Common Beginner Mistakes When Buying Your First Microbrand Watch
A comprehensive guide to the 15 most common mistakes first-time microbrand buyers make — from buying the wrong size and panic-buying limited drops to falling for homage traps and ignoring warranty terms.
Steven Thompson
Independent Watchmaker · 10 Years Experience
Reviewed by Indie Watches
Editorially reviewed for accuracy
⚡ Key Takeaways
- ✓"39mm is the 'sweet spot' — must be perfect"
- ✓"If it looks good on Instagram, it'll look good on me"
- ✓"I've worn 42mm Casios before, so 40mm will fit"
📑 Table of Contents
Common Beginner Mistakes When Buying Your First Microbrand Watch #
You're about to click "Buy Now" on a beautiful Baltic Aquascaphe.
📚 Explore our full watches guide →
You've read the reviews. Seen the Instagram photos. The drop launches in 3 minutes.
Your finger hovers over the checkout button...
STOP.
Are you about to make one of the 15 mistakes that plague first-time microbrand buyers?
The microbrand world is incredible — unique designs, killer value, passionate founders. But it's also a minefield of expensive mistakes that cost beginners hundreds (sometimes thousands) of dollars.
I'm not here to talk you out of buying microbrands. I'm here to make sure your first purchase is a good one, not a regret sitting in a drawer.
This guide covers the 15 most common beginner mistakes, from buying the wrong size to falling for FOMO marketing, complete with real examples from brands like Baltic, Farer, Lorier, Studio Underd0g.
Mistake #1: Buying the Wrong Size #
The Scenario: You see wrist shots of the Baltic Aquascaphe 39mm on Instagram. Looks PERFECT. You order one immediately. It arrives. The lugs hang over your wrist. Looks like you stole your dad's watch.
What went wrong: You never measured your wrist or checked lug-to-lug.
Why This Happens #
Beginners assume:
- "39mm is the 'sweet spot' — must be perfect"
- "If it looks good on Instagram, it'll look good on me"
- "I've worn 42mm Casios before, so 40mm will fit"
Reality: Wrist size varies. Lug-to-lug matters MORE than diameter. Different case shapes wear differently.
How to Avoid This Mistake #
Step 1: Measure your wrist with tape or string (below wrist bone). Calculate wrist width: circumference ÷ 3.
Step 2: Check Lug-to-Lug. Golden rule: Lug-to-lug should be ≤90% of your wrist width.
Step 3: Find real wrist shots of your size on Reddit r/Watches.
Size Chart: #
| Wrist Circumference | Wrist Width | Ideal L2L | Ideal Diameter |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6"-6.5" / 152-165mm | 50-55mm | 45-50mm | 36-39mm |
| 6.5"-7" / 165-178mm | 55-59mm | 50-56mm | 38-40mm |
| 7"-7.5" / 178-190mm | 59-63mm | 53-57mm | 39-42mm |
| 7.5"-8"+ / 190-203mm+ | 63-68mm+ | 57-62mm+ | 40-44mm |
For Small Wrists (6"-6.5"): #
- ✅ anOrdain Model 1 (36mm x 43mm L2L)
- ✅ Brew Metric (38mm x 44mm L2L)
- ✅ Lorier Neptune (39mm x 47mm L2L)
- ❌ Halios Seaforth (40mm x 48mm L2L) — borderline
Mistake #2: FOMO Buying Limited Drops #
The Scenario: Lorier announces new Gemini drop. 300 pieces. Launches Thursday 12pm EST. You're at work. You panic-buy. 24 hours later: "Wait, do I even like blue dials? And 39mm might be too small for my 7.5" wrist..." Too late. All sales final.
How to Avoid #
The 24-Hour Rule:
- Before the drop, research FULLY: Do you actually like this watch? Does it fit your wrist?
- If you're unsure, DON'T BUY. Write down why you want it. Sleep on it.
- Remember — They ALWAYS Restock. Lorier: Every 2-3 months. Halios: 2-3x per year.
- Lorier Neptune ($625) — not a Submariner copy, its own thing
- Baltic Aquascaphe ($650) — vintage-inspired, not imitation
- Farer Lander GMT ($1,850) — unique, colorful, unmistakable
- Brew Retrograph ($625) — quirky, fun, totally unique
- Christopher Ward (20 years)
- Halios (15+ years)
- Farer (9 years)
- Lorier (6-7 years)
- Baltic (7 years)
- Serica (6 years)
- Any brand less than 2 years old
- Kickstarter one-off campaigns
- Brands with no social media activity
- 52% of watch Kickstarters fail to fund
- 9% of successful campaigns fail to deliver
- Average delay: 3-8 months past estimate
- Working prototype exists? (Not just renders?)
- Founder identifiable? (LinkedIn verified?)
- Realistic timeline? (Add 6 months to estimate)
- Previous successful deliveries?
- ✅ Warranty length? 5 years = Excellent. 2 years = Standard. 1 year = Red flag.
- ✅ Return policy? 60 days = Excellent. 30 days = Good. No returns = Red flag.
- ✅ Test customer service BEFORE buying: Email simple question. 24-48 hours response = good.
