Reference:116500LN: Difference between revisions
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{{#seo: | {{#seo: | ||
|title=Rolex Daytona | |title=Rolex 116500LN Daytona — Production, Dial Variants, Serial Ranges | BezelBase | ||
|description=The Rolex Cosmograph Daytona 116500LN — the ceramic-bezel steel Daytona produced from 2016 to 2023. Black-bezel, white-dial Panda and inverse Black-dial Panda variants, caliber 4130, the reference that inherited the long-run 116520 spot. | |description=The Rolex Cosmograph Daytona 116500LN — the ceramic-bezel steel Daytona produced from 2016 to 2023. Black-bezel, white-dial Panda and inverse Black-dial Panda variants, caliber 4130, the reference that inherited the long-run 116520 spot. | ||
|keywords=Rolex, 116500LN, Daytona, Cosmograph, Panda, ceramic bezel, caliber 4130, reference guide | |||
|image=Ref 116500LN hero panda.webp | |image=Ref 116500LN hero panda.webp | ||
|image_alt=116500LN Panda hero | |image_alt=116500LN Panda hero | ||
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|og_type=article | |og_type=article | ||
|published_time=2026-04-19T23:41:31Z | |published_time=2026-04-19T23:41:31Z | ||
|modified_time=2026-04- | |modified_time=2026-04-29T02:45:51Z | ||
|robots=index,follow,max-image-preview:large | |robots=index,follow,max-image-preview:large | ||
}} | |||
| | [[File:Ref 116500LN hero panda.webp|thumb|right|250px|alt=116500LN Panda hero|Panda 116500LN]] | ||
The <code>116500LN</code> is the steel ceramic Daytona, produced from 2016 to 2023. Two dials, one movement, one bracelet. The reference is best known not for what it changed mechanically but for what it did to the secondary market: a seven-year run during which authorized-dealer allocation became the defining story of modern Rolex retail. | |||
The <code>116500LN</code> is the steel ceramic Daytona. Two dials, one movement, one bracelet | |||
==Core facts== | ==Core facts== | ||
| Line 38: | Line 36: | ||
|- | |- | ||
| case | | case | ||
| 40mm 904L Oystersteel, | | 40mm 904L Oystersteel, about 12.2mm thick, screw-down pushers | ||
|- | |- | ||
| crystal | | crystal | ||
| Line 59: | Line 57: | ||
|- | |- | ||
| launch price | | launch price | ||
| CHF 11,800 / EUR 11,300 / USD | | CHF 11,800 / EUR 11,300 / USD about 12,400 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| predecessor | | predecessor | ||
| Line 72: | Line 70: | ||
The 116500LN replaces the 116520, which had run | The 116500LN replaces the 116520, which had run sixteen years on the same 40mm case, the same caliber 4130, and an aluminum tachymeter bezel that scratched and faded. On paper the change is a bezel swap. In practice the ceramic launch reset where the reference sat in the queue. Demand outran allocation almost immediately and stayed there for the full production run. | ||
The 126500LN took over in March 2023 with the same ceramic bezel, a slightly thinner 11.9mm case, a reworked Oysterlock clasp, and the new caliber 4131. Rolex moved the platinum PVD numerals to a reshaped bezel geometry and thinned the subdial rings | The 126500LN took over in March 2023 with the same ceramic bezel, a slightly thinner 11.9mm case, a reworked Oysterlock clasp, and the new caliber 4131. Rolex moved the platinum PVD numerals to a reshaped bezel geometry and thinned the subdial rings, but kept the reference a 40mm steel ceramic Daytona. The 116500LN remains the choice for buyers who prefer the existing case proportions and the 4130 movement Rolex had been refining since 2000, and its market position is now frozen because production has ended. | ||
The precious-metal siblings across the same case generation include the two-tone Rolesor 116503, the yellow gold 116508, and the white gold 116509 with ceramic-bezel variants added gradually across the generation. The 116500LN sits at the entry point of the ceramic family | The precious-metal siblings across the same case generation include the two-tone Rolesor 116503, the yellow gold 116508, and the white gold 116509, with ceramic-bezel variants added gradually across the generation. The 116500LN sits at the entry point of the ceramic family, the steel rollout that put Cerachrom on the lowest retail rung in the reference line. | ||
==What changed from the 116520== | ==What changed from the 116520== | ||
| Line 111: | Line 109: | ||
|} | |} | ||
The 116500LN keeps the 116520's case, movement, bracelet architecture, and most of the dial printing. What moves is the bezel material, the lume formula, and the visible treatment of the subdials. Everything else holds. | |||
==Production outline== | ==Production outline== | ||
