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Grand Seiko Spring Drive UFA Ushio 300 Diver Review 2026: SLGB023 & SLGB025

In-depth review of the Grand Seiko Spring Drive UFA Ushio 300 Diver (SLGB023 & SLGB025) — the brand’s best dive watch yet. 40.8mm titanium case, Calibre 9RB1 with ±20 sec/year…

The Grand Seiko Spring Drive U.F.A. Ushio 300 Diver — references SLGB023 and SLGB025 — is the most significant dive watch Grand Seiko has ever made. Launched at Watches & Wonders Geneva 2026, the new Ushio 300 pairs a compact 40.8mm Evolution 9 titanium case with the brand-new Calibre 9RB1, delivering ±20 seconds per year accuracy and 300 metres of water resistance at a retail price of $12,400 USD.

Note: Specs and pricing current as of June 2026. Always confirm with an authorised Grand Seiko retailer before purchase.

In This Review:
  1. Quick Verdict
  2. Spring Drive UFA: The Technology
  3. Design & Case
  4. Dial & Finishing
  5. Calibre 9RB1 Movement
  6. SLGB023 vs SLGB025: Which to Choose?
  7. How It Compares to the Competition
  8. Price & Value
  9. FAQ

Quick Verdict

The Ushio 300 Diver is what Grand Seiko collectors have been asking for since the brand’s dive watches began: a moderately sized case, serious depth rating, and the brand’s most accurate movement. The 40.8mm diameter is a genuine size reduction from the 43.8mm SLGA015 it effectively supersedes, the 300m water resistance finally clears the bar for genuine dive use, and ±20 seconds per year is class-leading accuracy for any mainspring-powered wristwatch.

At $12,400, it is not an impulse buy. But for a watch that combines Japanese finishing craft with horological innovation found nowhere else, it is priced fairly against equivalents from Rolex, Omega, and Patek Philippe. For serious collectors considering a dive watch with genuine technical substance, the Ushio 300 belongs at the top of the shortlist.

Specification SLGB023 (Ushio Blue) SLGB025 (Ushio Green)
Case Diameter40.8mm40.8mm
Case Thickness12.9mm12.9mm
Lug-to-Lug48.5mm48.5mm
Lug Width21mm21mm
Case MaterialHigh-Intensity TitaniumHigh-Intensity Titanium
Dial ColourDeep Blue (gradient)Coastal Green (gradient)
Water Resistance300m300m
MovementCalibre 9RB1Calibre 9RB1
Accuracy±20 sec/year±20 sec/year
Power Reserve72 hours72 hours
BezelBlue ceramic, 120-clickGreen ceramic, 120-click
Retail Price (USD)$12,400$12,400

Source: Grand Seiko Official, WatchTime, June 2026

Spring Drive UFA: The Technology Behind ±20 Seconds Per Year

To understand why the Ushio 300 Diver matters, you need to understand Spring Drive UFA — the designation Grand Seiko introduced in 2025 for its most accurate mainspring-powered movements to date.

Standard Spring Drive calibres like the 9RA5 (found in the SLGA015) achieve ±10 seconds per month accuracy. This is already exceptional — far beyond the COSC chronometer standard of ±4 seconds per day. But the new U.F.A. (Ultra Fine Accuracy) standard, embodied in Calibre 9RB1, achieves ±20 seconds per year. That works out to roughly ±1.7 seconds per month — approximately six times more accurate than the already-impressive previous generation.

How? The 9RB1 uses a vacuum-sealed Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC) paired with a three-month-aged quartz oscillator. Grand Seiko programmes each oscillator’s frequency data across multiple temperatures, compensating thermally so the regulator remains consistent regardless of ambient conditions. The result is a movement that bridges the gap between mechanical watchmaking and quartz precision — which is precisely Spring Drive’s founding promise, now taken to its logical extreme.

Grand Seiko Spring Drive movement detail — precision finishing and Zaratsu polishing
The level of hand-finishing that goes into every Grand Seiko movement is unmatched at this price point.

Design & Case: The Size Reduction Collectors Asked For

Grand Seiko’s previous flagship dive watch, the SLGA015 Ushio (2022), measured 43.8mm in diameter and 13.8mm thick. Those dimensions ruled it out for many wrists, and watch enthusiasts consistently noted the size as a barrier to purchase. Grand Seiko listened.

The new Ushio 300 Diver measures 40.8mm × 12.9mm — a meaningful reduction of 3mm in diameter and 0.9mm in thickness. The 48.5mm lug-to-lug distance will comfortably fit wrists from around 16.5cm upward. Compared to an Omega Seamaster Planet Ocean 600M (43.5mm), the Ushio 300 wears noticeably more refined.

The case is cut from Grand Seiko’s proprietary High-Intensity Titanium — an alloy approximately 30% harder than standard grade-5 titanium, making it scratch-resistant enough for daily dive use while remaining light on the wrist. Zaratsu-polished case flanks contrast with brushed lugs and case sides, creating the interplay of light and shadow that is a Grand Seiko signature. The solid screwed caseback bears the Grand Seiko lion emblem in relief.

