The watch world has been holding its breath for weeks and on May 8, Swatch made it official. The Royal Pop, a confirmed collaboration between Swatch and Audemars Piguet inspired by the legendary Royal Oak, is real, coming soon and landing on May 16th. This is the collaboration the industry has been speculating about since Audemars Piguet’s official Instagram account barged into the Swatch x Blancpain launch conversation with a single pointed question: “When do we start?” That wasn’t a throwaway comment. It was a signal. Now, after weeks of cryptic teasers, leaked AI renders, trademarked names, and newspaper ads with a single date printed on them, the Swatch x Audemars Piguet Royal Pop is no longer a rumor. It is the most anticipated watch release of 2026.
The story of how we got here is worth telling, because Swatch’s campaign for this collaboration has been one of the more carefully crafted pre-release marketing efforts the watch industry has seen. It started in mid-April with a single teasing line on Swatch’s website, ‘The real miracles happen in May’ fell just as every watch journalist was focusing on Watches and Wonders in Geneva.
Below that line: eight colored leather loops arranged in a flower formation, and the familiar X Swatch logo format that previously heralded the MoonSwatch and the Blancpain Fifty Fathoms. Full-page newspaper advertisements followed, showing clips of the Sistem51 movement alongside May 16. Then, on May 6, two posters came down. One said: “Royal.” The other said: “Pop.” Both used the unmistakable Audemars Piguet Royal Oak font. The internet did what the internet does.
Steel Audemars Piguet Royal Pop: Release date, price and where to buy
May 16 is the date. Swatch has confirmed store locations worldwide, with 13 UK locations, including five in London, plus Edinburgh, Glasgow, Birmingham, Manchester and Liverpool. In the United States, 21 stores will carry the release, including New York, Los Angeles, Houston, Las Vegas and Miami. The Saturday launch strategy is not accidental. It’s the same approach Swatch took for the original MoonSwatch in 2022, specifically designed to reach a wider audience outside of working hours and to maximize the social spectacle of a global queue forming simultaneously around the world.
No price has been officially confirmed. The MoonSwatch launched for $260 USD. The collaboration with Blancpain ended up slightly higher. A Swatch x Audemars Piguet release with one of the most iconic names in horology could reasonably sit slightly above both, while remaining a fraction of the Royal Oak’s actual starting price of $24,000 and up. If MoonSwatch’s Blueprint holds up, and every indication suggests it will, you can expect limited initial inventory, queues that form well before opening time, and a secondary market that moves quickly. If you’re seriously considering buying one, now’s the time to make plans.
What the Royal Pop actually looks like
This is where the speculation gets interesting. The design details confirmed so far point towards something that could surprise those expecting a simple wristwatch. The eight colored leather loops, available in light pink, dark pink, light blue, dark blue, light green, dark green, white and black, do not look like traditional watch straps. They look like lanyards, the kind designed to wear something as a pendant around the neck or attach to a bag. That detail, combined with the “Cluck!” sound effect Swatch posted on May 5 and the Pop Swatch reference built into the name itself strongly suggests that the Royal Pop is a pocket watch rather than a wristwatch.
It makes perfect sense. The Royal Oak’s defining visual element is its eight-bolt octagonal bezel, a Gerald Genta design that doesn’t need a wrist to impress. Rendering that silhouette in Swatch’s bioceramic material as a Pop Swatch-style pocket watch that can be worn as jewelry or clipped to a bag expands the collaboration’s appeal beyond just the traditional watch buyer. It’s the same formula that Swatch has used on both previous major collaborations: take the most iconic design element from a prestigious partner, translate it into an accessible, colorful, wearable object and make enough of it to create a cultural event without making so many that the excitement disappears.
Why this collaboration makes sense for both houses
The critics of this collaboration repeat the same argument previously made about the MoonSwatch and the Blancpain partnership. The claim is that collaborating with a mass-market brand lowers the prestige of the luxury partner’s most iconic model. This turned out not to be true for Omega. This turned out not to be true for Blancpain. The Royal Oak is not a fragile legend that shatters upon contact with accessibility. It is one of the most culturally embedded watch designs in history, precisely because it has continued to collect cultural references, including the CasioOak G-Shock phenomenon, the Travis Scott partnership, and multiple Marvel collaborations, without losing any of its desirability.
Audemars Piguet almost certainly spent years looking at those cultural moments around adjacent products and drew the logical conclusion. The close personal relationship between the former CEO of AP François-Henry Bennahmiaswho publicly praised the MoonSwatch concept, and CEO of Swatch Nick Hayek has been visible for some time. The commercial logic is equally clear: AP is capitalizing on one of the most iconic designs ever created, reaching a whole new generation, many of whom will eventually work their way into the real thing. Introducing someone to that octagonal silhouette via a $300 pocket watch doesn’t threaten Royal Oak’s mythology. It’s how that mythology grows.
Featured image: Swatch

