Scott Disick built his fame on extravagance, and his watch collection delivers on every part of the Lord Disick reputation. The reality TV personality known from Keeping Up With the Kardashians has parlayed 28 million Instagram followers and a sharp eye for value into one of celebrity culture's most underrated wrist games, anchored by holy grail pieces from Patek Philippe Nautilus, Audemars Piguet Royal Oak, and Rolex Daytona. He has also proven he understands the market, famously flipping a Richard Mille for over $350,000 in profit to help fund his speed boat. Across 15 publicly photographed pieces, Scott's collection sits at approximately $2.1 million.
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Patek Philippe Nautilus 5980/1R chronograph

Scott's choice for a daily wearer is nothing short of a holy grail for collectors. Crafted from 18k rose gold with a rich black dial, this 40.5mm powerhouse represents the absolute peak of the luxury sports watch. Its standout feature is the elegant monocounter chronograph subdial at 6 o'clock, maintaining a clean aesthetic despite its complex engineering. It is a masterclass in stealth wealth that is not particularly stealthy, and that is exactly why it fits Disick perfectly.
Patek Philippe Nautilus 5711/1A blue dial

The 5711/1A in stainless steel with the famous blue gradient dial is the reference that turned the Nautilus from an insider's pick into a full-blown cultural icon. It was discontinued by Patek in 2021, immediately turning an already impossible to buy reference into one of the most chased pieces in the entire watch market. Scott's example sits at the center of the collection as a benchmark piece, the kind of watch most collectors spend years trying to land at retail and never do. Its market value tells the story of just how badly the secondary market still wants it.
Patek Philippe Nautilus 5711/1R rose gold

Scott's second 5711 takes the icon and dresses it for dinner. The 5711/1R pairs an 18k rose gold case and matching integrated bracelet with a chocolate brown dial that reads warmer in person than any photo suggests. Owning both the steel and the rose gold version of the same reference is the kind of move that signals real Patek Philippe commitment, since most collectors stop at one. It is a textbook luxury sports watch, and it carries a market value of approximately $180,000.
Patek Philippe Aquanaut Travel Time 5164R

The Aquanaut 5164R Travel Time features a 40.8mm 18k rose gold case paired with a brown tropical rubber strap that elevates the sport DNA of the Aquanaut without losing its rough edges. Scott's example sits perfectly at the intersection of sporty and sophisticated, with dual time zone pushers integrated into the case for the world traveler crowd. This reference was discontinued in 2024, instantly upgrading it from production piece to a highly collectible model. It currently holds a market value of approximately $175,000.
Patek Philippe Complications 5070J

The Patek Philippe Complications 5070J is the connoisseur pick of the collection, a watch with a vintage feel that reads completely differently than the modern Nautilus and Aquanaut around it. Produced from 1998 to 2007, it features a 42mm 18k yellow gold case, black dial with gold applied Breguet numerals, leaf hands, and warm case tones that give it that unmistakable late 90s Patek elegance. Choosing the 5070J over another sport piece signals a collector who knows what they actually like rather than what is trending. It carries a market value around $100,000.

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Audemars Piguet Royal Oak 25829PT openworked perpetual calendar

The platinum 25829PT is the most expensive watch in Scott's entire publicly photographed collection. Produced from 1996 to 2013, this 39mm openworked perpetual calendar is one of just 156 examples ever made in platinum, putting it firmly in grail territory for serious Royal Oak collectors. The skeletonized dial reveals the perpetual calendar mechanism in motion, with day, date, month, leap year, and moonphase all displayed across an architectural lattice of bridges. It carries a market value of approximately $325,000, and at that level, it is the kind of watch that does not appear at auction often.
Audemars Piguet Royal Oak 25829OR openworked perpetual calendar

Scott owns the pink gold counterpart of the same openworked perpetual calendar reference, the 25829OR, with only 174 examples produced. Sharing the same 39mm classical case favored by Royal Oak purists, the pink gold version reads warmer than the platinum, and the contrast between the rose-toned bridges and the openworked architecture changes the personality of the watch entirely. Owning both the platinum and the pink gold version of this reference is the move of someone who treats the Royal Oak as an investment grade study, not just a flex. It currently holds a market value of approximately $250,000.
Audemars Piguet Royal Oak 15400OR

The 15400OR is the everyday Royal Oak that defined what the model means in modern celebrity culture. The 41mm rose gold case and matching integrated bracelet pair with a black tapisserie dial in a combination that has appeared on the wrists of athletes, rappers, and actors for over a decade. Compared to the openworked 25829 references, this is the relaxed daily wear version of the Royal Oak, the one Scott reaches for when he does not want to wear a six-figure complication to lunch. It has a market value around $90,000.