The 116500LN does not | The 116500LN does not carry the layered internal map that defines vintage Daytona references. Caliber 4130, the Cerachrom bezel, the Oyster bracelet, and the two dial options held constant for the full seven-year run. Year-to-year external change is narrow enough that the reference reads as a single-era production, and most editorial treats it that way. | ||
Forum collectors have documented minor dial-printing drift across the | Forum collectors have documented minor dial-printing drift across the run, but no Mark taxonomy has formed. The reference is not perfectly static from 2016 to 2023, but the variation has not crossed the threshold from supplier drift to identifiable variant. | ||
Production end is documented variously. The most precise claim places the final 116500LN production run at 27 March 2023, coinciding with the 126500LN announcement at Watches & Wonders Geneva. Other sources round to | Production end is documented variously. The most precise claim places the final 116500LN production run at 27 March 2023, coinciding with the 126500LN announcement at Watches & Wonders Geneva. Other sources round to 2023 or 2024 without a precise boundary. The conservative read is that 116500LN production ended around the March 2023 successor launch, with allocated examples continuing to reach retail into 2024. | ||
==Movement notes== | ==Movement notes== | ||
Caliber 4130 is the first fully in-house Rolex chronograph movement. Rolex introduced it in 2000 on the 116520, and | Caliber 4130 is the first fully in-house Rolex chronograph movement. Rolex introduced it in 2000 on the 116520, and it powered every steel Daytona from that launch through the end of 116500LN production in 2023. Twenty-three years on a single chronograph caliber is exceptional by any measure. | ||
The | The architecture is column wheel and vertical clutch, with a 72-hour power reserve. Nothing on the 116500LN's movement diverges from what the 116520 had already established as the modern Daytona template. | ||
The | The 4131 succeeded it on the 126500LN, keeping the column wheel and vertical clutch and adding the Chronergy escapement Rolex had rolled across the three-hand sport lines through the late 2010s and early 2020s. The efficiency gain shows up in real-world precision rather than power reserve, which stays at roughly 72 hours. | ||
==Dial map== | ==Dial map== | ||
| Line 133: | Line 131: | ||
===Panda (white dial)=== | ===Panda (white dial)=== | ||
The 116500LN-0001 is the white-dial option. | The 116500LN-0001 is the white-dial option. A silver-white lacquer base carries three black snailed subdials: the hours counter at 6, the seconds counter at 9, and the 30-minute counter at 3. Applied 18k white-gold indices, polished and filled with Chromalight, frame the subdials. A red <code>DAYTONA</code> signature arcs above the six o'clock subdial. There is no date window, consistent with the Daytona's chronograph-first layout. | ||
Panda is collector shorthand for any dial matching a white face against contrasting dark subdials, named for the visual resemblance to the animal. Rolex does not use the term in its documentation. The white-and-black combination has been on the Daytona since the 1960s Paul Newman variants, and the 116500LN is the first steel ceramic-bezel reference to carry that layout into modern production. | |||
===Black dial=== | ===Black dial=== | ||
| Line 141: | Line 139: | ||
The 116500LN-0002 is the black-dial option. | The 116500LN-0002 is the black-dial option. Layout matches the Panda: three subdials at 6, 9, and 3, applied white-gold indices, no date. The subdials are finished in a silver-grey snailed treatment that reads as a softer contrast against the black base than the crisp black-on-white of the Panda. The <code>DAYTONA</code> signature stays red, and the minute track sits in white printing. | ||
Market behaviour on the two dials diverges, with Panda examples consistently trading above black-dial ones. The reason | Market behaviour on the two dials diverges, with Panda examples consistently trading above black-dial ones. The reason has never been fully explained, but the price gap is real enough to treat as fact. | ||
===Dial printing drift=== | ===Dial printing drift=== | ||
Forum threads track small printing differences across the run on both dial variants | Forum threads track small printing differences across the run on both dial variants. Slightly thinner font weight on some mid-run bottom-line text, minor spacing adjustments in the lower-half printing, and subtle subdial-texture variations show up under macro lighting. None of these has crossed the threshold from photographed-on-some-examples to documented Mark variant, and a collector taxonomy for the 116500LN has not formed. The run reads as one long production with minor supplier drift visible only under close inspection. | ||
