Future doesn't follow the watch market, he moves it. The Atlanta rapper has spent the last decade building one of hip hop's most sophisticated horological collections, treating every red carpet, music video, and paparazzi walk like a wrist-shot moment for the algorithm. His publicly photographed pieces span from a $275,000 Audemars Piguet Code 11.59 Tourbillon to a discontinued rose gold Patek Philippe Nautilus 5711, with a Rainbow Royal Oak and a custom diamond-set Richard Mille thrown in for good measure. The total comes in north of $2.5 million, and that's only what the cameras have caught.
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Audemars Piguet Code 11.59 Selfwinding Flying Tourbillon Openworked

The Code 11.59 is AP's modern attempt at writing a new chapter outside the Royal Oak universe, and the Flying Tourbillon Openworked is its halo piece. Future's example pairs an 18k pink gold case with a black ceramic mid-case, a fully skeletonized movement, and a tourbillon at 6 o'clock that does the heavy lifting visually. He wore it during a Paris fashion week run with a fur coat and Louis Vuitton chain, signaling that he was investing in AP's most experimental collection rather than playing it safe with another Royal Oak.
Audemars Piguet Royal Oak Selfwinding Chronograph "Frosted Gold"

The Frosted Gold finish was developed in collaboration with Florentine jeweler Carolina Bucci, using a centuries-old hammering technique that gives the gold a glittering, almost diamond-pavé texture without using a single stone. This 41mm yellow gold chronograph runs the calibre 4401 with a flyback function and is one of the few AP pieces where the case finishing is genuinely the star, not just the dial. Future has worn it on a yacht in a "Bad Religion" tee with chains hanging from the belt loops, the kind of dressed-down flex that turns a $150K watch into part of the fit.
Audemars Piguet Royal Oak Selfwinding Chronograph 50th Anniversary

Released in 2022 to mark fifty years since Gerald Genta's original Royal Oak, this 41mm 50th Anniversary chronograph carries a redesigned case, a flat tapisserie dial, and a closed caseback engraved with the commemorative oscillating weight visible on the front of the openworked variants. The rose gold and blue combination is widely considered the most desirable colorway from the anniversary release. Future has been photographed wearing it in a tonal grey suit with layered chains, treating it as the dress option in his AP rotation.
Audemars Piguet Royal Oak Double Balance Wheel Openworked

The Double Balance Wheel is AP's flex piece for collectors who already have a regular Royal Oak. It uses two balance wheels mounted on the same axis to improve rate stability, and the openworked architecture turns the calibre 3132 into the dial itself. Future's example is the 41mm steel reference, the most demand-heavy version on the secondary market, paired here with a shirt-and-tie look and a serpent ring that confirms he understands the assignment. The steel skeleton is increasingly hard to find, with most pieces selling well above retail.
Audemars Piguet Royal Oak Double Balance Wheel Openworked Black Ceramic

If the steel Double Balance is the connoisseur's pick, the 15416CE in matte black ceramic is the trophy piece. Audemars Piguet pioneered ceramic case construction at this level, and machining the integrated bracelet to the same finishing standards as steel is what justifies the price tag. The watch has appeared in Future's hand in a leather jacket and durag look with a watch case full of additional pieces, suggesting this is one he carries with him on the road. Black ceramic Royal Oaks routinely trade above $350,000 on the secondary market.
Audemars Piguet Royal Oak Selfwinding "Rainbow"

The Rainbow Royal Oak is the piece Future helped immortalize in popular culture, alongside DJ Khaled and Lil Baby in the "Big Time" video where Khaled rapped, "Rainbow Audemar, bitch, I'm big time." This 37mm rose gold reference carries a bezel set with rainbow-graduated baguette sapphires and a fully diamond paved dial, putting it firmly in AP's high jewelry tier. Production numbers are extremely limited and the piece almost never surfaces at retail, making secondary market values north of $300,000 the norm.

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Patek Philippe Nautilus Chronograph

The 5980/1R is the all-rose-gold execution of the Nautilus chronograph, a 40.5mm flyback with the brown sunburst dial that Patek positioned as one of its most aspirational sport-luxury references. The integrated rose gold bracelet alone weighs more than most steel sports watches in their entirety, and the gradient dial shifts between cocoa and black depending on the light. Future has worn this front row at a fashion show, the kind of seat where every wrist gets photographed and the shot lives on watch-spotting accounts for years.
Patek Philippe Nautilus Chronograph

The 5980R-001 is the leather-strap counterpart to the 5980/1R, swapping the gold bracelet for hand-stitched brown alligator and dropping the wrist weight by close to half. It runs the same calibre CH 28-520 C flyback chronograph and shares the gradient sunburst dial. Future was caught wearing this version while fanning out a stack of hundreds outside what looks like a motorcycle dealership, an image that has lived rent-free on rap-watch fan accounts ever since. The leather strap configuration trades for noticeably less than the bracelet version, making it the value play within the rose gold 5980 family.
Patek Philippe Nautilus

The 5711/1R-001 is the rose gold time-and-date Nautilus, discontinued in 2019 and now one of the most chased pieces in the entire Patek catalog. The 40mm case carries the Calibre 26-330 S C and the brown horizontally embossed dial that gives the watch its tobacco-and-chocolate look on the wrist. Production was always limited, retail allocation almost never happened, and prices on the secondary market have stayed firmly above $200,000 since discontinuation. Future is one of a small group of artists who landed an example before the model was retired, putting him in rarefied 5711 territory alongside collectors like John Mayer and LeBron James.

