Buyer verification

Stolen Watch Serial Number Check

Use MyStolenWatch to check whether a luxury watch serial number has been reported lost or stolen before you buy, trade, insure, or accept it.

Why serial number checks matter

A box, receipt, or seller story does not prove clean ownership. A serial number check gives buyers and dealers one more layer of protection before money changes hands.

What to check before payment

Confirm the brand, model, serial number, seller identity, photos, and paperwork. If anything is missing or inconsistent, pause the transaction and run additional checks.

Who should use this page

Collectors, private buyers, watch dealers, pawn shops, insurers, and marketplaces can use the database as part of their due diligence workflow.

Practical checklist

Use this before the watch changes hands

These steps are designed for real transactions: private sellers, dealers, pawn shops, insurance checks, and marketplace purchases.

  1. 1Ask for a clear photo of the serial number before meeting.
  2. 2Match the serial number against the watch, paperwork, and seller invoice.
  3. 3Search the serial number in MyStolenWatch before payment.
  4. 4Avoid cash-only pressure when ownership documents are weak.
  5. 5Keep a written record of the seller and transaction.

Frequently asked questions

Can I check a watch by serial number?

Yes. Enter the brand and serial number into MyStolenWatch to check whether a matching lost or stolen report exists in the database.

Does a clean result guarantee the watch is not stolen?

No database can guarantee that. A clean result means the serial number was not found in the database at the time of the search.

Should dealers check every watch?

Yes. Dealers should check incoming inventory and keep search records as part of a defensible due diligence process.