The under-£500 category is where a lot of the most interesting watchmaking is happening right now.
With the rise of independent brands, you no longer need to spend thousands to get something well-designed, well-built, and genuinely enjoyable to wear.
The key is knowing where to look.
Here are five watches from independent brands that balance design, build quality, and value particularly well.
1. Studio Underdog — Watermelon Chronograph
Studio Underdog has built a reputation for doing something most brands avoid — making watches that are actually fun.
The Watermelon Chronograph is probably the best example of that.
Underneath the playful dial, you’ve still got a solid mechanical chronograph platform, but the real appeal is in the design — bold, recognisable, and completely different from the usual microbrand output.
It’s not trying to be serious. That’s why it works.
2. Furlan Marri — Mechaquartz Chronograph
Furlan Marri sits at the opposite end of the spectrum.
Where Studio Underdog is playful, Furlan Marri is restrained and vintage-inspired.
Their chronographs take clear cues from mid-century designs, but execute them cleanly with modern proportions and materials.
The use of a mechaquartz movement keeps things affordable while still delivering a satisfying chronograph feel.
3. Roebuck Watch Company — Diviso
Roebuck focuses on clean, everyday design.
The Diviso is a good example of what they do well — balanced dial layout, strong legibility, and a case that wears comfortably without trying to stand out too aggressively.
It’s the kind of watch you can wear daily without thinking about it, which is often exactly what you want.
4. Baltic — HMS 002
Baltic has been one of the standout names in the microbrand space for a while now.
The HMS 002 is simple, but very well judged.
- classic proportions
- clean dial
- automatic movement
- strong overall finishing for the price
It’s not trying to reinvent anything — it just executes the basics extremely well.
5. Lorier — Neptune
Lorier’s Neptune is one of the better vintage-inspired dive watches in this price range.
It leans heavily into classic design cues, but avoids feeling like a direct copy.
The result is something that feels familiar, but still distinct enough to stand on its own.
Final thoughts
There’s no shortage of options under £500.
The difference is in the details.
The brands above aren’t just assembling watches — they’re making deliberate design decisions, and it shows.
That’s ultimately what separates a good microbrand watch from the rest.



