Introduced: 2011 (with MP-01)
Purpose / Inspiration: The MP Collection—short for Masterpiece—was Hublot’s no-limits laboratory. These weren’t just watches—they were engineering experiments worn on the wrist. From barrel-shaped tourbillons to watches that look like supercar engines, MP models are where Hublot lets its mad scientists off the leash. No rules. No boundaries. Just raw horological power.
Designer: Built by Hublot’s R&D and haute horlogerie division led by Mathias Buttet, using custom-built cases, movements, and materials developed completely in-house
Case size: Varies widely by model; 48mm–50mm+ is common, but many MP watches are non-traditional in shape (engine block, barrel, spaceship, etc.)
Case options: Titanium, carbon fiber, sapphire, King Gold, ceramic, 3D carbon, and more; many models have modular or transparent case structures
Powered by:
- Entirely in-house manual-wind calibers
- Features include:
- 50-day power reserve (MP-05 LaFerrari)
- Vertical tourbillons
- Split-time dual chronograph (MP-09)
- 3D power reserve indicators
- Linear time displays
- 360+ components per watch in many cases
Bezel: Non-traditional in most models—many have integrated sapphire or carbon bezels, or sculptural cases with no separate bezel at all
Dial options: Often no dial at all—full movement visibility; others use cylinders, vertical wheels, or rotating drums instead of hands
Water resistance: Varies; most MP models are 30m–50m
Bracelet: Rubber straps, often custom-molded to fit the case shape; deployant buckles or Velcro in some limited models
Still in production, with new Masterpieces released irregularly; all are extremely limited (50 pcs or fewer per edition)
Why it matters: The MP line is Hublot at its most radical. These watches don’t exist to fit in a collection—they exist to push boundaries. They’re what you buy when you already have everything else.
Not Just a Watch—A Machine: Time display meets technical sculpture
Insane Power Reserves: 11 days? Try 50. MP-05 doesn’t play
No Hands, No Rules: Rotors, drums, cylinders, and cages instead of dials
Hublot’s Horological Playground: Where design meets daring meets engineering