==Case, bezel, crystal, and crown notes== | ==Case, bezel, crystal, and crown notes== | ||
| Line 153: | Line 151: | ||
===Case=== | ===Case=== | ||
The case is 40mm in 904L Oystersteel, | The case is 40mm in 904L Oystersteel, about 12.2mm thick, with brushed top surfaces and polished case-flank treatment. Lug-to-lug runs at roughly 47mm, consistent with the 116520 that came before it. Rolex did not resize the case for the 116500LN, and the bezel change did not require case tooling changes. A 116520 and a 116500LN wear identically on the wrist save for the bezel material. Anyone buying the 116500LN for the ceramic alone was getting the identical case and bracelet the 116520 had carried since 2000. | ||
===Bezel=== | ===Bezel=== | ||
The Cerachrom bezel is the reason the reference exists. Rolex produces it as a | The Cerachrom bezel is the reason the reference exists. Rolex produces it as a monobloc ceramic piece: the entire bezel ring including the tachymeter track is a single piece of ceramic rather than a ceramic insert seated inside a steel ring. The tachymeter numerals and scale graduations are deposited through a PVD (physical vapor deposition) process using platinum, which gives them the cool grey-silver cast that distinguishes the modern ceramic bezel from an aluminum insert at any distance. | ||
The numerical geometry shifted from the 116520 as part of the ceramic transition. Aluminum-insert tachymeter scales sat on a flat radial layout; the 116500LN tachymeter numerals follow a subtly curved axis that matches the ceramic bezel's surface tension and firing tolerances. The change is imperceptible on a wrist shot and obvious side-by-side with a 116520. | The numerical geometry shifted from the 116520 as part of the ceramic transition. Aluminum-insert tachymeter scales sat on a flat radial layout; the 116500LN tachymeter numerals follow a subtly curved axis that matches the ceramic bezel's surface tension and firing tolerances. The change is imperceptible on a wrist shot and obvious side-by-side with a 116520. | ||
The ceramic itself is scratch-resistant against anything shy of a diamond-edged tool and fade-proof against UV. The practical implication is that a 116500LN bezel surfaces any flaw as an impact mark | The ceramic itself is scratch-resistant against anything shy of a diamond-edged tool and fade-proof against UV. The practical implication is that a 116500LN bezel surfaces any flaw as an impact mark, since ceramic breaks before it scratches, rather than as the progressive wear pattern an aluminum bezel accumulates. | ||
===Crystal=== | ===Crystal=== | ||
| Line 173: | Line 171: | ||
===Pushers=== | ===Pushers=== | ||
The chronograph pushers on the 116500LN are | The chronograph pushers on the 116500LN are screw-down, consistent with the rest of the Daytona line since the 6263. Pusher-screw feel and travel match the 116520. Unscrewing the pushers before operating the chronograph remains the single habitual quirk of Daytona wear, and the 116500LN does not adjust it. | ||
==Bracelets, end links, clasps, and packaging notes== | ==Bracelets, end links, clasps, and packaging notes== | ||
| Line 179: | Line 177: | ||
===Bracelet=== | ===Bracelet=== | ||
Standard Oyster, 20mm at the lugs, solid links throughout, solid end links coded into the case. | Standard Oyster, 20mm at the lugs, solid links throughout, solid end links coded into the case. The reference carries the standard modern Daytona Oyster bracelet, consistent with the 116520 in both measurement and construction. | ||
===Clasp=== | ===Clasp=== | ||
The clasp is Oysterlock with Easylink. Oysterlock is the locking safety flap Rolex uses across the modern Professional line. Easylink is the toolless 5mm micro-adjustment system: a flip-out internal tab that extends the bracelet by five millimetres in a single step. The Glidelock on the ceramic Submariner offers continuous adjustment across a larger range; Easylink is a single binary extension, so more limited in travel but faster to deploy on the wrist. | |||
The Easylink implementation on the 116500LN is | The Easylink implementation on the 116500LN is identical to the 116520, and nothing in the bracelet system changed between the two references. The 126500LN successor reworked the clasp architecture, which leaves the 116500LN as the last Daytona with the older Oysterlock mechanism. | ||
===Packaging=== | ===Packaging=== | ||
| Line 195: | Line 193: | ||
