It is one of the most heated debates on r/Watches: should you put your dive watch on a NATO strap or keep it on the bracelet? Both options have passionate defenders, and the right answer depends on how you actually use your watch. This guide breaks down the practical differences, style implications, and safety considerations so you can make the right call for your diver.
Table of Contents
- What Is a NATO Strap?
- NATO vs Bracelet: Complete Comparison
- Comfort and Daily Wear
- Water Performance
- The Safety Argument
- Style and Aesthetics
- Durability and Long-Term Wear
- Cost Considerations
- Best Option by Scenario
- FAQ
What Is a NATO Strap?
The NATO strap originated with the British Ministry of Defence in 1973 as a standardised watch strap for military personnel. It is a single piece of nylon webbing that threads through the spring bars and loops back under the watch case. The key design feature is redundancy: even if one spring bar fails, the watch stays attached to your wrist via the second pass-through. The official specification was dubbed the G10 strap, but the community now calls any similar single-pass strap a NATO.
Modern NATO straps come in nylon, seatbelt-weave, elastic, and even leather. Widths typically range from 18mm to 22mm, and prices span from $10 for a basic nylon to $50+ for premium options from brands like Crown and Buckle or Erika’s Originals. For a comprehensive overview of all strap types, see our watch strap guide.
NATO vs Bracelet: Complete Comparison
| Factor | NATO Strap | Metal Bracelet |
|---|---|---|
| Comfort (hot weather) | Good (breathable) | Can stick to skin |
| Comfort (cold weather) | Good (insulating) | Cold on skin initially |
| Weight | Very light | Adds significant mass |
| Water drain | Slow (absorbs water) | Immediate |
| Spring bar safety | Redundant (watch secured even if bar fails) | Single point of failure |
| Wrist presence | Casual, vintage | Substantial, professional |
| Height on wrist | Adds 1-2mm (sits higher) | Sits flush |
| Versatility | Easy to swap ($10-50 each) | Expensive to replace |
| Durability | Fades, frays over months | Scratches but lasts years |
| Formality | Casual only | Casual through business |
Comfort and Daily Wear
NATO straps are lighter than any metal bracelet, which matters during long days. A dive watch like the Omega Seamaster 300M weighs roughly 170g on its bracelet but drops to under 100g on a NATO. That weight difference is immediately noticeable and can reduce wrist fatigue.
However, NATO straps add height. The nylon passes under the case back, lifting the watch 1-2mm off your wrist. On already-thick dive watches, this extra height can push the total stack past comfortable levels. If your diver is 14mm+ thick (like the Seamaster 300M or Rolex Deepsea), the NATO may make it feel top-heavy.
Bracelets sit flush against the wrist, distributing weight evenly across the entire circumference. High-quality bracelets with micro-adjustment (like Tudor’s T-fit or Rolex’s Glidelock) allow precise sizing that conforms to wrist expansion throughout the day. This micro-adjustment capability is a genuine comfort advantage over a NATO, which offers less precision in sizing.
Water Performance
This is where the comparison gets interesting. A metal bracelet drains instantly when you exit the water. Steel does not absorb moisture, and a quick shake removes residual droplets. A NATO strap absorbs water and can take 30-60 minutes to fully dry, leaving a damp feeling on your wrist in the meantime.
For actual diving, most professional divers prefer bracelets or rubber straps over NATO. The nylon can trap salt water against the case back, potentially accelerating corrosion on watches with lower water resistance ratings. For watches rated at 200m+ with screw-down case backs, this is a minimal concern. For 100m-rated watches, it is worth considering.
The rubber strap has quietly emerged as the best compromise for water use: it dries instantly like a bracelet, weighs less like a NATO, and sits flush against the wrist. Many modern divers now offer rubber strap options from the factory. For an in-depth look at divers across budgets, see our best dive watches under $1,000 guide.
The Safety Argument
The NATO strap’s original military purpose was safety through redundancy. Because the strap passes through both spring bars and loops back under the watch, the watch remains attached to your wrist even if one spring bar breaks. With a bracelet, a failed spring bar means the watch falls off your wrist, potentially into the ocean.
In practice, spring bar failures on quality watches with proper spring bars are extremely rare. Rolex, Omega, Tudor, and other reputable brands use spring bars rated far beyond normal wearing forces. The safety argument was more relevant decades ago with less reliable hardware. Today, it is a theoretical advantage rather than a practical necessity for most wearers.
That said, if you are wearing a valuable watch in genuinely risky environments (actual ocean diving, boating, cliff walking), the NATO’s redundancy provides meaningful peace of mind that costs only $15-$30.