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Richard Mille RM 67-01 Automatic Extra Flat (Custom)

The RM 67-01 is Richard Mille's slimmest automatic, a 7.75mm-thick tonneau with a skeletonized dial and the calibre CRMA6 micro-rotor movement. Future's example has been customized with aftermarket diamond setting on the bezel and case, transforming the original sport-luxury aesthetic into a fully iced piece. He was photographed with it in Paris while seated under "Les Anges ont la peau douce," wearing a Louis Vuitton cap and tonal grey tailoring. Custom diamond work on a Richard Mille is divisive among purists, but it's a move that fits Future's broader playbook of personalizing pieces to make them his.
Richard Mille RM 11-01 Roberto Mancini Chronograph Flyback

The RM 11-01 Mancini was a limited edition built around the Italian football coach, with bespoke complications including an "extra time" countdown and a green pusher referencing the start of a match. Production was capped at 50 pieces in rose gold, putting Future in a very small club of owners that includes a handful of athletes and watch obsessives. He was photographed wearing it in a brown wool overcoat, the kind of editorial setup that feels engineered to make the watch the focal point. Mancinis trade above $350,000 in the rare moments they hit the secondary market.

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Rolex Sky-Dweller

The Sky-Dweller is Rolex's annual calendar with a dual time zone display via the rotating Ring Command bezel, originally a 42mm dress-sport hybrid that the brand positioned for international travelers. Future's version is a custom full iced-out piece, with the case, bezel, and bracelet fully paved in diamonds while the black dial keeps the original Rolex layout intact. Photographed in a backstage setting with a heavy diamond Cuban link chain, this is the piece that sits closest to the iced-out aesthetic he made his signature in the early 2010s.

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Jaeger-LeCoultre Reverso Tribute Chronograph

The Reverso has been in continuous production since 1931, originally designed for British polo officers in colonial India who needed a watch face that could swivel out of harm's way. The Tribute Chronograph reinterprets the classic rectangular case with a fully skeletonized chronograph movement on the front and a second time zone on the reverse, two distinct watches in one case. Future was photographed wearing it alongside Metro Boomin in matching cowboy hats and tailored suits during the "We Don't Trust You" album rollout, the most overtly horology-literate pick in either of their collections. At a retail of $28,200, it's also the most accessible entry point into Future's collection.

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What his collection tells us
Future's collection is the archetype of the modern Atlanta rap watch portfolio, with one distinguishing trait that separates him from peers: he buys deep into a few brands rather than skimming the surface across dozens. Six Audemars Piguet references, three Patek Philippe Nautilus pieces, two Richard Milles, plus the Rolex and the Jaeger. That's a focused collector's pattern, not a celebrity who lets a stylist pick what shows up at the photoshoot.
Compared to peers, the closest reference point is Drake, who shares the AP and Patek obsession but skews more toward one-of-one Tiffany-blue and Cactus Jack collaborations. Travis Scott runs in similar circles but tends to follow Drake's lead. Future operates in his own lane, treating watches like he treats his catalog, picking a few signature sounds and going deep until the market follows. The Rainbow Royal Oak appearance in "Big Time" is a textbook example: his on-camera flex contributed real demand pressure on a piece that already had near-impossible allocation.
The legacy angle is what's interesting long term. Future's mix of grail Pateks (5711/1R), customized iced-out classics (Sky-Dweller), limited Richard Milles (Mancini), and watch-enthusiast deep cuts (Reverso Tribute Chronograph) reads like someone who started flexing and ended up actually loving the craft. That pipeline, from buss-down to genuine collector, is increasingly common in rap, and his collection is one of the most public timelines of how that journey actually unfolds.
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Future watch collection FAQ
What is the most expensive watch in Future's collection?
The Audemars Piguet Royal Oak Double Balance Wheel Openworked in black ceramic (Ref. 15416CE.OO.1225CE.01) is his most expensive publicly photographed piece, trading around $350,000 on the secondary market. The Richard Mille RM 11-01 Roberto Mancini in rose gold is close behind at approximately $350,000.
How much is Future's entire watch collection worth?
Future's publicly photographed collection is valued at approximately $2.5 million across the 13 references covered above. Private holdings he has not been photographed wearing could push the true total significantly higher.
Where can I buy a watch like Future's?
WatchGuys carries authenticated pre-owned and unworn examples of nearly every reference in Future's collection, including the Audemars Piguet Royal Oak, Patek Philippe Nautilus 5711 and 5980, Richard Mille RM 67-01 and RM 11-01, the Rolex Sky-Dweller, and Jaeger-LeCoultre Reverso. Browse our inventory or contact a representative for help sourcing a specific reference.
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