A small number of 116500LN watches left Rolex's production flow with a second dial signature or a bezel-colour swap tied to a specific retailer. The most visible | A small number of 116500LN watches left Rolex's production flow with a second dial signature or a bezel-colour swap tied to a specific retailer. The most visible is the Asprey program, a two-colour limited series of 25 pieces each delivered through Asprey's London boutique and sold from a back room rather than the retail floor. The Asprey Daytonas carry an Asprey co-signature on the dial and a colour-swapped tachymeter insert; production was tiny and Rolex's catalog never confirmed them. | ||
The Asprey Daytonas | |||
Beyond | Beyond Asprey, regular-production 116500LN watches have appeared with engraved casebacks for institutional customers and occasional double-signed dials for retailer anniversaries. These are personalisation layers on standard 116500LN watches rather than distinct Rolex reference variants. | ||
==Market and collector context== | ==Market and collector context== | ||
Few Rolex references have moved the secondary market the way the 116500LN did. At launch in spring 2016, grey-market dealers were selling the white dial at close to seventy percent over list within days of Baselworld. | Few Rolex references have moved the secondary market the way the 116500LN did. At launch in spring 2016, grey-market dealers were selling the white dial at close to seventy percent over list within days of Baselworld. The premium compounded through the late 2010s: roughly €17,000 in 2016, €20,000 in 2018, €23,000 across 2019 and 2020, then a steep acceleration into 2021 when white-dial examples traded routinely above €30,000 and peak Chrono24 listings went past €35,000. GBP prices tracked similarly, with retail around £10,500, Q4 2021 at roughly £32,000, and peak listings at £35,000. | ||
The | The reference sat at the centre of the 2020–2022 luxury-watch run-up. Authorised-dealer waitlists ran for years. Successful applicants had to show long purchase histories with the dealer, often on lesser references, before an allocation opened. Flipping was policed actively, with Rolex restricting future allocations to buyers who resold within windows set by individual dealers. | ||
The | The correction from early 2023 onward brought 116500LN pricing back toward the mid-$20,000s for white-dial examples and into the low $20,000s for black-dial examples by 2024. The reference still trades well above retail, consistent with its discontinued and ceramic-era status, but the multiples-of-retail era is over. The case for buying one now rests on the watch itself: the last steel Daytona on the 40mm case, the last on the 4130 movement, and the first to carry Cerachrom. | ||
The successor 126500LN has | The successor 126500LN has inherited the waitlist position without matching the secondary-market peak of its predecessor. The 116500LN is likely to be the reference collectors point to when they describe the ceramic-Daytona moment, regardless of whether the 126500LN turns out to be the objectively better watch. | ||
==Sources== | ==Sources== | ||
| Line 237: | Line 233: | ||
[[Category:Daytona]] | [[Category:Daytona]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Working Draft]] | ||
Latest revision as of 04:20, 30 April 2026

The 116500LN is the steel ceramic Daytona, produced from 2016 to 2023. Two dials, one movement, one bracelet. The reference is best known not for what it changed mechanically but for what it did to the secondary market: a seven-year run during which authorized-dealer allocation became the defining story of modern Rolex retail.
Core facts
| detail | value |
|---|---|
| reference | 116500LN
|
| family | Daytona |
| production | 2016 to 2023; succeeded by 126500LN in March 2023 |
| movement | caliber 4130 |
| case | 40mm 904L Oystersteel, about 12.2mm thick, screw-down pushers |
| crystal | sapphire, flat, no Cyclops |
| water resistance | 100m |
| bezel | Cerachrom monobloc ceramic, black tachymeter with platinum PVD numerals |
| bracelet | Oyster with Oysterlock and Easylink 5mm toolless extension |
| lume | Chromalight |
| dials | white with black subdials ("Panda", 116500LN-0001) or black with grey-silver subdials (116500LN-0002) |
| launch price | CHF 11,800 / EUR 11,300 / USD about 12,400 |
| predecessor | 116520
|
| successor | 126500LN (40mm, caliber 4131)
|
Where it sits in the line

The 116500LN replaces the 116520, which had run sixteen years on the same 40mm case, the same caliber 4130, and an aluminum tachymeter bezel that scratched and faded. On paper the change is a bezel swap. In practice the ceramic launch reset where the reference sat in the queue. Demand outran allocation almost immediately and stayed there for the full production run.
