NEUCHÂTEL, Switzerland — With its 5.6mm-thick profile, the 40th anniversary Integral watch, launched Friday night at a manufacturer event, embodies nothing less than Rado’s competitive advantage: a 40-year track record in high-tech ceramics.
The launch of Integral in 1986 was “the first time an industrially produced high-tech ceramic watch came to market,” said Adrian Bosshard, chief executive of the watchmaker, which is owned by the Swatch Group.
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That moment also came to define Rado’s identity as a “master of materials,” with distinctive designs to boot. The original model combined an edge-to-edge sapphire crystal with high-tech ceramic elements integrated into the bracelet, while the case underneath was protected in steel.
But the Integral didn’t exactly come out of nowhere, despite appearing at a time when ceramics in watchmaking was still largely experimental.
High-tech ceramic was already the second material innovation for the brand, after DiaStar’s “carbide metal” of 1962, which caused potential suppliers to respond “can’t” to initial requests, and emerged from experiments with edge-to-edge sapphire crystal, such as the Florence watch of 1981 and the Anatom two years later.
According to Bosshard, more than 2 million units have been sold since the Integral’s debut in 1986. The watch’s popularity did not fade even as the focus shifted to newer releases. The comprehensive models, which included design refreshes in 2009, 2014 and 2025, also remained part of Rado’s offering during that time, the CEO noted.
Rado
Over the intervening decades, Rado has built up deep experience and industrial capability in ceramics, culminating in 2023 with a high-tech ceramics laboratory in Boncourt, Switzerland, under the banner of Comadur, a hard materials specialist also under the umbrella of the Swatch Group.
The site produces between 80 and 90 percent of Rado’s ceramic-based products, which also include Ceramos, a composite containing 90 percent ceramic with 10 percent metal, and the distinctive metallic ceramic used by the watchmaker, which requires a plasma furnace.
This facility was a significant investment that “took us to a different level in terms of capacity and technology to ensure perfect quality, also for our products in the future,” said Bosshard.
Materials expertise underpins the brand’s positioning in what it calls the “affordable luxury” segment, also located within the “high-end” of the Swatch Group that has competitors such as Tag Heuer, Frédérique Constant and Maurice Lacroix. Rado watches cost between $1,200 and $6,000, with an average price in the range of $2,500 to $2,800, Bosshard said.
High-tech ceramics and Ceramos offerings account for 70 percent of the business. The Swatch Group does not break down figures for its individual brands.
The Comprehensive 40th Anniversary Edition, priced at CHF2,250, is positioned to reinforce the classic and elegant branch of its portfolio, which represents around 45 percent of the business.
The original Rado Integral from 1986
It also represents Rado’s position as a specialist in affordable, highly industrial, globally distributed luxury ceramics, which it plans to leverage for its next phase of growth, which faces a challenging macroeconomic and geopolitical context in 2026.
For Rado, 2025 was “a very positive journey,” with growth in terms of units and value in Swiss francs, Bosshard noted. The currency remains strong, which has generated exchange losses worldwide.
Currently, India and the Middle East account for 42 percent of Rado sales and have shown particularly strong growth. But since the start of the war in Iran on February 28, the Middle East has plummeted sharply, but surprisingly not in Saudi Arabia, he noted.
Meanwhile, the watchmaker is “really going” in India, with “impressive” growth in local currency and Swiss francs. In the price range of 1,000 to 3,700 Swiss francs, where 85 percent of its global sales are located, the brand has a 50 percent market share in the country. Actress Katrina Kaif and actor Hrithik Roshan, dubbed the “George Clooney of India”, are brand ambassadors.
Europe contributes just over a quarter of sales and is “in a positive evolution in local currency,” said the CEO. The “Far East” region, including a currently challenging China, remains important and has long-term potential. Australia, for example, is “doing great,” he said.
Closing out the world is America, encompassing Canada, the United States and Mexico, which now accounts for about 14 percent of business and is a major strategic priority.
The brand only began to “really address the market” in the US about two years ago, but has already seen “double-digit annual growth” since 2020, when Bosshard took the helm. Sales figures are double those of six years ago, he added.
The Integral anniversary was revealed at an event at Boncourt’s high-tech ceramics laboratory.
But American consumers have shown an appetite for Rado, particularly for its ceramic offering, shopping in Switzerland, Dubai or even the Caribbean, the CEO said. The Integral and Captain Cook lines are particularly strong.
Additionally, “watch culture in the United States is growing a lot,” Bosshard added. “Nowadays you see a lot of connoisseurs… and this, of course, works in our favor, because we are a premium brand with a great history, with great assets.”
Latent domestic demand is what Rado now aims to capture by developing its distribution in the United States with new stores and multi-brand partners. Rado has identified gaps in distribution, especially in Florida and the West Coast.
Rado currently has about 2,600 points of sale, up from 4,100 five years ago, as part of a retail consolidation strategy. The brand operates 150 Rado boutiques around the world, a mix of owned and franchised doors.
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