
Watch Manufacturing Guide
NH35 Movement Explained: Specs, Accuracy & Brand Guide
If you are building your own watch brand, one of the first real decisions you will face is the movement. It is the engine of the watch — the part that actually keeps time — and it shapes your cost, your positioning, and what you can honestly tell your customers.
For a huge number of independent and microbrand watches, that engine is the NH35 movement. If you have looked at automatic watches in the affordable-to-mid range, you have almost certainly worn one without knowing it. This guide explains what the NH35 is, its specifications and accuracy, why so many brands choose it, how it compares to alternatives like the Miyota 8215, and what it means for your own watch project.
What Is the NH35 Movement?
The NH35 is an automatic (self-winding) mechanical movement made by Seiko’s movement division, Time Module Inc. (TMI). It is part of the Seiko NH series — a family of movements designed specifically to be supplied to other watchmakers and brands, rather than used only inside Seiko’s own watches.
In plain terms: Seiko built the NH35 so that brands like yours could buy it and build watches around it. That is exactly why it has become a default choice for the independent watch industry.
A few core things to know about the NH35:
- Type: Automatic, self-winding (it winds from the motion of your wrist)
- Frequency: 21,600 beats per hour, or 3Hz (a smooth, steady sweep of the seconds hand)
- Power reserve: More than 41 hours when fully wound
- Jewels: 24
- Key features: Hacking (the seconds hand stops when you pull the crown, so you can set the time precisely) and hand-winding (you can wind it manually through the crown)
- Date: Date display, commonly used for 3 o’clock date-window designs
The hacking and hand-winding features matter more than they sound. Older budget automatic movements often lacked them, and serious watch buyers notice. The NH35 gives your watch behavior that feels closer to a “proper” mechanical watch.
NH35 Movement Specifications
Here are the core NH35 (NH35A) specifications at a glance — useful when you are planning case dimensions and dial layout for your own watch:
| Specification | NH35 / NH35A |
|---|---|
| Movement type | Automatic mechanical movement |
| Functions | 3 hands with date |
| Frequency | 21,600 vibrations per hour (3Hz) |
| Jewels | 24 jewels |
| Hacking seconds | Yes — stop-second device |
| Hand winding | Yes |
| Power reserve | More than 41 hours when fully wound |
| Movement size | 12 lignes |
| Height | 5.32 mm |
Why So Many Watch Brands Choose the NH35
The NH35 did not become an industry standard by accident. For a brand owner, it solves several problems at once.
It is reliable and widely understood. The NH35 has been produced in large numbers for years. Watchmakers know how to assemble it, regulate it, and service it. When something is this well understood, there are fewer surprises in production.
It is serviceable anywhere. Because the movement is so common, watchmakers around the world can service or repair it. For your customers, that means a watch they can actually maintain for years — not a sealed mystery.
It keeps your price accessible. The NH35 lets you build a genuine automatic watch at a price point that works for a new brand and its customers. You get the appeal of “automatic mechanical” without the cost of a Swiss movement.
It is honest to talk about. You can tell your customers exactly what is inside — a Seiko NH35 automatic — and that transparency builds trust. Many respected microbrands state their movement openly as a selling point.
For watch brands, the movement choice is not only about the movement itself. It also affects case thickness, dial layout, hand fitting, crown position, testing standards and final assembly. As a custom watch manufacturer, SGARIT helps brands confirm these details before production, so the finished watch matches both the design and the target price point.
NH35 Accuracy: What Should Watch Brands Expect?
A mechanical movement is not a quartz movement — it will never be as precise as a battery-powered watch, and that is normal. The NH35’s accuracy is best described as reliable for its price class rather than chronometer-grade.
The movement’s rated tolerance is relatively wide out of the box, but real-world performance depends on several things: how well the movement is regulated, the quality of assembly, how the watch is worn and stored, and temperature. This is why regulation matters. At SGARIT, we regulate mechanical movements in multiple positions before assembly, which helps tighten real-world accuracy beyond the base rating.
The honest message to give your own customers: an NH35 keeps dependable time for an automatic watch in its class, and small daily variation is part of owning a mechanical watch — not a defect.
Pros and Cons of the NH35 Movement
No movement is perfect for every project. Here is a balanced view to help you decide.
Pros
- Reliable and proven over many years of production
- Affordable, keeping your retail price competitive
- Serviceable by watchmakers worldwide
- Strong buyer recognition — customers know and trust it
- Hacking seconds and hand-winding
Cons
- Not ultra-thin — at 5.32 mm it adds some height to the case
- Not a high-beat movement (3Hz rather than 4Hz)
- Not positioned as a Swiss movement
- Date-only by default (if you want day-and-date, the NH36 is the sibling to consider)
- Finishing is functional rather than decorative
NH35 vs the Alternatives
One of the most common questions brand owners ask is how the NH35 compares to other movements. Here is an honest overview.
