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Why Seiko keeps raising price on NH series Movements

Why Seiko keeps raising price on NH series Movements

 

The rising price of Seiko’s NH series (NH35, NH36, NH34 GMT, etc.) is something a lot of microbrand and modding enthusiasts have noticed over the last few years. Here are the main reasons:


1. Global Demand Surge

  • Microbrand boom: Hundreds of new small watch brands rely on the NH series because it’s affordable, reliable, and easy to service.

  • Watch modding trend: The NH35/36 especially became the default choice for Seiko mods, which added big aftermarket demand.


2. Limited Supply & Capacity Constraints

  • Seiko Instruments (SII/TMI) produces these movements in Japan and Malaysia, but capacity isn’t unlimited.

  • Seiko prioritizes its own watches (like Presage, Seiko 5, etc.), which means fewer movements are left for third-party supply.


3. Increased Production Costs

  • Labor and material costs in Asia have gone up steadily.

  • Higher QC standards and refinements (especially for newer calibers like the NH34 GMT) add cost.

 


4. Currency & Import Factors

  • Exchange rate fluctuations (JPY vs. USD/EUR) make movements more expensive for overseas buyers.

  • Shipping and import costs also rose after the pandemic.


5. Strategic Positioning by Seiko

  • Seiko may be deliberately raising NH movement prices to push microbrands either upmarket (toward Miyota or Swiss movements) or closer into Seiko’s own watch price territory.

  • The NH series became too popular in cheap watches, and Seiko doesn’t want its technology undercutting its own lineup.


✅ In short: demand went up, supply stayed tight, costs rose, and Seiko is controlling the market strategically.