Style and Aesthetics
NATO straps give dive watches a casual, vintage military aesthetic. James Bond wore his Submariner on a NATO in several films, and the look has become iconic. Striped NATO straps (Bond-style, French flag, custom patterns) add colour and personality. The look works best with vintage-styled divers like the Tudor BB58, Seiko SKX heritage models, and the Omega Seamaster 300 (the vintage-styled version).
Metal bracelets give dive watches a more polished, substantial look. They work in professional settings where a NATO would look too casual. A Rolex Submariner on its Oyster bracelet is the archetype of this aesthetic: serious, refined, and versatile from boardroom to beach.
The aesthetic choice often comes down to how you want your diver to read. NATO says adventure and heritage. Bracelet says capability and polish.
Durability and Long-Term Wear
Metal bracelets scratch but last decades with basic care. Polished centre links show desk-diving scratches within weeks, but brushed bracelets maintain their appearance well. Occasional cleaning and link replacement can keep a quality bracelet going for the life of the watch.
NATO straps fade, fray, and stretch over months of daily wear. This is not a defect; it is the nature of nylon. Many enthusiasts consider the worn-in look part of the charm. At $15-$30 each, replacing a NATO strap every 6-12 months is inexpensive. Think of them as a consumable accessory rather than a permanent attachment.
Cost Considerations
A quality NATO strap costs $15-$50. A factory replacement bracelet for a dive watch typically costs $200-$700 (Seiko and Orient) to $1,000-$2,500 (Rolex, Omega, Tudor). This makes NATO straps an attractive option for people who want variety: for the cost of one bracelet, you can have 10-20 NATO straps in different colours and patterns.
Some collectors sell the original bracelet (which retains most of its value) and put the proceeds toward other watch purchases, wearing their diver exclusively on NATO or rubber straps. This is a legitimate strategy that reduces the total cost of a watch collection.
Best Option by Scenario
Everyday office wear: Bracelet. More professional, more versatile across dress codes.
Weekend casual: NATO. Lighter, more comfortable, adds personality.
Beach and swimming: Rubber strap or bracelet. Both drain quickly; NATO stays soggy.
Travel: NATO. Lightweight, easy to swap, and you are less worried about bracelet scratches on foreign adventures.
Maximum versatility: Buy both. Keep the bracelet for professional and dressy situations, and have 2-3 NATO straps for casual and active wear. Swapping takes 60 seconds with a spring bar tool.
For a broader exploration of watch accessories and maintenance, see our watch maintenance guide and the crystal types guide.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, NATO straps are safe for recreational diving. They were designed for military use including water operations. However, most professional divers prefer bracelets or rubber straps because NATO nylon absorbs water and dries slowly. The NATO strap will not affect your watch’s water resistance, but the damp nylon against your skin can be uncomfortable after the dive.
NATO straps can cause minor wear marks on the inner surfaces of watch lugs over time, especially on polished cases. The nylon rubbing against metal creates light scratches that are visible when you remove the strap. For watches with brushed lugs, this wear is virtually invisible. Using a thin piece of heat shrink on the spring bars can reduce this contact.
A NATO strap generally makes a watch appear slightly smaller and more casual than a bracelet. The bracelet extends the visual width of the watch, creating a more substantial look. The NATO’s fabric also sits slightly higher on the wrist, which can make thick dive watches feel top-heavy but makes thinner watches more comfortable.
Crown and Buckle (Supreme and Chevron lines) and Erika’s Originals (MN straps) are the most recommended premium NATO brands. For budget options, Barton Watch Bands and generic Amazon NATOs from Benchmark Basics offer decent quality at $10-$15. The difference between a $10 and $40 NATO is primarily in the hardware (buckle quality) and weave density.
For pure water performance, rubber is arguably the best option. It dries instantly (unlike NATO), is lighter than a bracelet, sits flush against the wrist, and is comfortable in all temperatures. Many dive watch brands now offer factory rubber straps. Aftermarket options from Barton, Crafter Blue, and Uncle Seiko offer excellent rubber straps for $30-$80.
Swapping a NATO strap takes about 60 seconds with no tools. You simply slide it through the spring bars. Removing and reinstalling a bracelet requires a spring bar tool and takes 2-5 minutes. Neither is difficult, but the NATO swap is genuinely effortless. Many collectors keep their dive watch on a bracelet as the default and swap to NATO for weekends or trips.
This article was researched with the help of AI. While we strive to keep all information accurate and up to date, there may be errors. If you notice any discrepancies, please contact us.

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