The 126500LN took over in March 2023 with the same ceramic bezel, a slightly thinner 11.9mm case, a reworked Oysterlock clasp, and the new caliber 4131. Rolex moved the platinum PVD numerals to a reshaped bezel geometry and thinned the subdial rings, but kept the reference a 40mm steel ceramic Daytona. The 116500LN remains the choice for buyers who prefer the existing case proportions and the 4130 movement Rolex had been refining since 2000, and its market position is now frozen because production has ended.
The precious-metal siblings across the same case generation include the two-tone Rolesor 116503, the yellow gold 116508, and the white gold 116509, with ceramic-bezel variants added gradually across the generation. The 116500LN sits at the entry point of the ceramic family, the steel rollout that put Cerachrom on the lowest retail rung in the reference line.
What changed from the 116520
| feature | 116520 | 116500LN |
|---|---|---|
| bezel | aluminum tachymeter, engraved and painted | Cerachrom ceramic monobloc, platinum PVD numerals |
| tachymeter numerals | straight-line geometry around the bezel | shifted to a curved-axis layout for ceramic fitment |
| lume | Super-LumiNova (green glow) | Chromalight (blue glow) |
| dial | white or black with colour-matched subdials on late production, and contrasting subdials on the 2000 launch | white with black subdials, or black with grey-silver subdials — both contrasting throughout the run |
| case finishing | brushed/polished contrast retained | same, with Oystersteel 904L unchanged |
| movement | caliber 4130 | caliber 4130, unchanged |
The 116500LN keeps the 116520's case, movement, bracelet architecture, and most of the dial printing. What moves is the bezel material, the lume formula, and the visible treatment of the subdials. Everything else holds.
Production outline
The 116500LN does not carry the layered internal map that defines vintage Daytona references. Caliber 4130, the Cerachrom bezel, the Oyster bracelet, and the two dial options held constant for the full seven-year run. Year-to-year external change is narrow enough that the reference reads as a single-era production, and most editorial treats it that way.
Forum collectors have documented minor dial-printing drift across the run, but no Mark taxonomy has formed. The reference is not perfectly static from 2016 to 2023, but the variation has not crossed the threshold from supplier drift to identifiable variant.
Production end is documented variously. The most precise claim places the final 116500LN production run at 27 March 2023, coinciding with the 126500LN announcement at Watches & Wonders Geneva. Other sources round to 2023 or 2024 without a precise boundary. The conservative read is that 116500LN production ended around the March 2023 successor launch, with allocated examples continuing to reach retail into 2024.
Movement notes
Caliber 4130 is the first fully in-house Rolex chronograph movement. Rolex introduced it in 2000 on the 116520, and it powered every steel Daytona from that launch through the end of 116500LN production in 2023. Twenty-three years on a single chronograph caliber is exceptional by any measure.
The architecture is column wheel and vertical clutch, with a 72-hour power reserve. Nothing on the 116500LN's movement diverges from what the 116520 had already established as the modern Daytona template.
The 4131 succeeded it on the 126500LN, keeping the column wheel and vertical clutch and adding the Chronergy escapement Rolex had rolled across the three-hand sport lines through the late 2010s and early 2020s. The efficiency gain shows up in real-world precision rather than power reserve, which stays at roughly 72 hours.
Dial map
Panda (white dial)
The 116500LN-0001 is the white-dial option. A silver-white lacquer base carries three black snailed subdials: the hours counter at 6, the seconds counter at 9, and the 30-minute counter at 3. Applied 18k white-gold indices, polished and filled with Chromalight, frame the subdials. A red DAYTONA signature arcs above the six o'clock subdial. There is no date window, consistent with the Daytona's chronograph-first layout.
