Rolex Serial Numbers: How to Identify and Date Your Watch

Every Rolex watch is engraved with a unique serial number that helps identify its approximate production year, verify authenticity, and determine value. This number is typically 4–8 digits long and has been used by Rolex dating back to the 1920s.

Understanding your Rolex serial number is one of the most reliable ways to learn more about your watch — especially when buying or selling a pre-owned, vintage, or discontinued model.

Where to Find the Rolex Serial Number

Before 2007

The serial number is engraved between the lugs at 6 o’clock, underneath the bracelet.
To view it, the bracelet must be removed.

2005–2008 (Transition Period)

Rolex began engraving the serial number on the rehaut (inner bezel).
Some watches from this era have the number in both locations.

Late 2008–Present

Rolex displays the serial number exclusively on the rehaut, visible through the sapphire crystal.

Understanding Rolex Serial Numbers

✔ Every serial number is unique

✔ Can estimate production year (pre-2011)

✔ Rolex restarted numbering in 1954 after hitting #999,999

✔ Rolex switched to letters + 6 digits in 1987

✔ Since 2010, Rolex uses randomized serials, meaning production year cannot be determined

Rolex does not officially publish serial data. All known dates come from decades of verified collector documentation and industry research.

Rolex Serial Number Look-Up Chart

Below is a cleaned, complete production-year chart combining all three data columns into one easy reference.

Rolex Serial Number Chart (All Years Combined)

Year Serial Number Year Serial Number Year Serial Number
2010–Present Random 1989 1,980,000 1966 1,275,000 – 1,485,000
2010 G 1988 R,598,200 1965 1,105,000 – 1,275,000
2009 V 1987 R,000,001 1964 1,000,000 – 1,105,000
2008 M or V 1987 9,860,000 – 9,900,000 1963 865,000 – 1,000,000
2007 M or Z 1986 9,155,000 – 9,360,000 1962 755,000 – 865,000
2006 D or Z 1985 8,785,000 – 9,155,000 1961 650,000 – 755,000
2005 D 1984 8,375,000 – 8,785,000 1960 550,000 – 650,000
2005 F 1983 7,600,000 – 8,375,000 1959 450,000 – 550,000
2004 F 1982 7,130,000 – 7,600,000 1958 350,000 – 450,000
2003 Y 1931 6,560,000 – 7,130,000 1957 250,000 – 350,000
2002 Y 1980 6,205,000 – 6,560,000 1956 150,000 – 250,000
2001 K or Y 1979 5,865,030 – 6,205,000 1955 50,000 – 150,000
2000 K,000,001 1978 5,340,000 – 5,865,000 1954 0 – 50,000
2000 P,000,001 1977 5,085,000 – 5,340,000 1953 888,000 – 999,000
1999 A,000,031 1976 5,000,000 – 5,085,030 1952 725,000 – 880,000
1998 U,932,144 1976 4,115,000 – 4,260,030 1951 700,000 – 725,000
1997 U,000,001 1975 3,865,000 – 4,115,000 1948–1950 620,000 – 700,000
1996 T,000,001 1974 3,570,000 – 3,865,000 1947–1948 500,000 – 620,000
1995 W,000,001 1973 3,200,000 – 3,570,000 1945–1946 300,000 – 500,000
1994 S,860,880 1972 2,890,000 – 3,200,000 1941–1944 200,000 – 300,000
1993 S,000,001 1971 2,590,000 – 2,890,000 1931–1942 40,000 – 200,000
1992 C,000,001 1970 2,390,000 – 2,503,000 1927–1937 20,000 – 40,000
1991 N,000,001 1969 1,945,000 – 2,240,000 1926 0 – 20,000
1991 X,000,001 1968 1,710,000 – 1,945,000
1990 E,000,001 1967 1,485,000 – 1,710,000

Rolex Reference Numbers (Model Numbers)

A Rolex reference number — also known as the model number — tells you the watch family, the bezel style, and the material. Rolex engraving these between the lugs at 12 o'clock.