NH35 vs Miyota 8215
The Miyota 8215 (made by Citizen) is one of the NH35’s closest rivals — another Japanese automatic movement widely used by independent brands. Older 8215 movements were often known as non-hacking, while Miyota’s current 8215 specification includes a stop-second device. In practice, the NH35 is still especially popular among microbrands because of its strong buyer recognition, broad parts compatibility, and familiar use in affordable automatic watches. The Miyota 8215 remains a proven workhorse, but the NH35 is often the easier choice when a brand wants a movement customers already recognize.
NH35 vs NH34, NH36 and NH38
These are siblings in the same Seiko NH family, each with a twist:
- NH34: Adds a GMT function (a second time-zone hand)
- NH36: Like the NH35 but with a day-and-date display instead of date only
- NH38: A version without a date, often chosen for open-dial designs
So if your design calls for a day-date window, the NH36 may suit you better; for a clean no-date dial, the NH38. The NH35 sits in the middle as the versatile, date-only standard.
NH35 vs Swiss Movements
Swiss movements such as Sellita and ETA sit at a higher tier — and a higher cost. They are the right choice when your brand positions itself as premium and your customers expect “Swiss made” components. The NH35 is not trying to compete with them; it serves the accessible and mid-range market where most new brands begin. Many brands start with the NH35 and introduce a Swiss-powered line later, as they grow.
Who Should Choose the NH35?
The NH35 is a great fit for many brands — but not all. It is well suited to:
- First-time founders launching their first automatic watch
- Dive, field, dress, minimalist and sport automatic designs
- Brands that want to control cost while still offering a real automatic watch
It is less suited to ultra-thin watches, high-end Swiss positioning, or complex complications. If you are not sure whether the NH35 fits your concept, you can start from one of our ready ODM designs or a fully custom build — and we will advise on the right movement either way.
Planning an NH35 automatic watch? Send us your target style, budget and order quantity — SGARIT can help you confirm the right movement and production solution.
Ask for Movement AdviceWhat the NH35 Means for Your Watch Project
If you are planning an OEM watch project with SGARIT, the NH35 is one of the movements we work with most often, and for good reason — it fits the independent brands we build for.
Here is how it fits into a real project:
- Customization around the movement: The movement is the engine, but everything around it is yours — the dial, hands, case, crystal and strap. An NH35 can sit inside a dress watch, a dive watch, a field watch or a minimalist design.
- Movement regulation: We regulate mechanical movements in multiple positions before assembly, so your watches leave the factory keeping reliable time.
- Documented sourcing: We can document movement sourcing for your records, so you know exactly what is inside the watches carrying your brand.
- Right movement for your positioning: If the NH35 is not the best fit — for example, if you want a day-date (NH36), a GMT (NH34), or Swiss positioning — we will recommend the movement that matches your target price and customer.
The goal is simple: the right engine for the watch you are trying to build, explained honestly, with no surprises.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the NH35 a good movement?
Yes — for its purpose. It is a reliable, serviceable automatic movement that has earned the trust of countless independent brands. It is not a luxury Swiss movement, and it is not trying to be. For accessible and mid-range automatic watches, it is one of the most sensible choices available.
Is the NH35 made by Seiko?
Yes. It is produced by Time Module Inc. (TMI), Seiko’s movement-manufacturing division, and supplied to watchmakers and brands worldwide.
How accurate is the NH35 movement?
The NH35 is generally considered reliable for affordable and mid-range automatic watches. Actual performance depends on regulation, assembly quality, wearing habits and testing standards. With proper regulation in multiple positions, real-world accuracy is typically better than the base rating.
Does the NH35 hack and hand-wind?
Yes — both. The seconds hand stops when you pull the crown (hacking), and you can wind it manually (hand-winding). These features are part of why it is so popular.
Is the NH35 better than the Miyota 8215?
Both are proven Japanese automatic movements. The NH35 is often preferred by microbrands because of its buyer recognition, common use and broad compatibility, while the Miyota 8215 remains a durable and affordable alternative. The best choice depends on your design and positioning.
What is the difference between the NH35 and NH36?
The NH35 has a date-only display; the NH36 adds a day-and-date display. Mechanically they are otherwise very similar.
Is the NH35 suitable for a custom dive watch?
Yes. The NH35 is commonly used in automatic dive-style watches, provided the case, crown, gasket, crystal and water-resistance testing are properly engineered.
Can I build my own brand of watch with an NH35?
Yes. The NH35 is specifically designed to be used by other brands. As a watch manufacturer, SGARIT builds custom automatic watches around the NH35 and other movements, with a low MOQ from 50 pieces — so you can launch your own line without an enormous first order.
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