Panda is collector shorthand for any dial matching a white face against contrasting dark subdials, named for the visual resemblance to the animal. Rolex does not use the term in its documentation. The white-and-black combination has been on the Daytona since the 1960s Paul Newman variants, and the 116500LN is the first steel ceramic-bezel reference to carry that layout into modern production.
Black dial

The 116500LN-0002 is the black-dial option. Layout matches the Panda: three subdials at 6, 9, and 3, applied white-gold indices, no date. The subdials are finished in a silver-grey snailed treatment that reads as a softer contrast against the black base than the crisp black-on-white of the Panda. The DAYTONA signature stays red, and the minute track sits in white printing.
Market behaviour on the two dials diverges, with Panda examples consistently trading above black-dial ones. The reason has never been fully explained, but the price gap is real enough to treat as fact.
Dial printing drift
Forum threads track small printing differences across the run on both dial variants. Slightly thinner font weight on some mid-run bottom-line text, minor spacing adjustments in the lower-half printing, and subtle subdial-texture variations show up under macro lighting. None of these has crossed the threshold from photographed-on-some-examples to documented Mark variant, and a collector taxonomy for the 116500LN has not formed. The run reads as one long production with minor supplier drift visible only under close inspection.
Case, bezel, crystal, and crown notes
Case
The case is 40mm in 904L Oystersteel, about 12.2mm thick, with brushed top surfaces and polished case-flank treatment. Lug-to-lug runs at roughly 47mm, consistent with the 116520 that came before it. Rolex did not resize the case for the 116500LN, and the bezel change did not require case tooling changes. A 116520 and a 116500LN wear identically on the wrist save for the bezel material. Anyone buying the 116500LN for the ceramic alone was getting the identical case and bracelet the 116520 had carried since 2000.
Bezel
The Cerachrom bezel is the reason the reference exists. Rolex produces it as a monobloc ceramic piece: the entire bezel ring including the tachymeter track is a single piece of ceramic rather than a ceramic insert seated inside a steel ring. The tachymeter numerals and scale graduations are deposited through a PVD (physical vapor deposition) process using platinum, which gives them the cool grey-silver cast that distinguishes the modern ceramic bezel from an aluminum insert at any distance.
The numerical geometry shifted from the 116520 as part of the ceramic transition. Aluminum-insert tachymeter scales sat on a flat radial layout; the 116500LN tachymeter numerals follow a subtly curved axis that matches the ceramic bezel's surface tension and firing tolerances. The change is imperceptible on a wrist shot and obvious side-by-side with a 116520.
The ceramic itself is scratch-resistant against anything shy of a diamond-edged tool and fade-proof against UV. The practical implication is that a 116500LN bezel surfaces any flaw as an impact mark, since ceramic breaks before it scratches, rather than as the progressive wear pattern an aluminum bezel accumulates.
Crystal
Flat sapphire, no Cyclops over the date window because the Daytona carries no date. Crystal thickness and radius match the 116520 exactly. No anti-reflective coating is specified in Rolex's published documentation.
Crown
Triplock screw-down with crown guards, rated with the case to 100m. The crown is identical in dimension to the 116520 crown, carrying the Rolex coronet and three dots that mark Triplock sealing.
Pushers
The chronograph pushers on the 116500LN are screw-down, consistent with the rest of the Daytona line since the 6263. Pusher-screw feel and travel match the 116520. Unscrewing the pushers before operating the chronograph remains the single habitual quirk of Daytona wear, and the 116500LN does not adjust it.
Bracelets, end links, clasps, and packaging notes
Bracelet
Standard Oyster, 20mm at the lugs, solid links throughout, solid end links coded into the case. The reference carries the standard modern Daytona Oyster bracelet, consistent with the 116520 in both measurement and construction.
Clasp
The clasp is Oysterlock with Easylink. Oysterlock is the locking safety flap Rolex uses across the modern Professional line. Easylink is the toolless 5mm micro-adjustment system: a flip-out internal tab that extends the bracelet by five millimetres in a single step. The Glidelock on the ceramic Submariner offers continuous adjustment across a larger range; Easylink is a single binary extension, so more limited in travel but faster to deploy on the wrist.
