Casio is making a bigger play in mechanical watches, and the newest Edifice automatics are now showing up in the United States. The brand’s EFK-110D series has appeared on official US product listings in three dial colors: EFK110D-1A in black, EFK110D-2A in blue, and EFK110D-7A with a white textured dial. Each model is listed at $300, and while pre-orders aren’t live yet, the listings signal that a wider US release is on the way.
These watches first launched in Japan earlier in 2026, and the US pages confirm that Casio is bringing the full trio over with the same core specifications across the lineup. The only real difference is the dial finish, which gives each version its own personality without changing the overall design.
The EFK-110D models come in a compact stainless steel case sized at 43 × 38 × 11.8 mm, paired with a solid steel bracelet and a three-fold clasp. Visually, the case blends brushed and polished surfaces for a clean look that leans sporty, but not overly aggressive. It’s a more restrained Edifice style than the brand’s chronograph-heavy offerings, making it easier to wear as an everyday mechanical watch.
Dial texture is where Casio tries to stand out. The brand uses an electroforming process to create a textured surface, and it’s most eye-catching on the white EFK110D-7A, which shows a more layered, dimensional effect. All three watches keep the layout simple and familiar: applied hour markers, a date window at 3 o’clock, and a straightforward three-hand design.
Powering the series is an automatic movement that also supports manual winding. Casio rates it for about 42 hours of power reserve, running at 21,600 vibrations per hour with 21 jewels. You also get hacking seconds, and the movement can be viewed through a screw-lock exhibition caseback. Finishing out the spec sheet are features that matter for long-term daily wear, including sapphire crystal, 100-meter water resistance, and an accuracy range listed at -20 to +40 seconds per day.
At $300, the Casio Edifice EFK-110D watches land in an interesting spot. They don’t fit the usual Casio mold of value-packed quartz options, and they aren’t trying to be rugged tool watches in the way many people expect from the brand. Instead, this release feels like a straightforward mechanical Edifice line aimed at buyers who want a clean stainless steel automatic with modern durability specs, backed by a name most people already trust.






