Bulova
Bulova is an American luxury timepiece manufacturing company founded in 1875 in New York City. For 150 years, Bulova has been renowned for artistry and innovation, creating watches, clocks, and accessories with superb craftsmanship and advanced technology.
Bulova customer service
Use any of the convenient means below to contact Bulova customer service.
| Phone | (800) 228-5682 |
| Web | https://www.bulova.com/us/en/contact-us.html |
| [email protected] |
Headquarters
350 Fifth Avenue
New York, New York 10118
(212) 497-1875
[email protected]
Returns
What is the return window?
Bulova offers a 30-day money-back guarantee. For a refund to be issued, item(s) must be returned within 30 days of delivery, and must be in original condition (unworn, with all Bulova packaging/inserts, and any removed links included).
Are there any items that are non-returnable?
Bulova will not accept the return of any watch which is not in pristine condition (e.g., unworn, no scratches, in the original packaging, original tickets, with the warranty and instruction booklet). Returns can only be accepted for products purchased through Bulova.com.
How will I receive my refund?
Refunds will be issued to the purchaser in the same form of payment used for the original sales transaction. Please note that it may take up to 7-10 business days for your return to be processed once it arrives in our logistics department. Credits cannot be issued until the merchandise being returned or exchanged is received.
Editor's Take
So here's the thing about Bulova-it's basically the watch brand that's been quietly flexing since before your great-grandparents were born. Founded in 1875 in New York City, this isn't some Johnny-come-lately trying to ride the vintage wave. They've been there, done that, and literally invented half the playbook.
What makes Bulova kind of fascinating is how they've always been the brand that does stuff first and asks questions later. They produced the world's first television advertisement on July 1, 1941-before a baseball game, no less. And while everyone obsesses over Omega's moon credentials, a Bulova chronograph was actually worn on the lunar surface during Apollo 15's third lunar walk, making it the only privately owned watch to have been worn on the moon. That's the kind of flex that doesn't need Instagram.
The Accutron line from the 1960s? Revolutionary. It was guaranteed to be accurate to one minute per month, or two seconds per day-considerably better than anything else at the time. Instead of ticking, it hummed. People went nuts for it. NASA used the technology in 47 space missions, and President Johnson declared it an official gift of state.
But what really sets Bulova apart today is that they're not trying to be something they're not. They were sold to Citizen at the end of 2007, which gave them serious manufacturing muscle without losing their New York soul. Their headquarters is literally in the Empire State Building-you can't get more New York than that. And they're still pushing boundaries with things like the Precisionist line, which has that smooth sweeping second hand that makes watch nerds lose their minds.
The brand collaborates with everyone from the Apollo Theater to Marc Anthony to the Latin GRAMMYs, keeping one foot in heritage and the other in contemporary culture. They're not stuck in the past, but they're not pretending the past doesn't matter either. For 150 years, they've been making watches that regular people can actually afford while still delivering genuine innovation and craftsmanship.
Notice how they don't scream about luxury the way some brands do? That's because they don't have to. When you've been around since Ulysses S. Grant was president and you've put watches on the moon, the work speaks for itself. Whether you're into vintage Accutrons or their modern Lunar Pilot reissues, there's something refreshingly unpretentious about a brand that's been this consistently good for this long.