dial, often running on a 24-hour scale. That hand can be set to home time while the regular hour hand shows local time, or vice versa depending on the watch.
The name comes from Greenwich Mean Time, historically the reference point for global timekeeping. The idea became especially useful in the age of international aviation, when pilots, crew and frequent travellers needed a simple way to track time across borders.
Today, the appeal is just as relevant. A GMT watch helps you know the time where you are and the time somewhere else without opening an app, unlocking a phone or doing mental arithmetic after a long flight.
Why it helps when travelling abroad
Time zones sound simple until you are tired, delayed, rushing between connections or trying to work out whether it is too early to call someone back home.
A GMT watch makes that easier.
If you are travelling from the UK to New York, Dubai or Tokyo, you can set the main hands to local time and keep the GMT hand on UK time. That means one glance tells you whether your family is awake, whether your office is open, or whether a call can wait until tomorrow.
It can also help with jet lag. Keeping a visible reference to home time helps you understand why your body feels out of sync. More importantly, it lets you gradually adjust to the new time zone without constantly checking your phone and being dragged into emails, messages or notifications.
For business travellers, the second time zone is even more useful. Meetings across countries, supplier calls, client updates and travel schedules all become easier when you are not relying solely on your phone calendar.
Why not just use your phone?
You can. Nobody is pretending a GMT watch is technically necessary in the same way it might have been decades ago.
But travel is not only about technical necessity.
A phone gives you the time, but it also gives you everything else. Messages, work, news, delays, banking alerts, social media, emails and the general noise that follows you everywhere. A watch gives you the time and nothing else.
That simplicity is the point.
There is also the practical side. Your watch is already on your wrist. You do not need signal. You do not need battery life. You do not need to dig through a bag while standing at passport control or waiting for a boarding gate to appear. You just look down.
For many travellers, that small difference is enough.
The appeal of mechanical travel watches
GMT watches also carry a certain romance because they belong so naturally to travel. They are linked to pilots, explorers, international business, long-haul flights and the older idea of moving through the world with a few well-chosen possessions.
That does not mean they need to be delicate or showy. Many of the best travel watches are practical sports watches: legible, water resistant, comfortable on the wrist and tough enough to deal with airports, trains, taxis, hotels and changing weather.
This is where brands such as Tudor, Breitling, TAG Heuer and Hublot can sit naturally in the conversation. Breitling has long been associated with aviation and instrument-style watches, while TAG Heuer brings a sportier, modern feel that suits active travel and everyday wear. Hublot is more contemporary and design-led, but still appeals to travellers who want something bold, robust and unmistakably modern. Tudor neatly blend dive/tool watches with GMT functions giving you the best of both worlds.
For anyone exploring the pre-owned market, specialist retailers such as MVS Watches often carry a changing selection across these kinds of brands, which can make it easier to find travel-ready watches beyond the current catalogue.
What makes a good travel watch?
A GMT function is useful, but it is not the only thing that matters. A proper travel watch needs to be comfortable, readable and versatile.
Legibility matters because travel is full of awkward lighting. Plane cabins, hotel rooms, taxis, restaurants and train stations are not always kind to complicated dials. A watch that can be read quickly is more useful than one that needs studying.
Water resistance is also worth considering. Even if you are not diving, travel usually involves rain, pools, beaches, hand washing, humidity and the occasional drink knocked across a table. A watch does not need extreme depth ratings for normal travel, but it should not feel fragile.
The bracelet or strap matters too. Metal bracelets are practical because they handle heat, sweat and water well. Rubber straps can be excellent for warmer climates. Leather looks good, but it may not be ideal for humid trips, beach holidays or heavy wear.
Size is another consideration. A watch that feels fine at home may become annoying after a full day of flights, walking, luggage and hotel transfers. The best travel watch is usually the one you forget you are wearing until you need it.
Why pre-owned can make sense for travel watches
Buying pre-owned opens up far more choice. GMT models, discontinued references, older dial colours, previous-generation cases and less common configurations can all be easier to find on the pre-owned market than through current retail channels.
That matters because travel watches are personal. Some people want a rugged sports watch. Some want something slimmer and more discreet. Some want an aviation feel. Others prefer a watch that works just as well with a jacket at dinner as it does with a T-shirt at the airport.
The pre-owned route also gives buyers more flexibility across price points. Rather than being limited to the latest release, you can look at proven models that have already found their place with collectors and regular wearers.
The key is buying carefully. Condition, authenticity, service history, box and papers, seller reputation and clear photography all matter. A travel watch is meant to be worn, not worried about, so confidence in the seller is part of the purchase.
Choosing the right GMT watch before a trip
The best GMT watch is not always the most expensive one. It is the one that fits how you actually travel.
For frequent flyers, a clear GMT display and comfortable bracelet may matter most. For holidays, water resistance and durability may be higher priorities. For business travel, something understated enough for meetings but practical enough for the journey might be the better choice.
Think about where you are going, what you will be doing and whether the watch needs to handle every part of the trip. A good travel watch should move easily from airport lounge to hotel check-in, from daytime exploring to evening dinner.
That is why GMT watches remain relevant. They are practical without being boring. Traditional without feeling outdated. Useful without demanding attention.
Your phone may still do most of the work when you travel. But a good GMT watch gives you something your phone rarely does: a simple, quiet connection between where you are and where you came from.
Photo courtesy of MVS Watches
