Point your camera at any wrist. Tokei.ID reads the dial, bezel and case — then names the brand, model, reference and movement in seconds.
Frame the watch through Tokei.ID's camera. Any angle, any lighting — on the wrist or on a table.
AI vision reads the dial layout, hands, bezel and case to recognise the watch — usually in a few seconds.
Get the full dossier — reference, movement, production years, lineage and an estimated secondary-market value range.
From the maison down to the exact line and generation — including discontinued and limited variants.
The precise reference and case-back code, so you know exactly which production run you're looking at.
Automatic, manual, quartz or spring-drive — with the caliber, power reserve and complications.
Estimated production years and notable dial or bezel changes that date a specific piece.
An estimated secondary-market value range, so you get a ballpark figure at a glance.
Save every identification to a private vault — build a catalogue of grails, owned pieces and the ones that got away.
Sign in with Google, point your camera, drop a photo — Tokei.ID returns the brand, reference, movement and a market value range.
Tokei.ID is a watch identifier that names any watch from a single photo. Point your camera at a dial — on the wrist, in a case or in a listing — and our AI reads the dial layout, hands, bezel and case to identify the brand, model, reference number and movement in seconds. It's the fastest way to answer “what watch is this?” without trawling forums.
Every identification comes with the details collectors actually want: the precise reference, caliber and complications, estimated production years, and an estimated secondary-market value range. Identify a vintage Seiko, a modern Rolex, a microbrand diver or a dress quartz — Tokei.ID reads the watch in the photo, no fixed catalogue to browse.
Save each result to a private vault, build a collection, and share any piece to a public page. Curious what others are identifying? Browse the recently identified watches feed, or open the watch identifier and scan your first watch free — no card required.