The complete reference for IWC Schaffhausen serial numbers — where to find them, the critical movement vs. case serial distinction, full production dating tables from 1875 to 1975, modern reference decoding, and how to obtain an IWC Certificate of Authenticity.
IWC (International Watch Company, Schaffhausen) uses two separate serial number systems — a movement serial number and a case serial number — which are not the same and are never interchangeable. The movement serial is the primary tool for dating vintage IWC watches (1875–1975) and is engraved on the movement itself. The case serial is on the caseback. For watches produced after approximately 1975, IWC transitioned to non-sequential serials that cannot be used to date production. IWC does not offer an “extract from archives” — instead, they issue a Certificate of Authenticity requiring physical examination of the watch at IWC Schaffhausen headquarters. Modern IWC reference numbers follow the format IW + 6 digits (e.g., IW500401).
- The Critical Distinction: Two Serial Systems
- Where to Find Each Number
- Dating from the Movement Serial (1875–1975)
- Full Serial Number Dating Table
- The Assembly Lag: Why the Date Isn’t Always Exact
- Post-1975 and Modern IWC Serials
- Modern IWC Reference Numbers Decoded
- Authentication Checklist
- IWC Certificate of Authenticity
- FAQ
The Critical Distinction: IWC Has Two Separate Serial Number Systems
Before any other discussion of IWC serial numbers, this point must be established clearly — because it is the single most common source of confusion, and ignoring it leads to every subsequent dating and authentication mistake.
IWC maintains two completely independent serial number registers: one for movements and one for cases. These are separate sequences. A movement serial number and the case serial number on the same watch will almost always be different numbers. This is not a defect, a sign of tampering, or an inconsistency — it is simply how IWC’s production records work.
The Movement Number
Stamped on the movement itself when the batch of movement components is allocated. This is the primary dating tool for vintage IWC watches. It appears on the movement plate and is visible on exhibition-caseback models or when the watch is opened by a watchmaker. It is also listed on original IWC documentation and certificates.
The Case Number
A separate serial assigned to the case itself, typically engraved on the caseback (exterior or interior). It belongs to the physical case, not the movement. Because IWC cases and movements were produced and allocated separately, a watch’s case serial and movement serial will ordinarily be different numbers from different sequences.
Looking up a case serial in a movement serial dating table — or vice versa — will return a meaningless or incorrect result. The two series are separate. When this guide refers to dating a watch by serial number, it means specifically the movement serial number. The case serial serves a different purpose: confirming that the movement and case belong together in IWC’s records, which is the basis of the IWC Certificate of Authenticity.
Where to Find Each Number on Your IWC
Locating the right number depends on what you’re trying to do. If you want to date the watch, you need the movement serial. If you want to check case originality, you need both the movement and case serial together.
On some IWC models — particularly certain Portugieser and Pilot’s references — an additional case number can be found engraved on the underside of one of the lugs (the projections that hold the strap or bracelet). This requires removing the strap. It’s worth checking if the caseback engraving is unclear or worn.
Dating from the Movement Serial: How It Works
For vintage IWC watches produced between approximately 1875 and 1975, the movement serial number is the primary and most reliable dating tool. IWC has maintained production records since its founding in 1868 by American watchmaker Florentine Ariosto Jones — one of the most complete factory archives in Swiss watchmaking — and those records correlate movement serial ranges to specific production years.
The dating system is straightforward in principle: IWC allocated batches of serial numbers to groups of movements at the start of their production cycle. The serial numbers are sequential — higher numbers were allocated later. By matching a movement serial to the known allocation ranges, you can identify the year that batch of movements was initiated. Typically, IWC allocated serial batches in multiples of 600 movements.
IWC used a different numbering system before 1884 (the “Old System” in the table below), and production records from before 1884 are less complete than those from 1884 onwards. The “New System” beginning in 1884 restarted the serial sequence. This means IWC watches from before 1884 cannot be dated as reliably from the serial number alone — consult the archives directly if you have a very early piece.
