Last year was a very big one for TAG Heuer. It announced its return as the Official Timekeeper of Formula 1, the TAG Heuer F1 collection made a proper comeback (as a chronograph, too), and we saw plenty of race-ready new references, including watches inspired by three-time champion Ayrton Senna and the Las Vegas Grand Prix.
Unsurprisingly, TAG Heuer remains very focused on celebrating the ever-growing sport of F1, and we’ve already seen a statement of this intent with the arrival of the TAG Heuer Connected Calibre E5 45MM x Formula 1 Edition. As the year progresses, we’re almost guaranteed to see more releases linked to F1.
Now, for Watches & Wonders 2026, it’s all about the legendary Monaco collection. Specifically, with the debut of the all-new TAG Heuer Monaco Evergraph collection, and three exciting new references within the Monaco Chronograph line-up.
TAG Heuer Monaco Evergraph

The headline of this new range within the Monaco collection is the Calibre TH80-00, a movement developed by the TAG Heuer LAB alongside Vaucher Manufacture Fleurier and one that arrives with more than a handful of serious upgrades.
Manufactured using devastatingly precise LIGA technology (which essentially moulds very small, very complex components), the new movement design eliminates “virtually all” springs and levers typically found inside a chronograph movement and replaces them with two flexible bistable components.

One serves to actuate the start/stop function and the other the reset function, but thanks to their flexibility, TAG Heuer promises very little wear and tear over time, ensuring there’s no change in performance or tactility over the years.
In addition to these groundbreaking flexible bistable components, it’s also equipped with a TH-Carbonspring oscillator (for improved magnetic resistance), ticks away at 36,000vph, and serves up a full 70 hours of power reserve when fully wound. If all that wasn’t enough, it’s also COSC-certified for accuracy and arrives with a five-year warranty.


The Monaco Evergraph arrives in two different references, one with a black DLC coating and one in brushed titanium, but both measuring 40mm across and featuring semi-skeletonised dials that reveal with movement within.
They arrive paired with colour-matched rubber straps with textile pattern embossing and are priced at CHF23,000.
TAG Heuer Monaco Chronograph

For the TAG Heuer Monaco Chronograph line-up, we’ve also got an all-new movement in the Calibre TH20-11 that’s based on the long-serving Calibre TH20-00 of previous generations.
It features the same bi-compax layout, date window at 6 o’clock, and 80-hour power reserve as the previous generation, but in a nice nod to the legendary Calibre 11 that debuted in the Monaco in 1969, the crown has been moved to the opposite side of the case to the chronograph pushers.



In total, we’ve got three new references, all cased in grade 5 titanium and water resistant to 100m, but with different colourways including the classic blue with white subdials, green with black subdials, and black with white subdials that feature an 18K 5N rose gold bezel, crown, and pushers.
The full titanium versions are priced at CHF8,800, while the reference with 18K 5N rose gold accents has an RRP of CHF12,300.