







































You know the feeling. You’ve decided you want a Rolex, you walk into an authorised dealer, and within about thirty seconds, it becomes obvious that the watch you actually want isn’t there. The staff are polite, the showroom is beautiful, and the waiting list they’re adding you to is somewhere between one and three years long. And why would they rush? That’s just how the authorised dealer model works.
That’s exactly the gap Watch Avenue fills. We’re a Sydney-based grey market dealer specialising in Rolex watches, which means we source, authenticate, and sell genuine Rolex timepieces outside the official retail network, with no waitlist, no relationship-building requirements, and no games. Just the watch you want, at a fair market price, with full authentication and a dealer warranty behind it.
Browse our current Rolex collection below, and keep reading if you want to understand the models, the market, and why more and more serious buyers are choosing the grey market route.
Rolex produces a tighter lineup than most people realise. Each family has a clear personality, and within each family there are enough dial, bracelet, and metal variations to make choosing genuinely interesting. Here’s what you need to know about the watches we regularly stock.
The current generation Submariner runs on Rolex’s calibre 3235 movement and is available in two core configurations: the no-date Submariner (ref. 124060) in stainless steel with a black dial and Oyster bracelet, and the date versions (ref. 126610), which add a date window at three o’clock. Date models are available in both all-steel and two-tone configurations, and in black or green bezel and dial combinations. The green bezel version, nicknamed the Hulk in the older 116610LV generation and now continued in the Starbucks reference (126610LV), remains one of the most recognisable Rolex variants in the world.
If you’re buying your first sports Rolex, the Submariner is the obvious starting point. It’s also one of the strongest performers on the secondary market, with popular references consistently holding or exceeding their purchase price over time.
The current GMT-Master II sits at 40mm on an Oyster or Jubilee bracelet, powered by the calibre 3285 with a 70-hour power reserve. The watch really gains its personality from the bezel colourways, and each combination has earned its own community nickname:
The GMT-Master II is one of the most collected sports Rolex models, and the grey market for these references is active and liquid. All of these colourways appear in our collection regularly.
Today, the Datejust runs across three case sizes, which makes it one of the most flexible watches in the collection for different wrist sizes and styling preferences.
Bezel and dial combinations are genuinely endless on the Datejust, which is part of its appeal and, honestly, part of what makes choosing one take longer than you’d expect.
The current Daytona runs on Rolex’s calibre 4131 with a 72-hour power reserve and is available at 40mm across stainless steel, two-tone Rolesor configurations, and precious metal versions in Everose gold, yellow gold, and white gold.
The vintage Daytona market, particularly references like the 6263 “Big Red” we’ve had in stock, is its own world entirely and carries price points that reflect genuine rarity and collector demand.
The current Oyster Perpetual is available in 28mm, 31mm, 34mm, 36mm, and 41mm case sizes, all in stainless steel on an Oyster bracelet. Rolex has been adventurous with dial colours on these, producing vivid options like the Coral Red, Turquoise Blue, Yellow, and Pistachio Green that created genuine secondary market demand when they first launched.
For buyers who want a Rolex that wears simply and cleanly, or for those who prefer the look of a watch without a date, the Oyster Perpetual is often underrated. Pricing in the grey market also tends to be more accessible than the sports references, making it a genuine entry point to the Rolex collection.
The current generation runs in two sizes: the Day-Date 36 and the Day-Date 40. Both sit on a President bracelet by default, though other bracelet options are available. Dial options on the Day-Date are the most extensive in the Rolex lineup, with choices running from simple indexes through to full diamond baguette dials and stone chapter rings.
This is the watch heads of state have worn, which is where the “President’s Watch” nickname comes from. It’s the statement piece of the Rolex collection, and on the grey market it often represents better relative value than the steel sports references because precious metal models are less constrained by AD allocation politics.
The current Explorer runs at 36mm (ref. 124270) on an Oyster bracelet in stainless steel, returning to the historically correct sizing after a period at 39mm. Dial options are limited intentionally, black only on the standard Explorer. Clean, resolved, easy to wear with almost anything.