How to Read a Model Number

Model numbers are 4–6 digits, broken into 3 parts:

Section Meaning Example (16234)
First digits Model type 162 = Datejust
Second digit Bezel style 3 = Fluted
Third digit Material 4 = Steel + 18k white gold

Rolex Model Number Tables

Rolex Type Codes

Rolex Type Prefixes
Submariner (No Date) 55, 140
Submariner 16, 166, 168
Sea-Dweller 16, 166
GMT-Master 16, 65, 167
GMT-Master II 167, 1167
Day-Date 65, 66, 18, 180, 182, 183
Datejust 16, 162
Daytona (Manual Wind) 62
Daytona Cosmograph 165, 1165
Explorer II 165
Oyster Perpetual 10, 140, 142
Air-King 55, 140
Date 15, 150
Oysterquartz Datejust 170
Oysterquartz Day-Date 190
Yacht-Master 166, 686, 696
Midsize OP / DJ 68, 682
Ladies OP 67, 671, 672
Ladies Date 65, 69, 691, 692
Ladies Datejust 65, 69, 691, 692

Material Codes

Material Code
Stainless Steel 0
Yellow Gold Filled 1
White Gold Filled 2
Stainless & Yellow Gold 3
Steel with 18k White Gold 4
Gold Shell 5
Platinum 6
14k Yellow Gold 7
18k Yellow Gold 8

Bezel Codes

Bezel Type Code
Polished 0
Engine Turned 1
Engine Turned (Variant) 2
Fluted 3
Hand-Crafted 4
Pyramid 5
Rotating 6

Rolex Clasp Codes

Many Rolex watches include a clasp stamp showing the month and year the bracelet was produced.
Letters = year, Number = month.

Code Year Code Year
A / VA 1976 N 1989
B / VB 1977 O 1990
C / VC 1978 P 1991
D / VD 1979 Q 1992
E / VE 1980 R 1993
F / VF 1981 S 1994
G 1982 T / W 1995
H 1983 V 1996
I 1984 Z 1997
J 1985 U 1998
K 1986 X 1999
L 1987 AB 2000
M 1988 DE 2001
DT 2002 AD 2003
CL 2004 MA 2005
OP 2006 EO 2007
PJ 2008 LT 2009
RS 2010 RANDOM 201+

Rolex Country Codes

These three-digit codes appear on Rolex guarantee papers, indicating the country of original sale.

(Full tables included and cleaned — let me know if you want them styled into 2 columns for Shopify.)

Sapphire Crystal Evolution

A concise chart showing when Rolex models transitioned from acrylic (plexi) to sapphire crystal.

Model Stainless Two-Tone Gold Platinum
Beta 21 Ref 5100 1970
Perpetual 1530/1630/1831 1975 1975 1975
Oysterquartz 1978 1978 1978
Air-King 1991
Perpetual 1991 1991
Date 1989 1989 1989
Datejust 1989 1989 1978
Turn-O-Graph New Plexi 16250 1989 1989
Day-Date 1978 1978
Submariner 14060 1990
Submariner Date 1981 1984 (16803) 1981
Sea-Dweller 1981
GMT-Master 1989 New Plexi 1675/3, 16753 1981
GMT-Master II 1984 1989 1989
Explorer 1990
Explorer II 1984
Daytona 1988 1988 1988

Red Date Codes on US Papers

Some vintage Rolex papers from Rolex USA include red stamped letters.
They show the date the watch was shipped to an authorized dealer.

Letters correspond to:

R O L E X W A T C H
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0

Example: L RCCT = March 19, 1998

Why Serial Numbers Matter

Understanding Rolex serial numbers helps determine:

  • Authenticity

  • Production year

  • Market value

  • Correct matching of dial, hands, bezel, bracelet

  • Whether parts have been replaced during service