The Swatch x Audemars Piguet Royal Pop collaboration is officially here, and it is not the Royal Oak wristwatch many collectors expected. Instead, the two brands have introduced a colourful collection of Royal Oak-inspired pocket watches.
The release marks one of the most surprising watch collaborations of 2026 and follows the success of previous Swatch partnerships with Omega and Blancpain.
The Royal Pop is a new collaboration between Swatch and Audemars Piguet inspired by two very different parts of watch history: the Audemars Piguet Royal Oak and the Swatch Pop collection.
Rather than launching as a traditional wristwatch, the Royal Pop is designed as a pocket watch or wearable accessory. It can be carried in a pocket, attached to a lanyard, clipped to a bag, or used as a small desk clock.
This makes it very different from the MoonSwatch, which was a more direct reinterpretation of Omega’s Speedmaster.
The design is immediately recognizable. The Royal Pop uses key visual elements associated with the Royal Oak, including the octagonal bezel, exposed screws, and tapisserie-style dial.
However, the execution is pure Swatch.
The watches are made in brightly coloured Bioceramic cases and are offered in several playful colour combinations. The result is not a substitute for a Royal Oak, but a more casual, accessible object built around one of the most famous designs in modern watchmaking.
One of the most interesting details is the movement. The Royal Pop is powered by a manually wound SISTEM51 mechanical movement.
This gives the release more mechanical interest than the original MoonSwatch, which used a quartz movement. The movement offers a power reserve of more than 90 hours and is partly visible through the caseback.
The watches measure 40mm without the clip and 44.2mm by 53.2mm when mounted in the holder. They also feature Super-LumiNova on the hands and indices.
The Swatch x Audemars Piguet Royal Pop will be available from May 16, 2026, at selected Swatch stores.
The Lépine-style version is priced at $400, while the Savonette-style version is priced at $420.
Availability is expected to be limited at launch, with one watch available per person, per day, per store.
At first glance, the collaboration may seem surprising. Audemars Piguet is one of the most prestigious names in Swiss watchmaking, while Swatch is known for colourful, accessible watches.
But strategically, the collaboration makes sense.
The Royal Oak is one of the most recognizable watch designs in the world, but it remains inaccessible to most people. By working with Swatch, Audemars Piguet can introduce elements of its design language to a much wider audience without creating a lower-priced Royal Oak wristwatch.
The pocket watch format is important here. It allows the collaboration to reference the Royal Oak without competing directly with the real thing.
The Royal Pop shows how luxury watch brands are thinking differently about culture, visibility, and younger consumers.
The goal is not simply to sell a cheaper version of an expensive watch. It is to create attention, conversation, and emotional connection around a brand.
This strategy worked extremely well with the MoonSwatch. Whether Royal Pop reaches the same level of demand remains to be seen, but the launch has already created significant debate among collectors.
Some see it as fun and creative. Others see it as too playful for a brand like Audemars Piguet.
Either way, that discussion is part of the point.
The Swatch x Audemars Piguet Royal Pop is not the affordable Royal Oak wristwatch many expected. It is something stranger, more playful, and arguably more strategic.
By choosing a pocket watch format, Audemars Piguet avoids making a direct mass-market version of the Royal Oak while still participating in one of the biggest collaboration trends in modern watchmaking.
For collectors, the Royal Pop may be divisive. For the wider watch market, it is another clear sign that heritage brands are no longer only competing through tradition, scarcity, and craftsmanship.
They are also competing for cultural relevance.