A quartz watch second hand that jumps in two-second intervals instead of moving smoothly is almost always signaling a dying battery. This intentional power-saving function tells you the battery has dropped below the voltage needed to drive the motor at full speed. The fix is straightforward: replace the battery. If the hand continues to skip after a fresh battery, the cause is mechanical or electrical, and home troubleshooting becomes limited.
Quick answer
The most common reason for a quartz watch second hand skipping two or more seconds at a time is a low battery. Many quartz movements are designed to enter an “end-of-life” indicator mode where the second hand moves in multi-second jumps to alert the wearer. Replacing the battery with the correct type (usually a silver-oxide cell such as SR626SW or SR920SW) resolves the problem in the vast majority of cases. If the skipping persists after a new battery, the issue lies elsewhere — a loose connection, a stalled motor, or a damaged circuit.
What the skipping second hand actually means
In a healthy quartz watch, the second hand steps once per second (or once per half-second in sweep-movement models). When the battery voltage drops below approximately 1.35 V (from a nominal 1.55 V), the integrated circuit enters a low-power mode. Instead of delivering one pulse per second, it delivers one pulse every two, four, or sometimes even ten seconds, conserving enough energy to keep the timekeeping circuit alive while telling the owner the battery needs replacement.
“The two-second skip is a deliberate end-of-life indicator, not a malfunction,” notes movement engineers at Miyota. “It is designed into many calibers to save the owner from a sudden stop.”
This behavior is found in Swiss, Japanese, and Chinese movements alike. Manufacturers such as ETA, Ronda, and Miyota embed this indicator in many of their calibers. The skipping hand is the watch’s way of saying, “Replace me soon.”
How quartz movements regulate time
A basic quartz movement consists of five components that work together:
| Component | Function |
|---|---|
| Battery | Provides direct current (typically 1.55 V for silver-oxide cells) |
| Quartz crystal | Oscillates at 32,768 Hz when energised |
| Integrated circuit (IC) | Divides the crystal’s frequency down to 1 Hz and sends a pulse to the stepper motor |
| Stepper motor | Converts electrical pulses into mechanical rotation (one pulse = one step of the second hand) |
| Gear train | Transfers motor rotation to the hands |
When the battery voltage drops below the IC’s operating threshold, the divider circuit cannot maintain a steady 1 Hz output. The IC switches to the low-power pulse mode, causing the second hand to skip. The movement continues to track time accurately enough to maintain the correct time, but the skipping pattern becomes the primary symptom.
Diagnose and fix the skipping second hand
Before opening the watch, note the skipping pattern: does the hand jump exactly two seconds, four seconds, or an irregular number? A consistent two-second skip almost always points to low battery. Irregular or random skipping may indicate a different fault.
Step 1: Confirm the battery condition
- What you need: A case-back removal tool (knife-style or adjustable wrench for snap-off backs; a case-back wrench for screw-down backs), a digital multimeter, and the correct replacement battery (check the old cell’s printed code or the manufacturer’s specification).
- Action: Remove the caseback and locate the battery. Measure voltage across the battery terminals. A reading below 1.35 V confirms the battery is the likely culprit. If the reading is above 1.45 V, the battery is not the cause.
- Branch: If the battery tests low, replace it. If the battery tests good, move to Step 2. If the battery tests between 1.35 V and 1.45 V, the cell may be marginal but not fully dead. Replace it anyway, as some movements begin skipping at voltages as high as 1.4 V.
Step 2: Inspect and clean the battery contacts
- What you need: A plastic or wooden toothpick (metal tools can short-circuit the movement), bright light.
- Action: Examine the positive (+) and negative (-) contact springs. Look for corrosion, white powder, or bent/depressed springs. Gently lift the spring with the toothpick to restore tension if it appears flattened. Clean any visible corrosion with a dry, lint-free cloth. Reinsert the battery and test.
- Home-safe limit: Do not apply any cleaning solvent near the movement. If contacts are heavily corroded or broken, the watch needs a professional.
Step 3: Perform a full reset (movement restart)
Some movements freeze after a battery change and need a short-circuit reset to resume normal operation.
- Action: With the battery installed and the caseback still off, use a pair of insulated tweezers to briefly touch the positive terminal of the battery to a metal ground point on the movement (often the metal rim or a screw). Hold for two seconds. The second hand should begin stepping normally.
