When Omega released its white ceramic Seamaster Diver 300M Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games in January, it established a compelling visual language for the brand's 32nd edition as Official Timekeeper. Now, as the Paralympic Winter Games open in Northern Italy—a role Omega has held since 1992—the manufacture extends that same design vocabulary to a dedicated Paralympic edition that differs in two deliberate ways. The specifications are functionally identical to the Olympic version we covered in January.
Things to Know About the Watch
The Paralympic Seamaster Diver comes with the same specifications as its Seamaster Diver 300M Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games sibling, but swaps the blue seconds hand for a tri-color version. The case is still 43.5 mm in polished-brushed white ceramic and grade 5 titanium; the laser-engraved frosted dial, with its finger-trace pattern drawn from the "26" of the Milano Cortina emblem, remains, as do the rhodium-plated hands and indexes filled with white SuperLumiNova. The unidirectional bezel with its laser-ablated diving scale in positive relief and the integrated white rubber strap with grade 5 titanium buckle all carry over unchanged.
What separates this reference from its Olympic sibling comes down to two targeted modifications, both executed on the case back and the seconds hand. The varnished central seconds hand trades the Olympic edition's blue gradient for a tri-color transition through red, blue, and green—a direct nod to the three-colored Agitos symbol of the Paralympic movement. On the grade 5 titanium caseback, the stamped emblem now incorporates the Paralympic logo in place of the Olympic rings.
The Movement
Inside, the Co-Axial Master Chronometer Calibre 8806 provides a 55-hour power reserve and is certified to METAS standards, with a magnetic field resistance of 15,000 gauss. The movement features a co-axial escapement and a silicon balance spring—the same technically sound, if familiar, specification that powers the no-date variants across the Diver 300M range, including the 007 "No Time to Die" edition.
Summary & Price
This is not a limited edition, but its production window is inherently constrained by the Milano Cortina 2026 tie-in. Omega has applied the same approach it used for Paris 2024, where the Olympic and Paralympic editions shared a common design platform, with specific details distinguishing each. For collectors who acquired the blue-gradient Olympic version, the Paralympic edition offers the obvious pair; for those who passed on the first release, the tri-color seconds hand arguably delivers more visual interest on what is otherwise a monochromatic watch.
The watch arrives in a dedicated white presentation box—just like its sibling—bearing the Paralympic emblem and the Milano Cortina 2026 logo.
Sticker Price USD 10,500. For more info on Omega, click here.
