Counterfeit

What a fake scan
looks like

We scanned a counterfeit Rolex Submariner and the system caught it immediately. Here is what the report looks like when a watch fails authentication.

Counterfeit Rolex Submariner submitted for authentication
Verdict: Counterfeit

Identity flagged

Instead of a clean identification, the system flags the watch as a known replica type — in this case, a "superclone" variant.

Watch identified as a superclone replica

Defects highlighted

Rather than confirming features, the report pinpoints exactly what is wrong — font weight, hand finishing, bezel alignment, and more.

Defect analysis showing font, hand, and bezel issues

No valuation given

Counterfeit watches receive no price estimate. Instead, you get a clear advisory against purchase or resale.

Valuation section showing purchase advisory instead of price range
4

AI concierge

You can still ask follow-up questions — the concierge explains exactly which red flags were found and what to look out for next time.

AI concierge explaining the red flags found on the counterfeit watch
5

Evidence report

Even for fakes, you get a downloadable PDF documenting the findings — useful if you need to file a dispute with a seller.

Downloadable PDF report documenting counterfeit findings
6

Sources cited

Every verdict is backed by references — official manufacturer specs, known replica databases, and authentication benchmarks.

Sources and references used in the authentication analysis

Why this matters

Counterfeits are getting harder to spot. A quick scan before you buy can save you thousands and protect you from fraud.

Superclones replicate 95% of details
Sellers often claim "unworn" condition
Boxes and papers can be faked too
One photo can reveal the truth
Scan your watch now

See what an authentic scan looks like? View genuine example