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Rolex Daytona 116568BR mother of pearl baguette

Scott's most visually striking piece is an off-catalog Daytona reference 116568BR. It pairs an 18k yellow gold case with a mother of pearl dial set with diamond hour markers, all framed by a bezel of baguette-cut diamonds. Rolex does not publicly list watches like this. They are reserved exclusively for top tier VIP clients, and the factory baguette bezel is the telltale sign of an unlisted, ultra-exclusive build. Given the iridescent dial and the high-grade gemstones, this piece holds a market value of approximately $265,000. What is the value of my Rolex?
Rolex Daytona 116509 meteorite

This 18k white gold Rolex Daytona meteorite 116509 features a rare meteorite dial paired with contrasting black subdials. Rolex creates these dials by slicing, polishing, and acid washing authentic pieces of iron meteorite to reveal each piece's unique Widmanstätten pattern. Because no two slices of meteorite are identical, every watch is a one-of-one piece, which is exactly why investors and collectors have pushed values relentlessly upward. This reference currently holds a market value of approximately $50,000.
Rolex Daytona 126508 "John Mayer 2.0"

The Rolex Daytona John Mayer 2.0 was released in 2025 as the updated version of the original green-dial yellow gold Daytona that John Mayer made famous. The refresh features a brighter green dial and solid gold subdials, both of which sharpen the contrast against the 18k yellow gold case in a way the original could not match. It also runs on Rolex's updated calibre 4131, while keeping the gold case proportions that made the first version a cult favorite. It carries a market value around $90,000.
Rolex Daytona 116528 "Paul Newman" tribute

Scott's Rolex Daytona Paul Newman 116528 confirms what the rest of the collection already suggests, that he has an affinity for gold cases paired with unique or unconventional dials. This 18k yellow gold piece runs a black dial with white index hour markers, gold subdials, and the red accents that give the Paul Newman style its instantly recognizable signature. Modern Paul Newman dial Daytonas tend to hold their market value well, since they bridge the vintage Paul Newman cult with contemporary movement reliability. It carries a value around $45,000.
Rolex Daytona 116500LN "Panda"

Even with seven and eight figure pieces in rotation, Scott still owns the classic Rolex Daytona Panda 116500LN. The white dial and black subdials make it a holy grail for the broader collector community, the Daytona that everyone wants to own first. It is also the most attainable piece in Scott's lineup, the stainless steel reminder that taste is not just about how much you spend. It carries a market value around $35,000.
Rolex Day-Date 228238 "Money Green"

Scott's love of green-dial Rolex watches continues with his Rolex Day-Date 228238 in the Money Green colorway. He prefers the flat green over the ombré version, since the solid color reads more striking against the 18k yellow gold case and gold Roman numeral hour markers. This is the Day-Date in its most classically luxurious form, the 40mm President bracelet doing exactly what it has done for over six decades. It has a market value of approximately $70,000.
Rolex Day-Date 228206 platinum

The Rolex Day-Date 228206 is the platinum President, fitted here with the signature ice blue dial that Rolex reserves for platinum-cased watches only. Scott prefers the smooth bezel over the fluted, noting that the smooth bezel is what makes the platinum model feel quieter and more deliberate, less ostentatious than its yellow gold sibling. This is the watch you wear when you do not need anyone in the room to notice the watch. It has a market value up to $80,000.

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What his collection tells us
Scott Disick's collection reads like the work of a buyer who treats watches the same way he has treated real estate, fashion, and nightlife, as assets first and accessories second. The split is telling. Five Patek Philippes, three Audemars Piguets, and seven Rolexes, with a clear preference for gold cases, unusual dials, and references that have either been discontinued or were never publicly listed in the first place. The Richard Mille flip he mentioned, a clean $350,000 in profit on a single watch, is the giveaway that this is not a casual hobby. He is paying attention to what is rising and what is stalling.
Compared to peers in his orbit, the collection lands in its own lane. Most reality and lifestyle figures lean almost entirely on Rolex, with maybe a single Patek Nautilus as the trophy piece. Scott is going further, building meaningful depth in Patek Philippe, including the dressier 5070J Complications that almost nobody on Instagram is wearing, and pulling rare openworked Royal Oak references that read as serious-collector territory rather than celebrity-purchase territory. The two openworked perpetual calendar Royal Oaks, the platinum 25829PT and the pink gold 25829OR, are pieces that real collectors track for years before one becomes available.
What Scott's collection ultimately signals is taste calibrated by access. He has the relationships to land off-catalog VIP pieces like the baguette mother of pearl Daytona, the budget to chase production-limited grails, and the discipline to balance them with attainable icons like the steel Panda Daytona. It is a roadmap for how to build a collection at this level, lead with rarity, anchor with classics, and never stop watching the secondary market.
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