Watches & Wonders: Nomos Introduces the Club Sport neomatik Worldtimer in a Classic Colorway


A year removed from last year’s Watches & Wonders, it’s clear that Nomos had the accessible watch of the show, and maybe of the year, with the Club Sport neomatik Worldtimer. Introduced initially in rhodium plated silver and blue dial executions, along with a handful of limited edition colorways that turned out to be incredibly highly sought after, the new Nomos Worldtimer became a bit of a phenomenon among a certain type of watch enthusiast. Over the course of the last year, we’ve seen Nomos return to the Worldtimer a few times with new limited editions, always appearing to sell out quickly. Given the appetite for this watch, it’s no wonder that Nomos would go back to the well a year later to introduce yet another variant. This one, though, immediately feels like the colorway that should have existed all along. 

The new Club Sport neomatik Worldtimer in a white silver plated dial is a permanent addition to the collection. And it should be – this is basically the colorway that defined Nomos through their early years, and the period of time where they really grew as an enthusiast driven brand across the larger Watch Internet. This simple silvery white is, for most people, the dial color they imagine in their head when they close their eyes and think of a Nomos. It’s simple, minimal, and very much core to the Nomos brand identity. While they’ve certainly become known in recent years as being more freely experimental with color (to great effect – I own a multi-tone orange Nomos that I adore) there’s a “back to basics” quality here that I think is really appealing. 

The dial uses color accents in a smart way to draw the attention of the wearer to the complication that makes this watch special. A 24 hour subdial at 3:00 is divided between blue and red hemispheres to easily orient the eye and acts as a day/night indicator. Small red Arabic numerals placed around the dial’s outer edge are meant to help the wearer calculate time differentials quickly and intuitively, and the primary numerals and markers that read out the local time are in gray (and lumed) for easy contrast with the dial’s white base. 

Like the other Club Sport neomatik Worldtimers released in the last year, this one runs on the DUW 3202 automatic caliber. When fully wound, it has a power reserve of 42 hours, and it’s quite thin, allowing for a case height of 9.9mm. The diameter is 40mm, so the neomatik Worldtimer is a very approachable, modern size that fits a lot of wrists, no doubt a huge reason for its popularity. 

Retail pricing on the new Club Sport neomatik Worldtimer is set at $5,580. Nomos



Zach Kazan

2026-04-24 16:30:00