If you're after a luxury watch that handles both a Monday boardroom and a Saturday on the water, the OMEGA Seamaster Aqua Terra belongs on your shortlist. As part of the renowned OMEGA Seamaster collection, the Aqua Terra offers a range of styles and complications to suit any discerning watch enthusiast. It's been doing the "dress watch meets sport watch" thing since 2002, and it does it better than almost anything in its price range. METAS certified movements, 150 meters of water resistance, antimagnetic protection, a design that doesn't scream "look at me." Explore our selection of used Omega Aqua Terra watches and find the perfect companion for your wrist. ... read more
So what makes the Aqua Terra special? In a word: range. You've got sizes from 28mm to 43mm. Materials from stainless steel to titanium to 18K gold. Complications from simple time and date all the way up to a full Worldtimer. And every current model carries OMEGA's Master Chronometer certification, meaning it's been tested for accuracy, water resistance, and magnetic resistance up to 15,000 gauss. Watch collectors call this a GADA watch, short for "Go Anywhere, Do Anything." That label fits the Aqua Terra better than almost any other watch on the market.
Here's where it gets interesting if you're shopping pre-owned. Based on our sales data at Bob's Watches, the average Aqua Terra sells for around $4,564. Prices start at just over $2,000 for older quartz models and climb past $13,000 for gold and limited editions. But the sweet spot? Current generation steel models that retail for $6,700 to $7,000 show up pre-owned in the $3,500 to $5,500 range. That's serious savings on a seriously capable dive watch. And references with collector appeal, like the Skyfall and SPECTRE James Bond editions, have been holding their value or climbing.
OMEGA watches launched the Seamaster Aqua Terra in 2002. The goal was to fill a gap in the brand's catalog. The Seamaster was already established as a true dive watch, and there wasn't a great option for someone who wanted Seamaster toughness in a package clean enough for a suit. The Aqua Terra filled that gap. Its name means "water and land," which tells you exactly what OMEGA was going for. The first models came in 39.2mm cases with the Caliber 2500 Co-Axial movement, and they hit right away with buyers who thought dive bezels and bulky cases were overkill for their day-to-day lives.
A lot has happened since then. The vertical teak dial pattern showed up in 2008, inspired by the wooden decks of luxury yachts. In 2013, OMEGA released the antimagnetic "15,000 Gauss" model, proving the watch could shrug off magnetic fields that would wreck most movements. Master Chronometer certification came in 2015, adding METAS testing to every new model. Then 2017 brought about a handful of updates. New case shapes, a symmetrical dial layout moving the date to 6 o'clock, and updated calibers. James Bond wore the Aqua Terra in Skyfall (2012), SPECTRE (2015), and No Time to Die (2021), which didn't hurt its reputation. OMEGA added the Worldtimer complication in 2017, and launched the colorful Shades lineup in 2023. They rolled out sleek black lacquer dials with a new micro-adjustment clasp in 2024. If you’re interested in learning more, we have a deep-dive into the history of the OMEGA Seamaster.
OMEGA doesn't do things halfway, and the Aqua Terra lineup proves it. There's over 100 active references at any given time, plus years' worth of discontinued models still floating around on the pre-owned market. That can feel overwhelming when you're trying to figure out which one's right for you. So here's a walkthrough of the key collections.
This is the one. The core Aqua Terra, the model most people are shopping for. Current versions come in 38mm and 41mm, powered by OMEGA's Co-Axial Master Chronometer Caliber 8800 (38mm) or Caliber 8900 (41mm). Both are METAS certified, antimagnetic to 15,000 gauss, and pack 55 to 60 hours of power reserve. The dial layout is clean: applied hour markers, date at 6 o'clock, OMEGA's arrow tipped hands. You can get it in stainless steel, 18K Sedna gold, 18K Moonshine gold, or two tone combos. Retail for steel starts at $6,800 (38mm) and $6,700 (41mm).
Pre-owned, it's the most actively traded Aqua Terra by a wide margin. Older teak dial models with the date at 3 o'clock run $2,500 to $4,500 in steel and are still excellent daily wearers. Post-2017 models with the 6 o'clock date fetch a bit more, generally $3,500 to $5,500 for steel in good shape with the full kit.
Nothing moves like a James Bond watch. Daniel Craig strapped on an Aqua Terra with a blue teak dial (ref. 231.10.39.21.03.001) for Skyfall in 2012, a 38.5mm steel model on a matching bracelet. That reference is now one of the most collectible Aqua Terras out there, and clean examples don't come cheap. For SPECTRE in 2015, Bond upgraded to the Master Co-Axial version (ref. 231.10.42.21.03.003) at 41.5mm.
