Watch winder maintenance comes down to a few regular habits: remove dust and leather residue, keep the cushions clean and correctly tensioned, listen to the motor, and protect the module from heat, humidity and magnetic fields. A well-built winder needs no oil or lubricant — what matters is clean bearings and a stable power supply. Get those right and you extend the watch winder lifespan from a few years to a decade or more.
Below we set out what proper watch winder care looks like, which mistakes shorten a motor's life, and how to tell when an drive unit has reached its end. The electronics in a premium module are essentially maintenance-free — what you actually look after is what moves and what touches the watch.
For routine care, a roughly three-month rhythm is enough: wipe the cushions, check that the watch sits firmly, and listen briefly to the motor. A properly built winder is designed for continuous running and does not need an annual service the way a movement does.
Between those checks, pay attention to any change in sound. A previously quiet motor that suddenly hums or clicks is the single most useful early warning — usually it is dust in the bearing or a shifted cushion, rarely the motor itself.
Winder cleaning is always done with the power off and no watch in the module. Remove the cushion and lift away loose dust with a soft brush or a blower — not canned compressed air, which can drive moisture into the bearing.
Never use solvents, silicone spray or oil on the motor or shaft. Interior surfaces in full-grain leather or Alcantara are wiped only lightly damp; once or twice a year an acid-free leather conditioner applied sparingly to a cloth keeps the lining supple — much like caring for a leather strap, only on a larger scale.
"A watch winder does not age from use — it ages from dust, humidity and an unclean power supply."
Wear happens almost entirely on the moving parts. The motor bearing runs for years but is the first candidate for wear; the control electronics, by contrast, are virtually maintenance-free as long as they stay clean and dry.
The table below sums up what to do and when. It applies equally to single and multiple modules.
| Interval | Task | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Weekly | Check the watch sits firmly, listen to the run | early warning of bearing or motor trouble |
| Quarterly | Wipe cushions, brush away dust | keeps dust out of the bearing, preserves quiet running |
| Twice a year | Condition leather, check TPD and direction | maintains the lining and correct winding |
| Annually | Check cables, plugs and contacts; deep-dust | prevents loose connections and faults |
| As needed | Replace cushion, power supply or motor module | extends overall lifespan |
The most common cause of early failure is humidity. Keep the winder at a stable 45–55 % relative humidity; levels that are too high attack the bearing and electronics, while air that is too dry harms the leather. There is more on this in our guide to humidity and watch storage.
Equally damaging are trapped heat, constant vibration, a cheap power supply with fluctuating voltage, and continuous running at an excessive TPD. Set the turns per day only as high as the movement requires — details in our TPD reference. Whether your watches need a winder at all is covered in the piece on quartz and manual-wind watches.
On an inexpensive winder, a motor swap is rarely economical. On a high-quality or safe-integrated system, however, the motor, cushions and power supply are usually replaceable as individual modules — which extends service life considerably and is the more sustainable choice. Kronberg Collection supplies spare parts for its own watch winder modules and replaces drives at the atelier near Zurich.
If a motor stops turning, check the power and fuse first, then the programming — an accidentally enabled rest mode looks like a fault. If the module stays silent or runs audibly rough, the motor has reached its end. For integrated solutions and servicing, reach us through the contact page; how winders sit cleanly inside a safe is covered in our piece on built-in watch winders.
If you will not wear a watch for weeks, it need not stay in the winder. Remove the watch, clean the holder and store the powered-off module away from dust. That avoids unnecessary running and spares the motor — sometimes the best watch winder care is a deliberate pause.
A quick clean every three months and a thorough check once a year are enough. Unlike a movement, a quality watch winder needs no annual service because it is built for continuous operation.
No, never add oil yourself. Good winder motors run maintenance-free, and extra oil or silicone spray gums up and can seize the bearing — faulty drives are swapped by a specialist instead.
Use a dry or lightly damp microfibre cloth and no solvents. For full-grain leather, an acid-free leather conditioner applied sparingly to a cloth once or twice a year keeps it supple.
With clean bearings, a stable power supply and protection from heat and humidity, a quality module easily lasts ten years or more; trapped heat and fluctuating voltage shorten its lifespan the most.
It is usually dust in the bearing or a shifted cushion rather than the motor itself; cleaning the module with the power off and checking the cushion fit fixes the noise in most cases. If it persists, the motor has worn out.
A permanently excessive turns-per-day setting loads the motor needlessly and shortens its life. Set the TPD only as high as the specific movement actually requires.
Book a no-obligation personal consultation with a Kronberg advisor. We'll guide you through every option.