IWC Movement Serial Number Dating Table (1875–1975)
The ranges below show the approximate movement serial numbers allocated to each production year. Your watch’s movement serial falls between two rows — it was produced in or after the earlier year and before the later year. All figures are approximate; IWC’s own archives are the definitive source for precise dating.
| Production Year | Movement Serial Range (approx.) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Old System — Pre-1884 (incomplete records) | ||
| 1875 | up to ~7,000 | Early pocket watch production. Florentine Jones era. |
| 1877 | ~7,001 – 25,000 | |
| 1879 | ~25,001 – 50,000 | |
| 1881 | ~50,001 – 80,000 | |
| 1883 | ~80,001 – 100,000 | |
| New System — 1884 onwards (sequential, well-documented) | ||
| 1884 | 6,501 – 15,499 | New serial sequence begins. Records substantially more complete from this point. |
| 1885 | 15,500 – 23,499 | |
| 1886 | 23,500 – 29,499 | |
| 1887 | 29,500 – 37,499 | |
| 1888 | 37,500 – 48,999 | |
| 1889 | 49,000 – 62,999 | |
| 1890 | 63,000 – 75,499 | |
| 1891 | 75,500 – 87,499 | |
| 1892 | 87,500 – 102,999 | |
| 1893 | 103,000 – 116,999 | |
| 1894 | 117,000 – 133,000 | |
| 1895 | 133,001 – 151,499 | |
| 1896 | 151,500 – 170,499 | |
| 1897 | 170,500 – 193,999 | |
| 1898 | 194,000 – 211,999 | |
| 1899 | 212,000 – 230,999 | |
| 1900 | 231,000 – 253,499 | |
| 1901 | 253,500 – 276,499 | |
| 1902 | 276,500 – 298,499 | |
| 1903 | 298,500 – 320,999 | |
| 1904 | 321,000 – 349,499 | |
| 1905 | 349,500 – 377,499 | |
| 1906 | 377,500 – 405,999 | |
| 1907 | 406,000 – 434,999 | |
| 1908 | 435,000 – 463,499 | |
| 1909 | 463,500 – 491,999 | |
| 1910 | 492,000 – 520,999 | |
| 1911 | 521,000 – 556,999 | |
| 1912 | 557,000 – 593,999 | |
| 1913 | 594,000 – 620,499 | |
| 1914 | 620,500 – 634,999 | WWI slows production. |
| 1915 | 635,000 – 656,999 | |
| 1916 | 657,000 – 683,999 | |
| 1917 | 684,000 – 713,999 | |
| 1918 | 714,000 – 741,999 | |
| 1919 | 742,000 – 764,999 | |
| 1920 | 765,000 – 779,999 | |
| 1921 | 780,000 – 783,499 | |
| 1922 | 783,500 – 793,499 | |
| 1923 | 793,500 – 806,999 | |
| 1924 | 807,000 – 827,499 | |
| 1925 | 827,500 – 865,999 | |
| 1926 | 645,000 – 865,999 | |
| 1927 | 866,000 – 890,499 | |
| 1928 | 890,500 – 919,499 | |
| 1929 | 919,500 – 928,999 | |
| 1930 | 929,000 – 937,499 | |
| 1931 | 937,500 – 937,999 | Great Depression — only ~600 movements produced total. |
| 1932 | 938,000 – 938,999 | ~1,200 movements. Production nearly halted. |
| 1933 | 939,000 – 939,999 | ~600 movements. |
| 1934 | 940,000 – 940,999 | ~600 movements. The Depression is visible in the data. |
| 1935 | 941,000 – 944,999 | Recovery begins — 4,800 movements including first Cal. 83 batch. |
| 1936 | 945,000 – 955,499 | 10,800 movements. Production restores to pre-recession scale. |
| 1937 | 955,500 – 978,999 | |
| 1938 | 979,000 – 1,000,000 | IWC reaches 1 million movements produced. |
| 1939 | 1,000,001 – 1,012,999 | WWII begins. Military watch production (Mark series) increases. |
| 1940 | 1,013,000 – 1,038,999 | |
| 1941 | 1,039,000 – 1,061,999 | British military WWW (Watches, Wristlet, Waterproof) supply. |
| 1942 | 1,062,000 – 1,077,999 | |
| 1943 | 1,078,000 – 1,091,999 | |
| 1944 | 1,092,000 – 1,105,999 | |
| 1945 | 1,106,000 – 1,130,999 | WWII ends. Post-war production rebuilding. |
| 1946 | 1,131,000 – 1,152,999 | |
| 1947 | 1,153,000 – 1,176,999 | |
| 1948 | 1,177,000 – 1,204,999 | |
| 1949 | 1,205,000 – 1,221,999 | |
| 1950 | 1,222,000 – 1,252,999 | |
| 1951 | 1,253,000 – 1,290,999 | |
| 1952 | 1,291,000 – 1,315,999 | |
| 1953 | 1,316,000 – 1,334,999 | |
| 1954 | 1,335,000 – 1,360,999 | |
| 1955 | 1,361,000 – 1,398,999 | |
| 1956 | 1,399,000 – 1,435,999 | |
| 1957 | 1,436,000 – 1,459,999 | |
| 1958 | 1,460,000 – 1,512,999 | |
| 1959 | 1,513,000 – 1,552,999 | |
| 1960 | 1,553,000 – 1,611,999 | |
| 1961 | 1,612,000 – 1,665,999 | Ingenieur and early Aquatimer/Aquatimer era. |
| 1962 | 1,666,000 – 1,732,999 | |
| 1963 | 1,733,000 – 1,777,999 | |
| 1964 | 1,778,000 – 1,795,999 | |
| 1965 | 1,796,000 – 1,819,999 | |
| 1966 | 1,820,000 – 1,888,899 | |
| 1967 | 1,888,900 – 1,904,999 | |
| 1968 | 1,905,000 – 1,969,999 | |
| 1969 | 1,970,000 – 2,025,999 | |
| 1970 | 2,026,000 – 2,112,999 | |
| 1971 | 2,113,000 – 2,217,999 | |
| 1972 | 2,218,000 – 2,229,999 | |
| 1973 | 2,230,000 – 2,264,999 | |
