The History

TAG Heuer is synonymous with precision timekeeping, both at the finish line and on the wrists of motorsport legends. Founded in 1860 by Mr Edouard Heuer, the brand soon patented the “oscillating pinion” clutch system that remains a standard feature for wristwatch chronographs. By 1916, the founder’s son Mr Charles-Auguste Heuer had invented the first 100th-of-a-second stopwatch, kickstarting a lineage of timers that earned Heuer three Olympic timekeeper gigs in the 1920s and – by the 1960s – standard-issue status in Formula 1 pitlanes. The “TAG” prefix came in the 1980s, when one of McLaren’s major shareholders, Techniques d’Avant Garde bought Heuer and set its modern phase on the way. Now, under LVMH custodianship since 1999, the brand’s future has never seemed brighter.

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Drawing on an innovative sporting pedigree, TAG Heuer’s watches offer everyday, sporty wearability and great value for money. Its latest smartwatches are among the finest luxury models out there.

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Browse the styles our editors are currently coveting for their own wrists. Or shop all TAG Heuer watches.

Stories

TAG Heuer watches have always been worn by adventurous rule-breakers and speed freaks. And with good reason.

The Space Race

Heuer was the first Swiss watchmaker in space. Nasa astronaut Mr John Glenn strapped a large ref 2915A stopwatch around the outside of his suit to time his 1962 Mercury-Atlas 6 flight, orbiting Earth three times in Friendship 7 before splashing down.

Innovations

The Proto-Chronograph

Heuer’s ingenious “oscillating pinion” mechanism of 1887 – essentially a tiny steel dumbbell the size of a matchhead, with teeth at each end – cemented the basic mode of action for chronographs used to this day.

The Tourbillon

TAG Heuer recently launched a tourbillon, the Heuer-02T, for just over £12,000 – less than a third of what Swiss tourbillons generally start at. Not only is it up there with the haute horlogerie heavyweights, but it’s chronometer-rated for precision.

The Transmission

In 2004, TAG Heuer unveiled its Monaco V4, a watch with four winding barrels arranged like the cylinders of a V8 engine. The gear wheels of its “transmission” were replaced by toothed rubber belts, each thinner than a human hair. “Wow” doesn’t quite cover it.

FROM THE JOURNAL

TAG Heur Takes Pole Position

How the watch brand became one of the most recognised names in motorsport

FROM THE JOURNAL

TAG Heur Takes Pole Position

How the watch brand became one of the most recognised names in motorsport

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