Inhorgenta 2025: Tutima's New Chapter
At Inhorgenta Munich in February 2025, a Tutima watchmaker bent a Breguet overcoil by hand at a workbench on the booth floor. Behind him, a new company, new leadership, and five new models.
At Inhorgenta Munich in February 2025, visitors to the Tutima booth found a watchmaker — Herr Kuge — seated at a workbench on the show floor. Under a loupe, he bent a Breguet overcoil by hand. No recording, no screen. The actual work, performed live.
Behind the workbench, a new structure. Tutima Glashütte GmbH & Co. KG is now an independent company headquartered in Glashütte, led by Matthias Stotz — formerly CEO at Junghans. An extension building on Altenberger Straße is underway, targeting 2027 completion, expanding the manufactory's capacity beyond its current limits.
The booth displayed five new references. Within the Patria line: the Ref. 6612 Titan series, bringing grade 5 titanium to Cal. 617 for the first time. The Mara Safari Chronograph: 250 numbered pieces in titanium, supporting the Mara Elephant Project. An updated M2 Seven Seas S with new FKM rubber strap, 40mm case, 50-atmosphere water resistance, 2.5mm sapphire crystal, and Cal. 330. And the Lady Sky, Ref. 6705-08: a 34mm watch with sage green dial in an Asanoha leaf pattern, Cal. 335, 41-hour power reserve, stainless steel bracelet, priced at €2,200.
The partnerships were visible too. Tutima remains Official Timekeeper of Kieler Woche — a role held for two decades — and of the Hamburg Open ATP-500 tournament. The brand sponsors the Deutscher Aero Club national powered-flight teams and co-founded the Academy of Aviation Safety with aerobatic pilot Sean D. Tucker in King City, California. The Tutima Sailing Team, a 15-person all-women crew, won the ORC World Championship Corinthian division in 2023.
Tutima has built watches continuously since 1927 — family-owned, independent, operating from Glashütte and Ganderkesee. The expansion is not a pivot. It is the same conviction, requiring more floor space.