Guides · Luxury Watches
How to Tell if a Rolex Is Real or Fake (2026)
Rolex has been counterfeited longer and better than any other watch — there are “superclones” built on Swiss calibers. Yet even good replicas almost always fail on the details: the Cyclops optics, dial printing quality, and engravings. Here’s what to check first.
Real vs fake Rolex: comparison table
Data current as of July 2026. Replicas evolve, so judge by the combination of signs — never a single one.
| Sign | Authentic | Fake |
|---|---|---|
| Cyclops (date lens) | 2.5x magnification — the date digit fills nearly the whole window; the lens has anti-reflective coating and the date stays readable at an angle. | Weak magnification (1.5x or less), a date that floats small inside the window, and a lens that glares or sits crooked. |
| Seconds-hand sweep | A smooth glide (high-beat caliber, 8 half-steps per second), with the hand hitting the markers dead-on. | A discrete once-per-second tick (quartz) or a coarse sweep; the hand misses the markers. |
| Rehaut engraving and serial | On the inner ring — even, laser-engraved “ROLEX ROLEX…” with perfect spacing and the serial number at 6 o’clock; on older models the serial sits between the lugs under the bracelet. | Uneven letter spacing, inconsistent depth, a missing or wandering serial, or one struck too crudely — or too cleanly, without the laser microstructure. |
| Dial and printing | Flawless printing with no fuzzy letter edges, straight indices with polished edges, neatly applied lume, and a crisp Rolex coronet. | Smudged printing, ragged or grainy letters, tilted indices, glue traces around the markers, and weak lume. |
| Case, weight, and crown | Substantial heft, immaculately polished case edges, and a logo-signed crown that screws down snugly on its threads. | A lightweight case, soft “melted” edges, a wobbly crown, and threads that catch. |
| Case back and crystal micro-etching | A solid, smooth case back with no engravings (rare exceptions aside); since 2002 — a tiny laser-etched coronet in the crystal at 6 o’clock, visible under a loupe. | A show-off exhibition case back, engravings or text on the case back, and a missing or crudely imitated micro-coronet in the crystal. |
1. Cyclops (date lens)
Authentic: 2.5x magnification — the date digit fills nearly the whole window; the lens has anti-reflective coating and the date stays readable at an angle.
Fake: Weak magnification (1.5x or less), a date that floats small inside the window, and a lens that glares or sits crooked.
2. Seconds-hand sweep
Authentic: A smooth glide (high-beat caliber, 8 half-steps per second), with the hand hitting the markers dead-on.
Fake: A discrete once-per-second tick (quartz) or a coarse sweep; the hand misses the markers.
3. Rehaut engraving and serial
Authentic: On the inner ring — even, laser-engraved “ROLEX ROLEX…” with perfect spacing and the serial number at 6 o’clock; on older models the serial sits between the lugs under the bracelet.
Fake: Uneven letter spacing, inconsistent depth, a missing or wandering serial, or one struck too crudely — or too cleanly, without the laser microstructure.
4. Dial and printing
Authentic: Flawless printing with no fuzzy letter edges, straight indices with polished edges, neatly applied lume, and a crisp Rolex coronet.
Fake: Smudged printing, ragged or grainy letters, tilted indices, glue traces around the markers, and weak lume.
5. Case, weight, and crown
Authentic: Substantial heft, immaculately polished case edges, and a logo-signed crown that screws down snugly on its threads.
Fake: A lightweight case, soft “melted” edges, a wobbly crown, and threads that catch.
6. Case back and crystal micro-etching
Authentic: A solid, smooth case back with no engravings (rare exceptions aside); since 2002 — a tiny laser-etched coronet in the crystal at 6 o’clock, visible under a loupe.
Fake: A show-off exhibition case back, engravings or text on the case back, and a missing or crudely imitated micro-coronet in the crystal.
How to photograph your Rolex for a check
Shoot in daylight, avoid glare, keep focus sharp. You need 5 angles:
- 1 Dial straight-on
- 2 Cyclops and date at an angle
- 3 Rehaut and serial number
- 4 Crown and case from the side
- 5 Case back and bracelet
How to read the result
The AI returns a verdict with a confidence score:
- 75–100% — Authentic: high confidence the item is genuine.
- 60–74% — Likely authentic: probably genuine with minor concerns.
- 40–59% — Uncertain: the photos are not conclusive — retake or add angles.
- 25–39% — Likely fake: several red flags.
- 0–24% — Fake: clear signs of a replica.
Check your Rolex right now
First check is free. Snap photos of your item and get an AI verdict with a confidence score in about a minute.
FAQ
Are there Rolex replicas that are impossible to tell apart?
“Superclones” really are hard to judge from a single photo — but they almost always fail on the sum of the details: Cyclops optics, engraving microstructure, the hand sweep on video, and weight. For high-value deals we recommend the AI check as a first filter, followed by having a watchmaker open the case and inspect the movement.
Where is the serial number on a Rolex?
On modern models it’s on the rehaut (inner ring) at the 6 o’clock position; on older ones it’s on the case edge between the lugs (visible with the bracelet removed). Cross-check the number format against the production year.
Does a smooth sweep guarantee it’s authentic?
No. Some replicas use mechanical calibers with a smooth sweep. A smooth sweep is a necessary but not sufficient sign — read it together with the Cyclops, the dial printing, and the engravings.
Do the box and papers prove authenticity?
Only partly: warranty cards get forged, and a full set can be assembled from different watches. The card must match the serial on the watch — but the watch itself always has the final say.