
Perhaps the most notable difference this year, though, is the price. At $8,625, the Carbon 26 represents a meaningful jump from last year’s $7,575. Whether that’s a function of broader pricing trends, material costs, or external factors, it’s a noticeable shift. With the watch otherwise unchanged beyond the color, it offers a clean one-to-one comparison—and a fairly stark one.
That’s a conversation for another time. For now, the story is Tudor continuing to invest in its F1 partnership, and we’ll likely see these out in the wild this weekend in Miami—on the wrists of Isack Hadjar and Arvid Lindblad, possibly atop a podium.
Tim Jeffreys
2026-04-30 14:01:00