The unidirectional rotating bezel uses 120 clicks — double the 60-click standard on most dive watches, giving divers precise elapsed-time tracking in 30-second increments. The blue ceramic insert on the SLGB023 and green ceramic on the SLGB025 resist fading and scratching indefinitely. A screw-down crown completes the water-resistance package.

Dial & Finishing: Ushio Means Tide

“Ushio” (潮) translates from Japanese as “tide.” Both dial variants evoke that reference through textured gradient colouring that shifts in tone from the centre outward, mimicking the play of light on a sea surface at different depths.

The SLGB023 presents in deep ocean blue — almost inky at the dial’s outer edge, lightening toward the centre. The SLGB025’s green dial draws from the emerald shallows of a coastal inlet. Both dials use Grand Seiko’s process of layering lacquer and texture by hand, a craft technique applied by artisans at the Shinshu Watch Studio.

Applied indices are polished faceted steel, catching light in the Zaratsu tradition. Broad sword hands carry generous LumiBrite lume — Grand Seiko’s proprietary phosphorescent material, which the brand claims emits light approximately 1.5 times brighter than standard Super-LumiNova. A power reserve indicator sits at 6 o’clock, displaying the 72-hour reserve. There is no date complication, a deliberate choice that many enthusiasts will applaud — the dial reads cleaner for it.

Professional dive watch on rocky ocean shoreline — the kind of environment the Grand Seiko Ushio 300 Diver SLGB023 is built for
The Ushio 300’s 300m water resistance and titanium construction make it a genuine tool watch as well as a collector’s piece.

Calibre 9RB1: The Most Accurate Dive Watch Movement Ever Made

The 9RB1 is a derivative of the 9RB2 movement introduced in 2025 in the SLGB001 and SLGB003. The key difference is the power reserve indicator: the closed titanium caseback of a dive watch means the indicator runs on the dial rather than through the display back.

Dimensionally, the 9RB1 measures 30mm in diameter and 4.7mm thick — allowing the case to achieve that 12.9mm profile. Power reserve is 72 hours, identical to the 9RA5 in the SLGA015 despite the increased energy demands of the UFA’s ASIC. Grand Seiko achieves this through a larger mainspring barrel engineered into the movement architecture.

Spring Drive’s core mechanism — a magnetically braked tri-synchro regulator replacing a traditional lever escapement — means there is no impulse shock to components, no oil degradation from escapement friction, and extraordinarily long service intervals. Grand Seiko recommends a full service every 3–5 years for water-resistance seal checks; the movement itself can run for many years without servicing under normal conditions.

Calibre 9RB1 vs 9RA5: Key Differences

Specification 9RB1 (Ushio 300) 9RA5 (SLGA015, 2022)
Annual Accuracy±20 sec/year±10 sec/month (±120 sec/year)
Power Reserve72 hours5 days (120 hours)
DisplayDial P.R. indicatorCaseback P.R. display
Thickness4.7mm6.8mm
Accuracy vs quartz~6× more accurateBaseline

Source: Grand Seiko Official; SJX Watches, April 2026

SLGB023 vs SLGB025: Which Colour Should You Choose?

Mechanically, the SLGB023 and SLGB025 are identical. The sole difference is the dial and bezel colour — and both are priced at $12,400 USD. The choice comes down to personal taste and how you plan to wear the watch.

The SLGB023 in Ushio Blue is the more versatile of the two. Deep ocean blue reads as formal enough for a dinner jacket and sporty enough for the weekend. The blue ceramic bezel aligns it with classics like the Rolex Submariner 126610LN and Omega Seamaster 300M, so it will feel immediately familiar to dive watch enthusiasts.

The SLGB025 in Ushio Green is the bolder choice. Coastal green is having a moment in horology — think Rolex Submariner “Starbucks,” Tudor Black Bay 58 Green — but Grand Seiko’s interpretation is distinctly Japanese: muted, organic, the green of a pine-forested hillside meeting the sea rather than a loud emerald statement. It is unusual in the best way.

Our recommendation: if this is your first Grand Seiko, the blue (SLGB023) is the safer long-term choice. If you already own a blue diver, the green (SLGB025) offers genuine differentiation.

How the Ushio 300 Compares to the Competition

The Ushio 300 Diver competes in a rarefied segment — high-end dive watches in the $10,000–$15,000 range. Its key rivals are the Omega Seamaster Planet Ocean 600M ($10,800), the Rolex Submariner Date 126610LN ($10,800), and the Patek Philippe Aquanaut 5168G (much higher at ~$65,000). Against the first two, the Ushio 300 makes a compelling case.

