Chronoswiss unveils limited-edition Pulse GMT watches with enamel and guilloché craftsmanship
Chronoswiss split its new Pulse GMT into a $95,000, 50-piece enamel showstopper and a $20,300 titanium travel watch.

The GMT is one of the hardest luxury watches to gift well, because the best ones have to do two jobs at once: keep time across borders and feel special enough to justify the price. Chronoswiss answered that brief with two Pulse GMT models, a highly collectible $95,000 Enamel Sky Gold limited to 50 pieces and a far more wearable $20,300 Silver Guilloché limited to 200.
That spread tells you exactly who each watch is for. The Enamel Sky Gold is the one for the collector who already owns practical watches and wants the conversation piece, not the compromise. Its curved white-gold dial is hand-guilloché’d in Atelier Lucerne, then finished with deep blue translucent enamel and tiny gold paillons placed by hand. It is the kind of object that belongs in a serious box, not a frequent flyer’s rotation.
The Silver Guilloché is the smarter gift for the executive who actually uses a GMT function every week. It comes in a 41mm Grade 5 titanium case with an integrated bracelet and Chronoswiss’s Manufacture Caliber C.6002, so it reads as modern, sturdy and ready for real travel. At $20,300, it is still unmistakably high-luxury, but it lands much closer to a watch someone might wear from the airport lounge to the boardroom.
Chronoswiss framed the Pulse family as a “new generation” collection, and the language fits. The Lucerne-based independent Swiss manufacturer keeps its familiar signatures, including the fluted bezel, prominent onion crown, three-dimensional display and atelier-made guilloché and enamel dials, but the case and bracelet language are sleeker than the brand’s older regulator designs. The Pulse line first arrived in 2025 as a clean break from that heritage.

The GMT idea also reaches back to Chronoswiss history. The Pulse GMT concept is tied to the Tora, the brand’s 1999 dual-time watch that stood apart from more conventional GMT layouts. That lineage matters here because Chronoswiss is not just dressing up a travel complication; it is using a practical function as the entry point for craft.
Arriving just ahead of Watches and Wonders Geneva 2026, the pair gives buyers a clear choice: the 50-piece enamel model for maximum collectibility, or the titanium version for broader wearability. In a category crowded with safe travel watches, Chronoswiss made the sharper move by offering both the trophy and the tool.
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