Super Clone Rolex Day-Date
Day-Date Watches(67)
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date 126331 Ice Blue Motif Dial
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date 126331 Stripe Dark Rhodium Dial
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date 128238 36mm Gold Dial
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date 128238 36mm Roman Numerals
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date 128238 36mm White Roman Dial
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date 40mm Black Dial 128238
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date II 218235 40mm Black Dial Watch
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date II 218235 40mm Chocolate Dial Watch
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date II 218235 40mm Ivory Dial Watch
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date II 218238 40mm Gold Dial Watch
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date II 218238 40mm Ivory Dial Watch
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date 40mm Slate Ombre Dial 228235
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date 40mm Ice Blue Dial 228236
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date 118238 36mm White Dial Watch
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date 118206 36mm Blue Dial Watch
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date 118208 36mm White Dial Watch
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date 118235F 36mm White Dial Watch
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date 118135 36mm Silver Dial Watch
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date 18038 36mm Black Dial Watch
Day-DateSAVE $40Rolex Day-Date 18248 36mm Blue Dial Watch
About the Day-Date
The Day-Date is the watch every U.S. President since Eisenhower has been photographed wearing, and the watch worn by more world leaders, dictators, kings, and prime ministers than any other timepiece in history. We carry 67 of them in stock, in 36mm and 40mm, in yellow gold, rose gold, and white gold. Every famous dial is here: the legendary Ice Blue (real platinum-exclusive in the genuine), the Olive Green Saudi king dial, the real meteorite, the mother-of-pearl, the champagne with diamond markers. Japanese tier from $359, Swiss tier from $999.

Why Every Powerful Person Wears This Watch
Rolex put the first Day-Date out in 1956, and they made one decision that nobody else in the watch industry was making at the time: they would only offer it in solid gold or solid platinum. There has never been a steel Day-Date. Not in 1956, not in 2026, not at any point in seventy years. It is the only Rolex collection in the entire catalog where the cheapest version starts at around forty thousand dollars at the official shop, because the metal alone costs thousands. The watch was designed from day one as a statement piece — a watch you wear to tell other people in the room that you are someone who matters. The engineering excuse for the design is that it was the first wristwatch on earth to display the full day of the week spelled out across the dial at 12 o'clock. WEDNESDAY, not just WED. That was actually a hard mechanical problem in 1956 — the disc that holds seven full English words is significantly bigger than a date wheel, and Rolex spent years getting the mechanism reliable. But the day-of-the-week display was never really the point. The point was the gold.
What happened next is the part of the story most replica sellers don't tell. Within a few years, the Day-Date had ended up on the wrist of almost every powerful person on earth. Eisenhower was the first U.S. president associated with one. Then Johnson, Nixon, Ford, Reagan, the Bushes. But the bigger story is outside the United States. Khrushchev wore one. Castro wore TWO at the same time, one set to Havana and one to Moscow. Saddam Hussein owned several. Muammar Gaddafi owned dozens. Jiang Zemin, the former president of China, wore one. The King of Thailand. The Shah of Iran. Mikhail Gorbachev. The Day-Date is the single most cross-ideological, cross-cultural symbol of political power any wristwatch has ever produced. Communists wore it. Capitalists wore it. Dictators wore it. Democratically elected presidents wore it. The watch did not care. The bracelet that came with it — a three-piece semi-circular link design Rolex created specifically for the Day-Date — was officially called the President bracelet by Rolex itself, and the nickname stuck to the whole watch.
Our 67 Day-Date references cover the modern catalog. The 36mm cases (the 128238 in yellow gold, the 128235 in rose gold, the 128239 in white gold) are the historically correct size — the same size Eisenhower and Khrushchev wore — and they read as classical, dressy, and old-school formal. The 40mm Day-Date 40 (228238, 228235, 228239) was launched in 2015 and is now the bestseller for buyers under fifty because the slightly bigger case looks more modern. Both sizes share the same fluted bezel, the same President bracelet, the same dials. The most-searched dial in the modern Day-Date is the Ice Blue, which in the real Rolex catalog is reserved exclusively for the platinum Day-Date (Rolex made up this rule to keep the color rare — that is why an Ice Blue Day-Date at the official shop costs sixty thousand dollars instead of forty). We carry the Ice Blue dial on every metal at our normal price. The Olive Green dial — the one Saudi King Salman is famous for wearing — is here. The real meteorite, the mother-of-pearl, the champagne with diamond markers, all stocked.
A note on what we copy and what we don't. The case dimensions, the lug width, the fluted bezel, the President bracelet with the correct semi-circular three-piece links, the concealed Crown clasp, the Cyclops magnifier, the dial layout with the day at 12 o'clock and the date at 3, the satisfying click when the day and date both jump at midnight, the weight on your wrist — all of that we get right on both tiers. Where we cut corners is the metal. The real Day-Date is solid 18K gold or solid platinum. Ours is heavy gold plating over a 904L Oystersteel base. The plating is thick, durable, won't tarnish under normal wear, and looks visually identical to solid 18K gold. This is the only honest way to keep a Day-Date replica at $359 or $999 — a real solid gold Day-Date starts at $40,000 because the gold alone is worth $15,000-$20,000. If you put our two-tone next to a real one on a scale, the real one is heavier. If you wear ours every day, no human will be able to tell. The other thing worth knowing is the movement: the real Day-Date runs the Caliber 3255 with a 70-hour power reserve and COSC chronometer certification. Our Swiss tier gives you the 70 hours and the smooth sweep but no COSC. Our Japanese tier runs about 40 hours.
