Patek Philippe database
Stolen Patek Philippe Database
Patek Philippe watches can carry major financial risk in secondary sales. Run a stolen watch search before completing a transaction.
High-value watches need stronger checks
For Patek Philippe, even one missed ownership issue can be expensive. Serial number checks should be part of every serious purchase.
Documents are not enough
Papers, boxes, and service documents help build confidence, but they do not replace a stolen database check and seller verification.
For collectors and trade professionals
Collectors, brokers, auction consignors, and dealers can use MyStolenWatch as one part of pre-transaction due diligence.
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.
- 1Verify the serial number before payment.
- 2Review ownership documents and service history.
- 3Confirm seller identity and authority to sell.
- 4Use escrow or a trusted dealer for high-value purchases.
- 5Keep a full due diligence record.
Frequently asked questions
Can I check a Patek Philippe serial number?
Yes. Search the serial number in MyStolenWatch to see whether a matching lost or stolen report exists.
Do auction houses check stolen databases?
Many professional sellers perform due diligence, but buyers should still ask what checks were performed and keep records.
What if the seller will not share the serial number?
For a high-value Patek Philippe purchase, refusal to provide enough details for due diligence is a serious warning sign.