Watch Case Size Movement Accuracy Water Resist. Price (USD)
GS Ushio 300 SLGB02340.8mmSpring Drive 9RB1±20 sec/yr300m$12,400
Rolex Submariner Date 126610LN41mmCal. 3235±2 sec/day300m$10,800
Omega Seamaster Planet Ocean 600M43.5mmCal. 89060/+5 sec/day600m$10,800
Tudor Pelagos FXD42mmCal. MT5602−2/+4 sec/day200m$4,775
GS Ushio SLGA015 (prev. gen)43.8mmSpring Drive 9RA5±10 sec/mo200m$11,600

Prices: Grand Seiko Official Boutique, Rolex Official, Omega Official, Tudor Official — June 2026

The Rolex Submariner remains the benchmark by which all dive watches are judged — its brand recognition, secondary market performance, and 300m water resistance make it an almost indestructible choice. But its movement accuracy (COSC-certified at ±2 sec/day) is orders of magnitude less precise than the 9RB1. The Omega Seamaster Planet Ocean 600M counters with 600m depth rating and Master Chronometer certification, but its 43.5mm case will overwhelm smaller wrists.

The Ushio 300 beats both on accuracy by a considerable margin, matches on depth rating, and offers a case size that will please the majority of wearers. It loses on brand recognition and secondary market liquidity — a Rolex Submariner holds its value more predictably. But for a buyer who cares about watchmaking substance over resale metrics, the Grand Seiko argument is compelling. You can read more in our Grand Seiko vs Rolex Submariner comparison.

Price, Availability & Value

At $12,400 USD for either reference, the Ushio 300 Diver sits above the Rolex Submariner Date ($10,800) but below the entry point of complications from Jaeger-LeCoultre or IWC. Grand Seiko confirmed availability from June 2026 through authorised Grand Seiko boutiques and select retail partners worldwide.

Unlike Rolex, Grand Seiko watches are generally purchasable at retail without multi-year waitlists. That accessibility is underappreciated — you can walk into a Grand Seiko boutique and buy an Ushio 300 Diver today at MSRP. Secondary market prices at launch were tracking slightly below retail, typical for a Grand Seiko release, which gives buyers confidence they are not overpaying.

The value proposition extends to ownership costs. Spring Drive movements require no escapement lubrication in the traditional sense, reducing service frequency. Grand Seiko recommends water-resistance seal checks every 3–5 years (approximately $200–$400 at an authorised service centre), with full movement service typically at 8–10 year intervals.

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Final Verdict: Should You Buy the Grand Seiko Ushio 300 Diver?

If you are in the market for a $10,000–$15,000 dive watch and you want something that demonstrates genuine horological ambition rather than brand legacy alone, the answer is yes. The SLGB023 and SLGB025 solve every real objection to Grand Seiko’s previous dive watches: the case is now wearable, the depth rating is now professional, and the movement is the most accurate of its kind ever made.

The only meaningful caveat is secondary market liquidity. Rolex holds its value more reliably, and if watch investment is part of your calculus, that matters. But if you are buying to wear and appreciate, the Ushio 300 Diver is one of the most technically accomplished watches at any price in 2026.

What is the price of the Grand Seiko Spring Drive UFA Ushio 300 Diver SLGB023?

The Grand Seiko SLGB023 (Ushio Blue) and SLGB025 (Ushio Green) are both priced at $12,400 USD at retail. They became available through Grand Seiko boutiques and authorised retailers from June 2026.

What is the accuracy of the Grand Seiko Calibre 9RB1 Spring Drive UFA?

The Calibre 9RB1 achieves ±20 seconds per year accuracy — making it the most accurate mainspring-powered wristwatch movement ever produced. This compares to ±10 seconds per month for the previous Grand Seiko Spring Drive standard, representing approximately a six-fold improvement in precision.

How big is the Grand Seiko Ushio 300 Diver SLGB023?

The SLGB023 and SLGB025 measure 40.8mm in diameter, 12.9mm thick, with a 48.5mm lug-to-lug distance and 21mm lug width. This represents a significant size reduction from the previous Ushio SLGA015, which measured 43.8mm × 13.8mm.

What is the difference between SLGB023 and SLGB025?

The SLGB023 features a deep blue “Ushio Blue” dial and blue ceramic bezel insert, while the SLGB025 features a coastal green “Ushio Green” dial and green ceramic bezel. Both watches are mechanically identical, use the same Calibre 9RB1 movement, share all case dimensions, and are priced at $12,400 USD.

How does the Grand Seiko Ushio 300 compare to the Rolex Submariner?

The Grand Seiko Ushio 300 Diver SLGB023 ($12,400) offers dramatically superior movement accuracy (±20 sec/year vs the Submariner’s ±2 sec/day), a smaller wearable case (40.8mm vs 41mm), and equivalent 300m water resistance. The Rolex Submariner Date 126610LN ($10,800) retains an advantage in brand recognition, secondary market value retention, and broader service network availability.

Is the Grand Seiko Ushio 300 available to buy at retail price?

Yes. Unlike Rolex, Grand Seiko watches are available to purchase at retail MSRP without significant waitlists. The SLGB023 and SLGB025 can be purchased from Grand Seiko boutiques worldwide or authorised retail partners at the stated $12,400 price.

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