OMEGA also released commemorative models, including the Aqua Terra James Bond Limited Edition (ref. 231.10.42.21.03.004) with Bond's family crest on the seconds hand and a gun barrel engraving on the rotor. This one's a strong performer here at Bob's Watches, averaging over $5,600. If you want the Bond connection without paying Bond LE prices, look at the standard blue teak dial models from the same era.
When OMEGA launched the Shades collection in 2023, it was a clear statement: the Aqua Terra doesn't have to play it safe. These 34mm and 38mm steel models feature striking gradient dials from terracotta and olive green to sandstone and summer blue, powered by Caliber 8800 (38mm models) and 8801 (34mm models). The dial finishing is what really sells them. It's a sun brushed, lacquered look that photographs well but genuinely pops in person. According to experts, OMEGA introduced at least nine color variations in the initial run.
Retail is $7,400. Pre-owned, expect $4,500 to $6,000 depending on the color and condition. The blue and green versions seem to get snapped up the quickest. If you've always liked the Aqua Terra but found the standard dial options a little conservative, the Shades collection is worth your attention. OMEGA has been adding new colors in 2024 and 2025, so the palette keeps growing.
OMEGA went minimal with the 2024 Black Lacquer models. There’s options in 34mm, 38mm, and 41mm, all steel. These watches ditch the teak pattern entirely for a glossy black dial with applied white gold markers and diamond polished hands. It's sleek and dressy. Caliber 8800 powers the 34mm and 38mm; Caliber 8900 handles the 41mm. Retail is $7,400 for all three sizes.
But here's the thing: these weren't just a new dial. These newer watches also marked OMEGA's micro-adjustment clasp on the bracelet, letting you fine tune the fit without tools. Enthusiasts had been asking for this for years. It's widely expected to spread across more Aqua Terra references going forward. Pre-owned, black dial Aqua Terra models are still fresh, but early pricing suggests $5,000 to $6,500.
Late 2024 brought the Turquoise models. The gradient turquoise dial looks like sunlight moving through water, available in both 38mm and 41mm. Originally, it came on steel bracelets with a polished steel bezel. Then in 2025, OMEGA transformed this model into a sports watch version: black ceramic bezel, integrated rubber strap, turquoise stitching. A completely different vibe.
Same Master Chronometer engine as the rest of the lineup, Caliber 8800 for the 38mm and Caliber 8900 for the 41mm. The ceramic bezel versions are a bit pricier than a standard Aqua Terra. These are still new enough that pre-owned supply is limited, but keep an eye on this one.
Want the most impressive dial in the entire Aqua Terra collection? This is it. The 43mm Worldtimer shows all 24 time zones at once through a rotating city ring, a day/night indicator, and a world map cut from grade 5 titanium using laser ablation. The first version was a 2017 platinum limited edition, just 87 pieces. Regular production steel and Sedna gold versions came in 2019, and OMEGA has since added green dials, titanium cases, and a Summer Blue colorway.
Under the hood, you get Master Chronometer Caliber 8938 (steel) or 8939 (gold). Retail for the steel version on rubber is $10,900. At Bob's Watches, the Worldtimer is one of our most popular Aqua Terras. The blue rubber strap model (ref. 220.12.43.22.03.001) averages nearly $6,925, while the green dial on bracelet (ref. 220.30.43.22.10.001) is actually our single highest volume Aqua Terra reference, at an average of about $4,714.
Before the Worldtimer existed, the Aqua Terra GMT was the traveler's pick. These 43mm watches added a 24 hour hand for a second time zone, and they came in steel, Sedna gold, and two tone options. The GMT Chronograph versions combined the dual time zone with a stopwatch function. Both are discontinued in the current lineup but remain very much alive on the pre-owned market.
What do they cost? Steel GMT models typically fall between $3,000 and $5,000, which is strong value for an OMEGA with a travel complication. The GMT Chronograph (ref. 231.13.43.52.02.001) has averaged about $4,595 at Bob's Watches. If you want a watch that can track two time zones and you don't need the full 24-zone Worldtimer display, the discontinued GMT is a smart buy.
Not everyone wants a center seconds hand. The Aqua Terra Small Seconds displays the seconds in a subdial at 6 o'clock, for a look that’s a bit more traditional. It’s available in 38mm and 41mm with Caliber 8916 (41mm models) and Caliber 8802 (38mm models), which have the same Master Chronometer specs as the rest of the current range.
Steel, gold, leather, rubber, bracelet. You've got options. These don't sell in the same volume as the standard 150M, which actually works in their favor when it comes to retaining value. If you're drawn to the Aqua Terra but want something that skews a little more toward the dress watch side, this is the one.