- Verification: After the reset, watch the second hand for a full minute. It should advance exactly one step per second with no double ticks or pauses. If it does, the fix is confirmed. If it still skips, proceed to Step 4.
Step 4: Check for a stalled or misaligned gear (mechanical cause)
A skipped gear or a seized pivot can cause the second hand to jump erratically or stop.
- What you need: A loupe (×5 to ×10), gentle hand-winding attempts (if the watch has a crown for hand-setting, rotate it).
- Action: Observe the second hand while gently rotating the crown in the time-setting direction. If the hand moves freely in one direction but hangs in the other, a gear may be out of alignment. Do not force the crown.
- Home-safe limit: If the hand does not move at all, or if you feel resistance, stop immediately. Further manipulation can damage the gear train.
Step 5: Evaluate the stepper motor coil resistance
This step requires a multimeter and knowledge of the movement’s coil resistance (typically 1.5–3 kΩ for modern movements).
- Action: Measure the resistance across the two coil terminals on the movement (consult the movement’s technical sheet for exact location). An open circuit (infinite resistance) indicates a broken coil. A short circuit (near zero) also signals failure.
- Home-safe limit: If the coil is faulty, the movement must be replaced — a job best left to a watchmaker.
Likely causes at a glance
| Symptom | Most likely cause | Home fix possible? | Professional needed? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hand skips 2 seconds consistently | Low battery | Yes – replace battery | Rarely |
| Hand skips 2 seconds after new battery | Battery contact issue | Yes – clean/adjust contacts | If corrosion persists |
| Hand skips randomly or sporadically | Stalled gear, damaged coil, or circuit fault | No | Yes – movement service or replacement |
| Hand stops completely after battery replacement | Movement needs reset (short-circuit reconnect) | Yes – touch battery to ground | If no response |
| Hand jumps 4–10 seconds | Very low battery (below 1.2 V) | Yes – replace battery | No |
When to stop and visit a watchmaker
Stop home troubleshooting if any of the following apply:
- The battery tests above 1.45 V but the hand still skips.
- Contact springs are broken or heavily corroded.
- The second hand does not move at all after a fresh battery and a reset attempt.
- The watch has been exposed to water (moisture inside the case can short-circuit the movement).
- The movement requires disassembly beyond the battery compartment.
A typical watchmaker charge for diagnosing a quartz movement issue is $20–$40, plus the cost of a new movement if needed (often $15–$50). For watches valued above $500, a movement replacement or professional cleaning is recommended rather than further home attempts.
Related questions
Can a dead battery damage a quartz watch?
No. A dead battery simply stops the watch; it does not harm the movement. However, a leaking battery (rare with modern silver-oxide cells) can corrode the contacts and circuit board, causing permanent damage. Remove a dead battery promptly to avoid leakage.
Why does my watch only skip when I wear it?
Intermittent skipping during wear can indicate a loose battery contact that shifts when the watch moves. The contact spring may be weak, or the battery retaining clip could be broken. This is a battery-contact issue, not a movement fault.
Does a skipping second hand mean the watch is broken?
Not necessarily. In the vast majority of cases it means the battery is low. Only if the battery is fresh and the hand still skips is there a deeper mechanical or electrical problem.
How long will the watch run after skipping starts?
Most quartz movements will continue to keep time for several weeks to a few months in the low-power mode. The exact duration varies by movement, but the watch will eventually stop. Replace the battery as soon as practical to avoid unexpected stoppage.
Can I use an alkaline battery instead of silver-oxide?
No. Alkaline cells (like LR44) have a lower voltage curve and may cause erratic operation or leaking. Always use the silver-oxide equivalent (SR prefix) specified for the movement.

The We Know Watches editorial team brings together over 40 years of combined watch collecting, trading, and repair experience. Our editors have owned and handled watches from every major brand — from entry-level Seiko 5s to Rolex, Omega, Patek Philippe, and independent Swiss watchmakers. We’ve bought and sold at auction, worked with authorized dealers, visited manufacturing facilities in Switzerland and Japan, and serviced hundreds of movements ranging from the Seiko 7S26 to the Longines L888. Every guide and review we publish is based on hands-on experience, original research, and consultation with professional watchmakers. We do not accept payment for reviews, and we clearly disclose when we use affiliate links.