What to Expect
Japanese From $359, Swiss From $999
Two tiers, two prices. Japanese Miyota automatic from $359 if you want the President look at the lowest price. Swiss ETA-clone from $999 with a 70-hour power reserve and the instant midnight day-and-date jump.
Day Spelled Out at 12 O'Clock
The day of the week written in full — WEDNESDAY, not WED — across the top of the dial. The mechanical complication that defined the Day-Date in 1956 and that almost no other watch has ever properly copied.
President Bracelet
The semi-circular three-piece link bracelet Rolex designed specifically for the Day-Date in 1956 and named after the watch itself. Concealed Crown clasp, perfect drape, only on the Day-Date.
Ice Blue Dial Available
At the real Rolex shop the Ice Blue dial is reserved for the solid platinum Day-Date and costs $60,000+. We carry the Ice Blue look on every metal, on both tiers, at our normal price. You skip the platinum cost completely.
Fluted Bezel
The signature Day-Date fluted bezel that catches light from every angle. Available in yellow gold, rose gold, and white gold finish. Same bezel detail on both tiers.
Multi-Language Day Wheel
Day of the week available in English, Spanish, French, German, Italian, and other languages. Standard ships in English; contact us for other language wheels before ordering.
Day-Date Replica — Frequently Asked Questions
Why is the Day-Date called the President?
Two reasons, and the order matters. First: in 1956, Rolex designed a brand-new bracelet specifically for the Day-Date — a three-piece semi-circular link design that nothing else in their catalog used. Rolex officially named it the President bracelet. So the bracelet was called the President before any actual president ever wore one. Second: starting with Dwight Eisenhower in the late 1950s, the Day-Date ended up on the wrist of nearly every U.S. president for the next 40 years. Eisenhower, Johnson, Nixon, Ford, Reagan, both Bushes — they were all photographed wearing one. The two facts collided and the nickname stuck to the whole watch. Today both Rolex and collectors use 'President' interchangeably with 'Day-Date'.
Is the gold real on the Day-Date replica?
No, and here is the honest math. A real solid 18K gold Day-Date at the official Rolex shop starts at around $40,000. Of that price, roughly $15,000 to $20,000 is the raw value of the gold alone — the case and bracelet together weigh about 100 grams of solid 18K gold, and gold trades at around $200 per gram. There is no way to make a $359 or $999 replica out of solid gold without losing money on every sale. So we use heavy gold plating over a 904L Oystersteel base. The plating is thick (much thicker than cheap costume jewelry plating), durable, won't tarnish under normal daily wear, and looks visually identical to solid 18K gold. The Swiss tier uses a slightly thicker plating layer than the Japanese tier. If you weigh ours on a scale next to a real one, the real one is noticeably heavier. If you wear ours every day, nobody can tell, because nobody walks around with a scale.
Should I buy the 36mm or the 40mm Day-Date?
Honest answer depends on your wrist size and what era you want to channel. The 36mm is the historically correct size — the same case Eisenhower and Khrushchev and Castro and the other 1960s leaders wore — and it reads as old-school formal, dressy, and refined. It fits wrists up to about 7 inches comfortably. The Day-Date 40, launched in 2015, is bigger and more modern-looking. It is the bestseller for buyers under 50 because the slightly bigger case has more presence on the wrist. If your wrist is over 7 inches, the 40 is probably the right pick. If your wrist is 7 inches or smaller, get the 36 — the 40 will look big and sit awkwardly under a suit cuff. Both sizes have the same dial options and the same President bracelet.
Which Day-Date should I actually buy?
Buy the 36mm yellow gold with the champagne dial. I know it sounds like the boring choice but this is the watch that became the symbol of power for seventy years for a reason — the warm yellow gold against the warm champagne dial is the single most timeless combination Rolex has ever made, and it is exactly what Eisenhower and the Bushes and Reagan all owned. The Ice Blue dial is the second pick if you want something more distinctive — the icy blue against any of the gold colors is genuinely beautiful, and at the real shop you would have to pay platinum money to get it. The Olive Green is the third pick if you specifically want the Saudi king look, but it is a louder dial than people expect on the wrist day to day. Skip the diamond bezels unless you specifically want a bling watch — they sparkle in photos and look slightly try-hard in real life. Skip the rose gold unless you have a specific reason to want it. Yellow gold and champagne dial. Trust the seventy years of evidence.
What is the difference between the Day-Date and the Datejust?
Two main differences. First, the Day-Date adds the full day of the week spelled out across the top of the dial at 12 o'clock — Wednesday, Thursday, Friday — instead of just showing the date the way the Datejust does. The Datejust only has the date window at 3 o'clock. Second, and more importantly, the Day-Date is only made in solid precious metals: gold or platinum. There has never been a steel Day-Date. The Datejust is available in steel, two-tone, and gold. The Day-Date is the more prestigious and more expensive of the two siblings — historically the watch of presidents and prime ministers, while the Datejust is the everyday luxury watch of executives and lawyers. We carry both as separate collections.
Can I get the Day-Date with the Ice Blue dial?
Yes, on every metal and on both tiers. At the official Rolex shop, the Ice Blue dial is one of the rarest dials in the entire Rolex catalog because it is reserved exclusively for solid platinum Day-Date references — Rolex made up this rule themselves to keep the color rare and the platinum models exclusive. A platinum Ice Blue Day-Date at the official shop costs around $60,000. In our catalog, the Ice Blue dial is available on the yellow gold, rose gold, and white gold case finishes, on both the Japanese tier ($359) and the Swiss tier ($999). You get the platinum-exclusive dial look without the platinum cost, which is one of the strongest reasons to buy a Day-Date replica in the first place.