The Easylink implementation on the 116500LN is identical to the 116520, and nothing in the bracelet system changed between the two references. The 126500LN successor reworked the clasp architecture, which leaves the 116500LN as the last Daytona with the older Oysterlock mechanism.
Packaging
Standard Rolex green box of the 2010s-2020s era with warranty card, Superlative Chronometer tag, booklets, and hang tags. Warranty format during the 116500LN run was the credit-card-style card rather than the earlier paper card. Full-set examples in the market carry the card, tag, and both booklets; the earliest examples from 2016 may carry transitional hang-tag formatting.
Special editions

A small number of 116500LN watches left Rolex's production flow with a second dial signature or a bezel-colour swap tied to a specific retailer. The most visible is the Asprey program, a two-colour limited series of 25 pieces each delivered through Asprey's London boutique and sold from a back room rather than the retail floor. The Asprey Daytonas carry an Asprey co-signature on the dial and a colour-swapped tachymeter insert; production was tiny and Rolex's catalog never confirmed them.
Beyond Asprey, regular-production 116500LN watches have appeared with engraved casebacks for institutional customers and occasional double-signed dials for retailer anniversaries. These are personalisation layers on standard 116500LN watches rather than distinct Rolex reference variants.
Market and collector context
Few Rolex references have moved the secondary market the way the 116500LN did. At launch in spring 2016, grey-market dealers were selling the white dial at close to seventy percent over list within days of Baselworld. The premium compounded through the late 2010s: roughly €17,000 in 2016, €20,000 in 2018, €23,000 across 2019 and 2020, then a steep acceleration into 2021 when white-dial examples traded routinely above €30,000 and peak Chrono24 listings went past €35,000. GBP prices tracked similarly, with retail around £10,500, Q4 2021 at roughly £32,000, and peak listings at £35,000.
The reference sat at the centre of the 2020–2022 luxury-watch run-up. Authorised-dealer waitlists ran for years. Successful applicants had to show long purchase histories with the dealer, often on lesser references, before an allocation opened. Flipping was policed actively, with Rolex restricting future allocations to buyers who resold within windows set by individual dealers.
The correction from early 2023 onward brought 116500LN pricing back toward the mid-$20,000s for white-dial examples and into the low $20,000s for black-dial examples by 2024. The reference still trades well above retail, consistent with its discontinued and ceramic-era status, but the multiples-of-retail era is over. The case for buying one now rests on the watch itself: the last steel Daytona on the 40mm case, the last on the 4130 movement, and the first to carry Cerachrom.
The successor 126500LN has inherited the waitlist position without matching the secondary-market peak of its predecessor. The 116500LN is likely to be the reference collectors point to when they describe the ceramic-Daytona moment, regardless of whether the 126500LN turns out to be the objectively better watch.
Sources
- The Vintage Rolex Field Manual — Colin A. White, Morning Tundra
- Jack Forster, "A Week On The Wrist: The Rolex Daytona Ref. 116500LN", Hodinkee, 2020-01-01
- JX Su, "Introducing the Rolex Daytona in Steel with a Black Ceramic Bezel Ref. 116500LN", SJX Watches, 2016-03-16
- JX Su, "Prudent Meditations on the Rolex Daytona Ceramic", SJX Watches, 2016-06-21
- Frank Geelen, "Rolex Daytona 116500LN in steel with Cerachrom black bezel Hands-On", Monochrome, 2016-03-17
- Brice Goulard, "Market Analysis: Continuous Rise in Price of the Rolex Daytona 116500LN", Monochrome, 2021-03-05
- "Rolex Daytona ref. 116500LN review", Time+Tide, 2019-04-30
- "An Owner Review Of The Rolex Daytona 116500LN", Fratello
- "New Rolex Daytona 2016 - What Changed", Fratello, 2016-01-01
- Nick Gould, "Review: Rolex Cosmograph Daytona 116500LN", Deployant, 2016-04-12
- "The Definitive Guide To The 2023 Steel Rolex Daytona Watch Vs Previous 116500LN Version", aBlogtoWatch, 2023-01-01
- "The Price Performance of the Rolex Daytona Cosmograph Ref. 116500LN in 2021", Oracle Time, 2021-12-11
- "Unusual Purple Rolex Daytona up for Sale at Sothebys", Oracle Time, 2023-12-04
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