| 1974 | 2,265,000 – 2,274,999 | |
| 1975 | 2,275,000+ | Approximate limit of reliable sequential dating from serial alone. |
| Post-1975 — Non-sequential serials. Year dating from serial number not reliable. See section below. | ||
All serial ranges are approximate. Sources: IWC production archives as compiled in specialist horological literature, including Tölke and King’s reference work on IWC. Serial numbers are approximations — contact IWC directly for definitive production verification.
The Assembly Lag: Why the Year Isn’t Always Exact
This is the most nuanced aspect of IWC serial number dating, and it explains why even a confirmed movement serial date may not match the year on a warranty card or service record. Understanding it prevents misidentifying a genuine watch as problematic.
IWC’s production process worked in two distinct stages. In the first stage, rough movement components — the base plate, bridges, and main structural parts — were machined, assembled in the rough state, and stamped with their serial numbers. This is the date that serial number tables record: when the serial batch was allocated to that group of rough movements.
In the second stage, those rough movements were “finished” — jewelled, engraved, plated, fitted with escapements, balance wheels, and mainsprings. This stage happened later, often significantly later, as orders arrived. IWC did not pre-finish movements speculatively; they finished them in batches of approximately 12 as customer orders required. A slow-selling calibre might sit as a rough movement for years before being finished.
An IWC watch with a movement serial corresponding to 1904 in the dating table may have actually been finished and cased in 1911 — a seven-year gap. This has been documented in IWC’s own archives for specific watches. The serial number tells you when the movement batch was allocated; the finishing and assembly date may be meaningfully later. For precise production dating where the difference matters — insurance valuations, auction estimates — only the IWC archives or a Certificate of Authenticity provide the definitive answer.
Additionally, cases were ordered and produced separately from movements. Gold and silver cases especially were expensive and ordered to fulfil specific customer commissions rather than stocked speculatively. A case might be produced and cased onto a movement that had been in rough-movement stock for years. This is another reason why the movement serial and case serial are different — their production timelines are independent.
Post-1975 and Modern IWC Serials
After approximately 1975, IWC transitioned away from sequential movement serial numbers toward a system that does not directly encode production year. This means the dating table above is not applicable to watches produced after approximately 1975.
For modern IWC watches — covering the entire portfolio of current references including the Pilot’s Watches, Portugieser, Portofino, Da Vinci, Ingenieur, and Aquatimer families — the serial number cannot be used to determine the production year from a lookup table. Dating a post-1975 IWC requires:
- Original warranty card or papers — lists the sale date, which establishes a latest possible production date.
- IWC Certificate of Authenticity — obtained by submitting the physical watch to IWC Schaffhausen. The certificate can include production year information from IWC’s own records.
- Reference number dating — modern IWC reference numbers (IW + 6 digits) correspond to specific models introduced at known points, allowing a window of possible production years even without the serial.
- Movement calibre identification — the calibre number visible through an exhibition caseback or on service documentation has its own introduction year, establishing the earliest possible production date.
For a modern IWC without original documentation, the practical approach is: identify the reference number (IW + 6 digits) and look up its introduction year, which gives you the earliest possible production date. The IWC website and specialist references list introduction years for all current and recent references. Combined with the service history if available, this usually narrows the production window to within a few years without needing the serial number itself.
What Is Your IWC Worth?
