All of Jaeger-LeCoultre’s New Watches and Clocks Presented at Watches and Wonders 2026 and Milan Design Week 2026
Lest we forget, Jaeger-LeCoultre used Watches and Wonders 2026 to remind the industry that it once supplied movements for icons like the Royal Oak, Nautilus, and 222. Prominent fans including Andrew Garfield, Dev Patel and Stromae attest to La Grande Maison’s rich heritage and restrained elegance.
The “Watchmaker of Watchmakers” has unveiled a suite of novelties that underscore its technical depth—some already available in Jaeger-LeCoultre boutiques. These releases span innovative complications, finely crafted Reversos, and a renewed push into integrated bracelet design.

New Master Control Chronomètre Timepieces
Many highly sought-after Jaeger-LeCoultre watches from the 1970s bear witness to the manufacture’s enduring influence on integrated bracelet watchmaking. Today, the brand refreshes the Master Control collectsion with an updated trio: a 38mm Master Control Chronomètre Date (priced at US$14,200 in steel and US$52,500 in pink gold), a 39mm Master Control Chronomètre Date Power Reserve (US$17,000), and a 39mm Master Control Chronomètre Perpetual Calendar (US$45,700 in steel and US$83,500 in pink gold).

Marking its entry into the highly competitive integrated bracelet segment, Jaeger-LeCoultre introduces a proprietary bracelet with sharply defined angles that echo design elements such as Dauphine hands and dart-style indices, all set against a bezel-less dial.

While 2025 models contrasted these angular features with frosted dials, the 2026 editions adopt brushed finishes for a more contemporary look. Each watch undergoes more than 1,000 hours of testing across varying altitudes, temperatures, positions, and shock conditions.

Impressively, the time-and-date model measures just 8.4mm thick, while the other two come in at only 9.2mm—commendably slim for their complications. Powering the trio are the Caliber 899 (Date), Caliber 738 (Date Power Reserve), and Caliber 868 (Perpetual Calendar), respectively.

Master Hybris Inventiva Gyrotourbillon À Stratosphère
A triple-axis tourbillon dominates the openworked dial, framed by 18k white gold bridges. This striking escapement comprises three titanium cages rotating on different axes: 20 seconds (inner), 60 seconds (middle), and 90 seconds (outer), covering 98 percent of all possible positions. Despite its complexity—189 components—the Gyrotourbillon weighs just 0.78 grams.

Housed in a 42mm platinum case, the watch is powered by the manually wound Caliber 178, decorated using 16 finishing techniques, including 65 hours of hand-beveling.

This piece completes a trilogy that began with Hybris Mechanica in 2003 and continued with Hybris Artistica in 2014. It is limited to 20 pieces, with price upon request.

Master Hybris Mechanica Ultra-Thin Minute Repeater
Created as a tribute to Jacques-David LeCoultre and Edmond Jaeger’s record-breaking 1.38mm-thick Caliber 145 from 1907, this watch integrates a flying tourbillon and minute repeater into a remarkably slim 41.4mm by 8.25mm pink gold case.

Its Caliber 362 incorporates multiple patents to ensure both precision timekeeping and clear, resonant chimes, and is finished using 14 decorative techniques.

Only 10 pieces will be produced, with price upon request.

Master Grande Tradition Tourbillon Jumping Date
The award-winning Caliber 978—winner of the chronometry competition held for the 50th anniversary of the International Museum of Horology in Le Locle—is now housed in a redesigned 42mm pink gold case.
This is not a conventional “jumping date” display. Instead, the 15th and 16th numerals are positioned on either side of the tourbillon aperture, allowing the owner to enjoy a spectacular jump at mid-month, when the red-tipped ‘JL’ date hand leaps across a 90-degree arc.

Above the tourbillon sits a 24-hour second time zone display, finished using the traditional technique of berçage, where a burnishing tool is applied in a controlled rocking motion.

The decorative artistry extends to the caseback, where bridges beneath the 22k gold rotor feature sunray Côtes de Genève soleillé—a signature Jaeger-LeCoultre finish.
This model is limited to 100 pieces, with price upon request.

La Vallée des Merveilles™
Limited to 20 pieces each, this trio of Reverso models (40mm by 20mm) showcases métiers d’art including Grand Feu champlevé and paillon enamel, lacquer, mother-of-pearl inlay, gem-setting, and gold leaf.

The Reverso One “Hibiscus Syriacus” depicts an Akialoa bird sipping nectar from a blue hibiscus, while the Reverso One “Hibiscus Rosa” shows the bird hovering over a red hibiscus—the emblem of Hawaii. Both are presented in diamond-set pink gold cases with leather straps, with an optional matching diamond-set bracelet.

The third model, the Reverso One “Sakura,” is rendered in white gold and portrays a red-crowned crane beneath a cherry blossom tree beside a lake, paired with a blue alligator strap and white gold double-folding clasp.

All three are powered by the manually wound Caliber 846 with a 50-hour power reserve. Price upon request.

Reverso Tribute Enamel Hokusai “Waterfalls” Series
Four new Reverso models complete the Hokusai “Waterfalls” series, joining eight earlier releases from 2018 to 2023. Each is limited to 10 pieces.

The new additions depict: Rōben Waterfall at Ōyama in Sagami Province, Kiyotaki Kannon Waterfall at Sakanoshita on the Tōkaidō, Yōrō Waterfall in Mino Province, and The Falls at Aoigaoka in the Eastern Capital.

Each dial requires at least 100 hours of work, combining guilloché, enameling, and hand-painting. Jaeger-LeCoultre uses Prussian Blue to faithfully recreate Hokusai’s palette. Japanese artists, such as Hokusai, first began using the synthetic Prussian Blue pigment in the early 19th century in favor of expensive natural pigments that they derived from indigo plants and semi-precious stones.

On the reverse, each watch features a distinct guilloché pattern: barleycorn, wave, bamboo, or herringbone.

These models house the manually wound Caliber 822 in 45.6mm by 27.4mm white gold cases, paired with either an alligator strap or an 18k white gold Milanese bracelet. Price upon request.

Three New Clocks
Right after Watches and Wonders 2026, the Jaeger-LeCoultre team sped off to Milan Design Week to present The Perpetual Timekeeper, an exhibition created in collaboration with designer Marc Newson. Featuring archival pieces from both Newson and the manufacture, the showcase was headlined by three new clocks.

Based on the original Atmos clock—developed by Jean-Léon Reutter in 1928 and powered by minute changes in ambient temperature—the Atmos Hybris Artistica Tellurium is a limited edition of three pieces that accurately depicts the orbits of the Earth and Moon. While most wristwatch moonphases require correction after 122 years, this clock will remain accurate for 5,770 years without adjustment.

The Atmos Designer Caliber 568, reimagined by Newson, is housed in a handcrafted Baccarat crystal cabinet. It displays the equation of time (the difference between solar time and mean time), sunrise and sunset times, and a moonphase accurate for 4,087 years.

Finally, the Memovox Travel Clock—housed in titanium—features classic Memovox design cues and chimes, an opaline dial, and a handmade leather travel case by Schedoni. Its standout feature is a patented 12-day power reserve, indicated via 12 colored apertures alongside the hour markers.
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