SKX007 Mod Guide: From Stock Diver to Custom Masterpiece
The Seiko SKX007 is the most modded watch on earth. Here's everything you need: parts, costs, common builds and how to get yours done without breaking it.
The Seiko SKX007 is the most modded watch in the world. Discontinued in 2019 but still everywhere on the second-hand market, this 200m dive watch is the perfect donor: rugged 4R36 movement (or 7S26 on older units), 42 mm steel case, screw-down crown. And once you start modding it, you can turn it into almost anything — from a Submariner homage to a full-blown custom design.
Why the SKX007 became the modder's favourite
- Affordable: $200–350 used, far less than a NH35-only donor
- Solid spec out of the box: screw-down crown, 200m WR, hardlex crystal, day-date
- Endless aftermarket: dials, bezels, hands, crystals, cases — every part has 50+ options
- Forgiving: the 4R36 movement is easy to service and replace
If you can only mod one watch in your life, it's this one.
The most common SKX mods (ranked)
1. Submariner / Sub-Style Mod
The classic. Black dial with applied indices, ceramic bezel insert (often blue or black), Mercedes hands, sapphire crystal, oyster or jubilee bracelet. Total cost: $400–600. Looks like a Submariner, costs 5% of one. This is essentially what our SUB MOD collection covers.
2. Pepsi GMT Mod
The SKX doesn't have a true GMT complication, but the GMT look (red/blue bezel insert) is wildly popular. With a Pepsi sapphire bezel insert and Mercedes hands, you get the Rolex GMT-Master II aesthetic for around $350. See our GMT MOD line.
3. Black-out / Stealth Mod
PVD-coated case, full-black dial, blacked-out hands, black bezel. Modern, low-profile, surprisingly hard to photograph well. Around $450 fully built.
4. Vintage / Tropical-Brown Mod
Faded dial, gold accents, old-radium lume, leather strap. For collectors who want Speedmaster vibes on a Seiko base.
5. Skeletonised / Exhibition Caseback
Display caseback replaces the standard one, showing the NH35 rotor in motion. Add a skeleton dial and you get a fully transparent build. Niche but stunning.
Parts checklist for an SKX mod
| Part | Typical cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Donor SKX007 (used) | $180–280 | Eternal grey market |
| Sapphire crystal (double-domed AR) | $40–80 | Single biggest visual upgrade |
| Ceramic bezel insert | $25–60 | Available in 30+ colours |
| Dial | $30–120 | Most personal choice |
| Hands set | $25–60 | Lume must match dial |
| Caseback (display optional) | $20–50 | Skip if going stealth |
| Bracelet (jubilee/oyster) | $40–120 | Or use leather |
| Build labour (if outsourced) | $80–150 | Skip if you have tools and patience |
Realistic total: $400–800 for a finished, well-built SKX mod.
Should you DIY or buy ready-made?
DIY pros:
- Cheaper if you already own the tools
- Total creative control
- The build process itself is half the fun
DIY cons:
- Specialised tools (case-back wrench, hand-puller, dust-free space)
- Easy to scratch dial or break a stem on your first try
- No warranty when something goes wrong
If you're new to modding, buy a finished mod first — learn what you actually want from a real watch, then DIY your second build. We finish all our SUB MOD and GMT MOD builds in-house, with 1-year warranty.
SKX vs SRPD / Seiko 5: which is the better donor?
The SKX is discontinued. Its successor is the SRPD (Seiko 5 Sports). The SRPD shares the same 42 mm case dimensions and uses the better 4R36 movement standard. For new builds in 2026, the SRPD is usually the smarter donor — easier to source, fresh from the factory.
The bottom line
The SKX007 is iconic, but modding has evolved. Today, most premium builds use a fresh NH35-based case (like the donors we use) rather than gutting an old SKX. The result: tighter tolerances, better water resistance, and no risk of buying a tired second-hand donor.
→ Browse our finished mods, or build your own in the configurator.
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