The Explorer II takes a different direction, adding a fixed 24-hour bezel and a bright orange or white GMT hand designed to distinguish AM from PM in environments without natural light. The current reference 226570 runs at 42mm and is available in both black and white dial configurations. The white dial Explorer II is particularly sought after and appears regularly in our inventory.
The Deepsea (ref. 126660) steps it up considerably to 3,900 metres water resistance, which is not something that’s relevant to most buyers but is genuinely remarkable engineering. It runs at 44mm and sits distinctly thicker on the wrist, with a black ceramic bezel and black dial as standard. There’s also a James Cameron edition with a half-black, half-blue dial that has developed its own collector following.
Both of these references are often available at more accessible grey market pricing than the Submariner because they’re perceived as niche. That perception is arguably wrong; they’re exceptional watches, but it does create buying opportunities.
The Yacht-Master is available in three sizes: 37mm, 40mm, and 42mm. Metal options are more varied than most Rolex sports watches, including all-steel, two-tone, Everose gold and steel, and full precious metal versions. The rubber Oysterflex bracelet is available on certain precious metal references and gives the watch a decidedly modern, casual character.
The Yacht-Master II (ref. 116681) is a different proposition entirely, a 44mm watch with a mechanical regatta countdown timer and a completely different design language. Bold, large, and unambiguously sporty. It’s not for everyone but has a dedicated following among buyers who want something genuinely distinctive.
Available in gold, Rolesor two-tone, and stainless steel configurations, the Sky-Dweller pairs a Jubilee or Oyster bracelet and comes in a range of dial colours. Pricing reflects the complication and the precious metal options, and it tends to attract buyers who want more from a Rolex than a straight time and date display.
The current references run in yellow gold, white gold, and Everose gold at 40mm, with a new case construction and a modified version of the calibre 3255. It’s too early to have a deep secondary market history on this one, but early grey market pricing has been strong, which typically reflects genuine collector enthusiasm rather than speculation.
This is the question that comes up constantly, and it deserves a proper answer rather than the standard marketing version.
The short version is this: authorised dealers sell genuine Rolex watches at official retail pricing, but access to the watches most people actually want is severely restricted by a combination of limited supply and Rolex’s allocation policies. So the grey market exists to provide what the authorised network can’t, or won’t, make available on reasonable terms.
Here’s what that actually means in practice.
What Watch Avenue isn’t is a shortcut that cuts corners. The grey market’s reputation suffers when buyers confuse it with unverified online marketplaces or private sellers with no accountability. We’re a professional dealer with a physical presence in Sydney, and our process is built around giving clients the same confidence they’d expect from any established watch business.
The technical milestones came quickly. In 1926, Rolex developed the Oyster case, the first genuinely waterproof wristwatch case, sealed against water and dust in a way no previous wristwatch had achieved. The following year, Mercedes Gleitze wore a Rolex Oyster during a Channel swim, and Rolex took out a front-page advertisement in the Daily Mail to announce it. That combination of engineered innovation and deliberate public demonstration became the template for how Rolex positioned itself for the next hundred years.
The Perpetual self-winding movement came in 1931. The Datejust, the first wristwatch with an automatically changing date display, followed in 1945. The GMT-Master arrived in 1954 in cooperation with Pan American Airways for use by their transatlantic pilots. The Daytona was introduced in 1963 and named after the Florida motorsport circuit.
Since 1960, Rolex has been a private foundation, meaning there are no shareholders and no quarterly earnings pressure. The company reinvests profits into research, manufacturing, and the philanthropy work of the Hans Wilsdorf Foundation. It’s an unusual structure for a business of this scale, and it’s a significant reason why Rolex operates with the kind of long-term consistency that short-term commercial pressure would likely undermine.
Today, Rolex produces approximately one million watches per year, all manufactured in-house in Geneva and Biel, Switzerland. Every component, from the movements to the cases to the bracelets to the dials, is made by Rolex. That level of vertical integration is genuinely rare, even at the top of the watch industry.
Watch Avenue is a Sydney-based watch expert and advisor specialising in luxury pre-owned and grey-market watches. We work with clients across Australia to buy and sell high-end timepieces. Get in touch with the team to see how we can help you.