- ❌ "Microbrands are just as good as Swiss brands!" ✅ Reality: Microbrands offer great VALUE, not luxury finishing
- ❌ "I can service this anywhere" ✅ Reality: Common movements yes. Proprietary parts? You're screwed.
- ❌ "Brand will be around forever" ✅ Reality: 50% don't survive 5 years
- ❌ "I can flip this for profit" ✅ Reality: You'll lose 25-40%
- Watch: $640
- Shipping: $35
- Import duties/taxes: $85
- Total: $760 (not $640!)
- Visit watch meetups (WatchUSeek, Reddit)
- Try similar-sized watches at local jewelers
- Borrow from watch library services
- Buy used (you can resell at same price if it doesn't fit)
- "Swiss Made" (can mean 60% Swiss components)
- "In-house movement" (verify independently)
- "Inspired by [famous vintage watch]" (homage language)
- "Limited edition" (may be permanent "limited" production)
- Join r/Watches (Reddit)
- Browse WatchUSeek forums
- Follow watch YouTubers
- Join brand-specific communities
- ✅ You love how it looks
- ✅ It fits your wrist
- ✅ It suits your lifestyle
- ✅ You'll wear it regularly
- Measured their wrist before buying
- Researched for weeks before purchasing
- Bought original designs they genuinely love
- Chose established brands with good service
- Set a realistic budget (and stuck to it)
Truth bomb: Missing a drop feels bad for 2 days. Owning a watch you don't actually like feels bad for 2 years.
Mistake #3: Buying Homages Instead of Originals #
The Scenario: You want a Rolex Submariner. Budget: $500. You discover San Martin makes a $200 Sub homage. Then a Heimdallr version. Then a Phylida. Total spent: $600 on three watches that all look like the same watch you can't afford.
What you could've bought: One original-design microbrand (Lorier Neptune, Baltic Aquascaphe, Brew HP-1) that you'd actually love.
The Alternative Path: #
Option 1: Save for the Real Thing — set aside $100-$200/month.
Option 2: Buy Original-Design Microbrands:
The Rule: Buy watches that stand alone, not watches that stand IN for something else.
Mistake #4: Expecting the Watch to Hold Value #
Microbrands depreciate 20-40% immediately.
| Watch | New Price | Used Market Value | Depreciation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rolex Submariner | $10,000 | $12,000-$15,000 | +20% to +50% |
| Baltic Aquascaphe | $650 | $450-$500 | -30% |
| Lorier Neptune | $625 | $450-$520 | -25% |
| Farer GMT | $1,850 | $1,200-$1,400 | -30% to -35% |
| Christopher Ward C60 | $850 | $550-$650 | -30% to -35% |
Mental Shift: Watches are EXPENSES, not INVESTMENTS. Treat them like cars (depreciate instantly) or clothes (lose value when worn).
Mistake #5: Not Researching Brand Longevity #
Reality: 50%+ of microbrands don't survive 5 years.
Tier 1: Very High Confidence (5-20+ years operating) #
Tier 2: High Confidence (3-5 years, strong trajectory) #
Tier 4: High Risk #
Mistake #6: Kickstarter Gambling Without Vetting #
Statistics:
Before backing ANY Kickstarter:
Mistake #7: Ignoring Customer Service & Warranty #
Quick checklist before buying:
Prioritize brands with good CS reputations: Christopher Ward, Halios, Serica, Farer, Zelos.
Mistake #8: Buying Too Many Cheap Watches #
"If I could only own ONE watch for the next 5 years, what would it be?"
That's the watch you should buy FIRST. Not a $200 placeholder. Not "something to wear while I save."
The $500+ Rule: Don't buy ANY microbrand under $500 UNLESS it's truly unique, you've tried it in person, or you know you'll wear it 100+ times.
Mistake #9: Not Understanding Microbrand Limitations #
Expectations vs. Reality: #
Microbrands are HOBBY purchases, not heirlooms. Buy them because of unique designs, great value, and supporting small businesses. DON'T buy them expecting Rolex-level finishing, worldwide service, or investment returns.
Mistake #10: Forgetting Shipping Costs & Import Duties #
The Scenario: Baltic Aquascaphe: €590 (~$640 USD). But at checkout:
BEFORE buying: Use a duty calculator. Factor ALL costs when comparing.
Mistake #11: Not Trying Similar Watches First #
Before buying online, try to:
Mistake #12: Believing All Marketing Hype #
Common marketing claims to be skeptical of:
Mistake #13: Buying Proprietary Parts/Movements #
If a brand uses proprietary movements or unique case parts, ask: What happens if the brand disappears?
Safe choice: Brands using common movements (NH35, Miyota 9015, Sellita SW200) = serviceable by any watchmaker worldwide.
Mistake #14: Not Joining the Community First #
Before buying:
Community benefits: Real wrist shots, honest reviews, size comparisons, secondary market access.
Mistake #15: Choosing Brand Over Design #
Don't buy a watch because the brand is "hot right now." Buy it because:
The most respected watch in your collection will be the one you reach for every morning—not the one with the most Instagram hype.
Conclusion #
The microbrand world rewards research and patience. The collectors who get the most joy from their watches are those who:
Avoid these 15 mistakes and your first microbrand watch will be a joy for years to come, not an expensive lesson in buyer's remorse.
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