Whether you have a vintage Portugieser pocket watch or a modern Big Pilot, IWC values depend on reference, calibre, condition, and provenance. Our specialists evaluate at the reference level. Free appraisal, no obligation.
Get a Free IWC Appraisal →Modern IWC Reference Numbers Decoded
Modern IWC watch reference numbers follow a consistent format: the prefix IW followed by six digits. The reference number identifies the specific model configuration and is distinct from the serial number. It appears on the caseback and on original documentation.
Modern IWC Reference Format — Example: IW500401
Common IWC Collection Codes
| Reference Prefix (IW + …) | Collection | Example Reference |
|---|---|---|
| 500XXX | Pilot’s Watch / Big Pilot | IW500401 — Big Pilot 46mm steel |
| 371XXX | Portugieser | IW371401 — Portugieser Chronograph |
| 356XXX | Portofino | IW356501 — Portofino Automatic 40mm |
| 376XXX | Da Vinci | IW376101 — Da Vinci Automatic |
| 322XXX | Ingenieur | IW322803 — Ingenieur Automatic steel |
| 329XXX | Aquatimer | IW329001 — Aquatimer Automatic |
| 394XXX | Portugieser Tourbillon / Grand Complication | IW394001 — Portugieser Tourbillon |
| 458XXX | Pilot’s Watch Top Gun / Ceramic | IW458002 — Top Gun Miramar ceramic |
Before the current IW-prefixed six-digit system, IWC used various formats. Early references were pure numbers (e.g., 3501, 3536 for the Ingenieur, 5441 for vintage Pilot references). These number-only references appear on vintage watches and do not follow the current IW + 6-digit structure. References from the 1980s and 1990s may use a five-digit format (e.g., 3711 for the Portugieser Chronograph introduced in 1998). If your watch reference doesn’t begin with IW, it predates the current numbering system.
Authentication Checklist
The serial and reference numbers are important authentication indicators, but they must be consistent with the physical watch in front of you. A serial number that matches a real IWC in production records does not confirm that the watch it is on is genuine — it only confirms that a watch with that number was produced.
IWC Certificate of Authenticity: How It Works
IWC does not offer an “extract from archives” service in the way that Patek Philippe or Rolex do. Instead, IWC’s official verification service is the Certificate of Authenticity — and it requires the physical watch to be examined by IWC’s own watchmakers at the Schaffhausen headquarters.
Certificate of Authenticity
Requires physical submission of the watch to IWC Schaffhausen. IWC’s watchmakers examine and confirm the movement serial, case serial, and their correspondence in the factory records. The certificate confirms model type, case, movement, and any notable features. This is the definitive authentication route. Note: the process is time-consuming and carries a cost.
IWC Boutique or Authorised Dealer
An IWC boutique or authorised service centre can initiate a Certificate of Authenticity request and facilitate the submission process. For significant purchases, this is the recommended verification route. The watch must physically travel to Schaffhausen — there is no remote certificate service.
Enquirus (Stolen Registry)
The Richemont Group’s Enquirus platform (enquirus.com) covers IWC and other Richemont brands. Free account required. Checks whether a serial number has been reported as lost or stolen. A clean result does not confirm authenticity — only that the watch has not been reported. Useful as a pre-purchase due-diligence step.
Specialist Watch Buyer / Appraiser
An experienced specialist can evaluate serial format consistency, dial quality, case finishing, and movement characteristics without an IWC boutique appointment. Le Watch Buyers appraises IWC watches across all references and eras — free evaluation, same-day response.
IWC does not maintain a publicly searchable serial number database. Third-party tools claiming to look up individual IWC watches from a database do not have access to IWC’s internal records. The dating table in this guide covers vintage movement serials through 1975 only. For post-1975 watches, for definitive dating, or for authentication confirmation, the only authoritative route is the IWC Certificate of Authenticity process.
IWC Serial Number FAQ
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Get a Free Offer →Le Watch Buyers · Watch Education Hub · lewatchbuyers.com · Serial number dating data compiled from specialist horological literature and crowdsourced production records. Primary reference: Tölke and King, “IWC — Internationale Uhren-Manufaktur Schaffhausen.” All serial ranges are approximations — IWC’s own archives are the definitive source. The assembly lag discussion is based on documented IWC production methodology. “IWC,” “International Watch Company,” “Schaffhausen,” “Portugieser,” “Pilot’s Watch,” “Big Pilot,” “Portofino,” “Ingenieur,” “Da Vinci,” “Aquatimer,” and related terms are trademarks of IWC Schaffhausen AG. Le Watch Buyers is an independent watch buying service with no affiliation with IWC or Richemont.