The crown of a watch is the small knob on the side of the case, usually at the 3 o’clock position, that you use to wind the watch, set the time, and sometimes adjust the date or other functions.

Quick Scoop

It’s called the crown because it sits like a little “head” on the watch, and in many watches it is also part of the mechanism connected to the movement. On dive watches, the crown is often screw-down to help improve water resistance.

Why it matters

  • Mechanical watches: The crown winds the mainspring and powers the watch.
  • Quartz watches: It’s mainly used to set the time and date.
  • Special watches: It may control extra features like GMT, moon phase, or world time settings.

Common types

  • Push-pull crown: The standard style on many watches.
  • Screw-down crown: Common on dive watches for better sealing.
  • Recessed crown: Set into the case for a cleaner look or added protection.

In simple terms

If the watch dial is the face, the crown is the little side control that helps you interact with the watch.