01 · OriginThe Swiss institute that certifies accuracy.
COSC — Contrôle Officiel Suisse des Chronomètres — is the independent body founded in 1973 by the Swiss watchmaking federation and the five Jura cantons to certify the accuracy of mechanical movements. Headquartered in La Chaux-de-Fonds, with laboratories in Bienne, Le Locle and Saint-Imier.
Its function is singular: apply a standardised test protocol — under third-party supervision — to every movement candidate for the "chronomètre" title, and issue a numbered rate certificate that confirms or denies it has cleared the tolerances. Only movements that pass the test may bear the inscription "Chronometer Officially Certified" on the dial.
The numbers are striking: over two million movements certified each year, the vast majority by Rolex, Omega, Breitling, Panerai, Tudor and Mido. For scale: less than 3% of all annual mechanical watch production goes through COSC.
02 · StandardISO 3159: the norm COSC applies.
The protocol is not a COSC invention: it's the international norm ISO 3159 "Chronometers · Wrist-chronometers with spring balance oscillator", written by the International Organization for Standardization and applied by COSC in its Swiss form. The standard defines seven quantitative criteria that a watch must meet over fifteen consecutive days of laboratory testing.
Tests run at three controlled temperatures (8 °C, 23 °C, 38 °C) and in five canonical positions: two with the balance wheel on a horizontal axis (dial up and dial down) and three with the balance wheel on a vertical axis (crown left, down, and right). The number 5 is not arbitrary: it reflects the most common orientations of a wristwatch over 24 hours of real-world wear.
The norm was first published in 1976 as ISO 3159:1976 and updated in 2009. To date, ISO has confirmed its validity in every periodic review — making it one of the most stable technical standards in the history of modern metrology.
03 · The seven rulesThe quantitative criteria for a chronomètre.
ISO 3159 defines seven quantitative criteria a movement must meet simultaneously. They're listed below in compact form, in the units you'll see both on the COSC certificate and in the WatchScope verdict:
Average daily rate
Mean rate across all 10 test positions over 24 hours.
−4 to +6 s/dMean variation in rate
Dispersion of the 5 positional rates relative to the daily mean.
≤ 2 s/dGreatest variation
Maximum gap between a position's rate and the daily mean.
≤ 5 s/dΔ Horizontal–Vertical
Difference between mean horizontal rate and mean vertical rate.
−6 to +8 s/dGreatest variation between positions
Δmax: gap between the fastest and slowest position rates.
≤ 10 s/dThermal variation
Rate change per degree Celsius of temperature swing.
−0.6 to +0.6 s/d/°CRate resumption
Difference between first and last measurement in the same position (CH).
≤ 5 s/dThe watch passes only if it meets all seven criteria. A single "out-of-spec" reading and no certificate is issued — and to be certified, the movement has to go back to the manufacturer for regulation.
A chronometer is not just an "accurate" watch. It's a watch whose accuracy has been certified by a third-party authority, against a published, reproducible protocol, with a tolerance margin defined by an international standard.
04 · TolerancesWhat "−4 to +6 s/d" means.
The most famous tolerance — the one you'll see quoted most often on forums and spec sheets — is the first rule: the movement may gain at most 6 seconds a day or lose at most 4 seconds a day, on average across all test positions. The asymmetry is deliberate: watchmaking prefers a watch that runs slightly fast (so you're on time by end of day) over one that runs slow.
On a human scale, +6 s/d means your watch gains a little over three minutes a month. The gap between a "normal" mechanical watch and a certified chronometer lies entirely in this: the former can easily drift ±20 s/d, the latter is locked to within ±5 s/d on average.
There are even tighter standards derived from or built on top of COSC:
- Rolex Superlative Chronometer: ±2 s/d after casing (post-COSC, on Rolex's own tests).
- Omega METAS / Master Chronometer: 0/+5 s/d after magnetisation up to 15,000 Gauss.
- Patek Philippe Seal: ±2 s/d (fully replaces COSC on Seal-marked models).
- Grand Seiko Special Standard: ±5 s/d in 6 positions, ±3 s/d on Hi-Beat models.
05 · WatchScopeCOSC on your phone, no lab needed.
WatchScope does not — and does not claim to — have the authority of a COSC certificate. What it has is the technical ability to apply the method: it captures the balance wheel's beat through the smartphone microphone, computes rate, amplitude and beat error in real time, and walks you through the five canonical positions in the ISO 3159 sequence.
At the end of the test, you see the verdict: three rules, three check marks. Average daily rate within −4 to +6 s/d, greatest variation between positions under 10 s/d, beat error contained. If the watch clears the standard, you know. If it doesn't, you know exactly which position let it down and by how much.
What you get isn't an official certificate — but it's the same reading a benchtop Witschi or Weishi would give you. The difference is you run it at home, in five minutes, without leaving the watch sitting in a lab for 15 days.
Who is it useful for?
- For buyers of pre-owned: verify in-store or right after delivery whether the watch is within spec before closing the deal.
- For post-service follow-up: document how the watch ran before and after the intervention, with an objective numerical comparison.
- For collectors: keep the precision history of every piece, year after year, and catch a movement that's starting to drift before it becomes a problem.
- For the curious: finally understand what "average daily rate" means with the watch in your hands.
Try the COSC verdict
on your next watch.
WatchScope is free on Android, and the full COSC test is included in the Pro version. All it takes is five positions and twenty-five minutes.