OMEGA built this one for athletes. Launched in 2019, the 41mm Ultra Light uses a grade 5 titanium case and, here's the wild part, a hand-wound movement (Caliber 8928) where even the movement components are titanium. First time OMEGA ever did that. The result is a noticeably lighter watch, developed with input from golfer Rory McIlroy.
The Ultra Light isn't common on the pre-owned market. The ref. 220.92.41.21.03.002 developed for Swedish pole vault legend Armand “Mondo” Duplantis retails for $57,800, while the non-tribute model retails for $60,100.
Green seconds hand. Green "Seamaster" text. Green minute markers at 15, 30, 45, and 60. The Aqua Terra Golf edition doesn't hide what it's about. These 41mm models are mechanically identical to the standard 150M, just with color-matched accents and usually a NATO strap. Earlier versions swapped green for orange.
On the pre-owned market, the Golf with a white dial (ref. 231.10.42.21.02.004) has averaged about $3,496 at Bob's Watches, making it one of the more affordable ways into the collection. If you play golf, or just like the look, it's a fun variation that doesn't command a premium over standard models.
The OMEGA Aqua Terra used to also come with an annual calendar or a chronograph. Annual calendars automatically distinguish between 30- and 31-day months, requiring only one manual correction on March 1st. Chronographs add a timing function. Some models even combined it with a GMT hand for a dual-time-zone stopwatch combination.
Both are discontinued now, but they're still out there on the pre-owned market and they're still good. GMT Chronograph models (ref. 231.13.43.52.02.001) average about $4,595. Annual Calendar and standard Chronograph models run $3,000 to $6,500 depending on the reference. If you want an Aqua Terra that does more than tell the time and date, these discontinued references are where to look.
The Aqua Terra isn't just a men's collection. OMEGA makes Aqua Terra Women's models in 28mm (quartz, now discontinued), 30mm, and 34mm. Current 34mm versions run on automatic Master Chronometer movements and come with options for diamond set bezels, mother of pearl dials, and colored dial variants. Worth noting: the 30mm Aqua Terra in Moonshine Gold took home the Revolution Awards 2025 for Best Women's Watch.
At Bob's Watches, the two tone diamond dial (ref. 220.20.34.20.59.001) is one of our most traded Aqua Terra references, period. It's averaged about $5,377. The 30mm ladies' models (ref. 231.20.30.20.06.003) average around $4,358 across our transactions. Quartz versions and simpler steel models for women can often be found for under $3,000.
We don't have to guess about the Aqua Terra market. We've got the data. Bob's Watches has moved many Aqua Terras over the years, and the numbers tell a clear story. The overall average sale price is about $4,564, with individual watches going for as little as $1,595 and as much as $13,595. We experienced strong year-over-year growth for the Aqua Terra in 2025, with both our total sales volume and average selling price trending significantly upward compared to 2024.
Where does most of the action happen? Between $2,000 and $5,000. About 74% of every Aqua Terra we've sold falls in that range. Under $2,000 is rare, less than 3% of our transactions, and you're mostly looking at older quartz models or watches that need a little love. From $5,000 to $7,000 (about 17% of sales), you'll find newer Master Chronometer steel models and some two tone or special edition pieces in great shape. And above $7,000 (around 7% of sales) is gold territory, along with Worldtimers and limited editions.
The trend line over the past six years tells a good story, too. Average sale prices at Bob's Watches went from around $3,728 in 2019 to $5,069 by 2022. There was a dip to $4,049 in 2023, which tracked with a broader correction across the luxury watch market. But things bounced back. In 2025, we're seeing that $5,118 average. Some specific models are doing even better. The Worldtimer on rubber strap (ref. 220.12.43.22.03.001) averages nearly $6,925, and the James Bond Limited Edition (ref. 231.10.42.21.03.004) averages over $5,600. Both are comfortably above the collection average.
If you're comparing Aqua Terra models across different generations, knowing the specs matters. Here's a quick breakdown of the important stuff.
Stainless steel (316L) is the default and the most popular pick for most buyers. It’s durable, corrosion resistant, and more affordable than the alternatives. Want something fancier? OMEGA's got you covered. 18K Sedna gold is their proprietary rose gold, engineered to resist fading over time. 18K Moonshine gold is a paler yellow gold with extra tarnish resistance, first introduced in 2019. Canopus gold is their white gold alloy. Two tone models mix steel with either Sedna or Moonshine. And the Ultra Light models go full titanium, case and movement.
Dials are all over the map in the best way. Sunburst finishes, lacquered surfaces, the classic vertical teak motif, ceramic (on Olympic editions), and the gradient lacquer you see on the Shades and Turquoise models. Hour markers are usually white gold or gold plated, and virtually every model gets a sapphire crystal with anti-reflective coating on both sides.
