AXIA has launched the Official FIFA World Cup 2026™ wristwatch collection, marking the tournament’s first entry into officially licensed watches.
The US microbrand, best known for custom projects for teams, universities and government agencies, has built the range around national colours, limited production and three distinct case formats.
Fourteen Nations, Three Watch Formats
The collection covers 14 countries: host nations Canada, Mexico and the United States, former World Cup winners Brazil, Argentina, Germany, Spain, France, England and Uruguay, plus Portugal, Morocco, Japan and the Netherlands.
A 15th winner’s edition will follow for the nation that lifts the trophy, and buyers of an existing country model can move into that winner’s watch at no extra cost if their selected team takes the tournament.
Argos Brings the Diver Spec
The Argos is the most technical model in the line, pairing a 42mm stainless steel case with 300 metres of water resistance, a coin-edge 60-minute bezel and a five-link bracelet fitted with a custom FIFA buckle.
Each version uses its country’s signature colour on the bezel and dial, with an embossed “26” pattern and an ETA 2824 automatic movement offering a 38-hour power reserve.
Enosi and Kosmos Widen the Appeal
The Enosi is the slimmer mechanical option, measuring 38mm by 10.3mm and using a Sellita SW200 automatic movement with the same 38-hour reserve.
For a more accessible, youth-oriented entry point, the Kosmos uses a 36mm bio-ceramic case and a Miyota quartz movement, keeping the national colour concept but shifting the character toward lightweight everyday wear.
Prices, Limits and Collector Sets
The Argos is priced at $1,495 and limited to 80 pieces per country, while the Enosi is $795 with the same 80-piece country allocation.
The Kosmos is priced at $225 and produced in a larger run of 400 pieces per country, with staggered launches beginning ahead of the tournament in June.
AXIA is also offering 20 Collector Box Sets per country, each containing all three watches in a walnut box with hand-painted and signed artwork by sports artist Lili Cantero.
For collectors, the appeal is less about a single complication than a specific moment in football history: a watch tied to a country, a tournament and, potentially, the team that wins it all.




