Swatch trademark infringement claim now seeks $170 million in damages from Samsung in London. The Swiss watchmaker says Samsung allowed digital clones of its watches on its smartwatches. Financial Times reporters reviewed the court documents and shared the key details last Friday. A British judge will rule on the damages soon after closing arguments wrap up.
Inside the Swatch Samsung lawsuit
The High Court in London found Samsung liable for trademark infringement back in 2022. These third-party apps let users replicate popular models from several famous Swatch-owned luxury brands. Owners then used the apps to make their smartwatch screens look like luxury dials. The court counted twenty-six digital watch faces closely resembling the group’s protected brand designs. Shoppers downloaded these Samsung smartwatch watch faces around 160,000 times across Britain and Europe. The Swatch trademark infringement claim covers the period from October 2015 to February 2019. Reporters at the Financial Times called this Britain’s largest trademark case of its kind.
How the Swatch trademark infringement claim reached this point
A British appeals court backed the Swiss watchmaker once again at the end of 2023. Judges ruled that the outside developers behind the apps did not change Samsung’s legal responsibility. Swatch lawyers built the $170 million damages demand on a set of hypothetical licensing fees. Those fees span ten Swatch brands and reflect the portfolio’s reputation and drawing power. The Omega Tissot watch apps drew the sharpest criticism from the watch group’s leaders. Tissot chief executive Sylvain Dolla warned the practice can kill the value of the fine Swiss watch. He described smartwatches as cheap commodity items beside genuine luxury timepieces from Swiss makers.
Samsung lawyers called the damages demand extravagant and far out of touch with reality. The company argued that Swatch suffered no real financial loss from the disputed watch apps. Samsung also said it gained no meaningful benefit from these disputed watch face listings. Executives noted the firm removed the apps soon after learning about the whole problem. Swatch and Samsung both declined to comment further on this ongoing legal process.
Where Swatch stands on smart devices
Watchmaker Swatch builds timepieces from cheap plastic models up to luxury pieces worth thousands. The group sells connected products like the SwatchPAY! Yet it avoids full smartwatches for now. This careful stance keeps the brand focused on traditional watchmaking and tight design control. Lawyers first began the dispute in 2019, before Britain formally left the European Union. Justice Marcus Smith will now hand down the damages judgment at a later date.
What the Swatch trademark infringement claim means for you
The outcome of this Samsung-Swatch lawsuit reaches well beyond one single London courtroom. A ruling for Swatch should clear the path for a parallel United States claim. Swiss watchmakers now face rising pressure from Apple, Huawei, and Samsung in connected watches. A clear win for Swatch would send a strong signal to other technology firms. Brand owners across fashion and luxury sectors will study this London result quite closely. As I see it, this case shows how brand value can shift onto small screens. You should watch how the judge weighs brand prestige against the real market harm here. The final verdict will shape how courts treat digital copies of physical luxury products.