Current Aqua Terra watches use METAS certified Master Chronometer movements. They’re independently tested for accuracy (0/+5 seconds per day), magnetic resistance (15,000 gauss), and overall performance. Here's the caliber breakdown: 8800 powers the 34mm and 38mm models (35,000 vph, 55 hour power reserve). 8900 goes in the 41mm (25,200 vph, 60 hours). 8916 runs the Small Seconds. 8928 is the all-titanium hand-wound movement in the Ultra Light. And the 8938/8939 drives the Worldtimer. All of them use OMEGA's Co-Axial escapement and a silicon balance spring.
Older models used different movements. Caliber 2500 was the early Co-Axial, and while it's a good movement, it's a generation behind. The 8500/8501/8507 family was OMEGA's first fully in-house automatic Co-Axial, and it shows up in a lot of the pre-2017 Aqua Terras you'll find on the pre-owned market. The ladies' 28mm models ran quartz. The biggest upgrade over the years was the move to Master Chronometer certification, which added that 15,000 gauss antimagnetic standard.
No rotating bezel here. That's what sets the Aqua Terra apart from other Seamaster models like the Diver 300M and Planet Ocean. There’s a fixed bezel, usually polished steel or gold depending on the case material. The 2025 Turquoise models brought about a black ceramic bezel, which was a first for the Aqua Terra.
The fact that there isn't a dive bezel only matters if you were actually planning to dive with your watch. Plus, the fixed bezel is part of why the Aqua Terra wears nice and slim on the wrist and is more dress-sport than tool watch. It makes more sense to buy the Diver 300M or Planet Ocean if you need to time dives.
There’s six case sizes across the collection: 28mm (discontinued quartz ladies'), 30mm (ladies' automatic), 34mm (ladies' or unisex), 38mm (the popular mid-size), 41mm (the men's flagship), and 43mm (Worldtimer). Lug-to-lug lengths is about 40.5mm for the 34mm case, 45mm for the 38mm, and 48mm for the 41mm. Thickness ranges from about 12mm to 13.4mm.
38mm models are popular right now. Smaller, more wearable sizes are trending, and the 38mm Aqua Terra fits a wide range of wrists without feeling undersized. It's become the go-to recommendation for people who aren't sure which size to pick. 41mm is still a great option for men because it wears well on larger wrists.
Every Aqua Terra is waterproof to 150 meters/500 feet. Plenty for swimming, snorkeling, and anything short of actual scuba diving. OMEGA pulls this off with a screw-down crown and caseback.
It’s not as capable as the Diver 300M or Planet Ocean. But it's three to five times more than what most luxury dress watches offer. You can wear this watch to the beach, in the pool, in the shower. You just wouldn't take it on a serious dive.
Three main options. The stainless steel three-link bracelet is the most popular, with polished center links. Starting with 2024 models, the bracelet includes a micro-adjustment clasp for on-the-fly fit changes. Structured rubber straps are available on the Worldtimer, Turquoise, and some other models, connecting to the case through an integrated solid link that looks seamless.
Leather straps, usually alligator or calf with a deployant clasp, push the Aqua Terra more toward the dressy end. The Golf edition gets a NATO strap. Lug width is 19mm on the 38mm case and 20mm on the 41mm, so aftermarket straps are easy to find if you want to swap things up.
The Aqua Terra is one of the best all-around luxury watches you can buy right now, full stop. Master Chronometer precision, real-world durability, and a design that works in almost any situation. We've sold many of them at Bob's Watches, and that kind of repeat demand tells you something about how well this watch delivers on its promise.
-Paul Altieri, Founder and CEO of Bob’s Watches
Why Choose Bob's Watches
Buying a pre-owned watch comes down to trust. You need to know the watch is real, the condition is accurately described, and the price is fair. That's what we do at Bob's Watches. Every OMEGA Aqua Terra in our inventory gets inspected and authenticated by our in-house watchmakers before it goes live on the site. No guesswork, no surprises.
Here's what that looks like in practice:
Ready to move on from your OMEGA Aqua Terra? Maybe you're upgrading, maybe it's just not getting wrist time anymore. Either way, Bob's Watches makes selling easy. We buy pre-owned Aqua Terra watches in all conditions and configurations, current models and discontinued ones. Our offers are based on what the market is actually doing, so you get a fair number without the hassle of listing it yourself.
Here's how it works. Visit our Sell Your OMEGA Watch page for a free quote. Like the offer? We’ll send you a free, pre-paid shipping label. You get paid after we’ve inspected the watch in-person. Quick and simple. Whether it's a 38mm Shades model, a Worldtimer, or a first generation Aqua Terra from the early 2000s, we want to hear from you.