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NOMOS GLASHÜTTE ADVANCES MECHANICAL CLARITY WITH NEW NOVELTIES

Latest Releases
14 Apr 2026 · 7 min read

NOMOS Glashütte’s latest releases during Watches and Wonders 2026 centre on two distinct developments that present a focused evolution of its core ideas, where mechanical ingenuity is expressed through clarity and proportion that refine both function and form. Rather than introducing entirely new concepts, the Manufacture refines what it already does well, sharpening both function and form with measured intent.


The Club Sport neomatik Worldtimer introduces a white silver-plated dial for the first time, reshaping the way its multi-time-zone display is read through greater visual clarity and restraint. Alongside it, the Tangente neomatik 38 Update appears in a newly balanced 38.5 mm size and, notably, in an 18-carat gold case, marking a first for this model line. Together, these updates highlight a deliberate shift towards improved proportion, enhanced legibility, and new material expression, while remaining firmly rooted in the brand’s established design language.

Club Sport neomatik Worldtimer
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Club Sport neomatik Worldtimer models with integrated bracelet, powered by the ultra-thin DUW 3202 calibre and featuring a pusher-operated worldtime function

At the centre of this approach is the Club Sport neomatik Worldtimer, now presented with a white silver-plated dial. The shift in tone is not merely aesthetic. It reframes the complexity of a multi-time-zone display into something calmer and more legible, emphasising usability over visual density.


The model’s appeal lies in its ability to manage 24 time zones through a single pusher at two o’clock, advancing the local time while maintaining orientation across a global scale. The city ring, paired with a red marker indicating the current zone, creates an intuitive system that avoids the cognitive overload often associated with worldtime functions. This is further reinforced by a 24-hour subdial, which distinguishes day and night through a restrained use of colour.

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Club Sport neomatik Worldtimer with white silver-plated dial, displaying 24 time zones with a city ring and 24-hour subdial for home time

What distinguishes this iteration is how the white dial alters perception. Previously offered in more expressive finishes, the display now appears more structured, almost architectural. The reduction of colour allows key indicators to stand out with greater precision, particularly the subtle red accents and the bi-colour subdial framing.


Beneath this clarity lies the DUW 3202 calibre, an in-house automatic movement. Its integrated worldtimer mechanism is housed at just 4.8 mm, enabling the overall case to remain under 10 mm. This slimness is not incidental. It reinforces the idea that technical capability need not result in bulk, preserving wearability across different contexts, from travel to daily use.

Tangente neomatik 38 Update
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Tangente neomatik 38 Update in stainless steel alongside two 18 ct gold versions, highlighting the new 38.5 mm case and DUW 6101 calibre with integrated ring date

If the Club Sport model explores complexity through simplification, the Tangente neomatik 38 Update approaches innovation through refinement of a single function. The defining feature here is NOMOS’s ring date, a patented system that positions the entire month around the periphery of the dial. Rather than isolating the date in a small aperture, the mechanism presents it as a continuous scale, with two markers framing the current day.


This display, integrated within the DUW 6101 calibre, reflects a different kind of thinking. It prioritises spatial coherence, allowing the date to coexist with the time without disruption. The movement itself has been adapted to fit a more compact 38.5 mm case, ensuring that the proportions remain balanced.

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The Tangente neomatik 38 Update in white and forest green dial variants, featuring the patented ring date display
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It also comes in stainless steel and 18 ct “doré” version, distinguished by gold hands and a brown Horween Shell Cordovan strap

The introduction of an 18-carat gold case adds another layer of meaning. It does not alter the fundamental design language of the Tangente, which remains rooted in Bauhaus principles, but it shifts its presence. The warmth of the metal contrasts with the austerity of the dial, creating a tension between tradition and modernity.


This duality is central to NOMOS’s current direction. The brand is not redefining its visual codes but recalibrating them. In the Tangente, this is evident in the careful adjustment of size, making the model more accessible without compromising its character. In the Club Sport, it appears in the way a complex mechanism is rendered approachable through clarity of design.

A Continued Focus on Precision and Purpose


Across both releases, the emphasis remains on the Manufacture's in-house development. Movements are conceived, produced and adjusted within Glashütte, adhering to a standard that values precision as much as independence. This commitment is not presented as a statement but as an underlying principle, shaping every aspect of the finished watch.


Taken together, these introductions suggest a brand that is refining rather than reinventing. NOMOS Glashütte continues to explore how far it can push functionality while maintaining visual restraint. The result is a collection that speaks quietly but with conviction, where every detail serves a purpose and nothing is superfluous.

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