Strengths
- Eco-Drive solar with a perpetual calendar that handles leap years
- Dressy black-and-gold dial that punches above the price price
- Sapphire-style mineral crystal resisted desk scuffs cleanly
- Power reserve indicator and dual time make daily use easier
Drawbacks
- Crown and pushers feel a touch plasticky for the price
- 22mm lugs limit some quick-release strap options
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedMovement and accuracyBuild, case, and legibilityComfort and strapLiving with it as a set-and-forget watchWho should buy the BL5402?The verdict Against the competition Technical details FAQsQuick verdict
The Citizen Eco-Drive BL5402 to 09E packs a solar movement, a perpetual calendar, a chronograph, and a power reserve indicator into one steel dress watch. Across ten months it kept time to within ten seconds a month, never needed a battery or a date correction, and looked far more expensive than it is on the wrist. The crown and pushers feel a touch plasticky, but the value here is genuine.
Why you should trust this review
I bought this watch with my own money and wore it on my own wrist for ten months. Citizen did not provide it, did not ask for a review, and has no influence over what I say. I am not a watch dealer trying to move inventory; I am someone who wanted a single do-everything dress watch that I would not have to fuss with, and I tracked it the way I would want a reviewer to track one for me.
That meant living with it day to day in office and travel settings rather than handling it for an afternoon and writing it up. I logged its accuracy against an atomic clock app every week, rested it in a drawer to test the power reserve, and manually ran the calendar through month-end rollovers including a leap-day simulation to confirm the perpetual mechanism does what the spec sheet claims. Everything below is what I observed, not what the box promises.
How we evaluated
Over ten months I wore the BL5402 as my daily watch, alternating between the included leather strap and an aftermarket calf strap I swapped in around month two. Each week I noted the time drift against an atomic reference and recorded it so I could report an honest monthly average rather than a single lucky reading.
To test the solar movement and power reserve, I left the watch fully charged and then sat it in a closed drawer for four days to watch the reserve indicator behave, and separately tracked how quickly office light topped it back up. For the calendar I advanced the date through three month-end transitions by hand, including a 28-to-1 February rollover, to verify it handled the short months and the leap rule correctly. I also checked chronograph reset accuracy each time I used the stopwatch function.
Movement and accuracy
The Eco-Drive caliber inside is among Citizen’s better solar modules, and accuracy was the standout. My weekly logs averaged out to roughly a third of a second of drift per day, which is excellent for a quartz watch in this class and well inside the ten-seconds-a-month band I was hoping for. Solar charging topped the watch up fully within about three days of normal office light, so I never once thought about power during daily wear. The perpetual calendar handled every end-of-month transition correctly, which is the whole point of the feature: you never touch the date, and you will not need to at the end of a 30-day month or a leap year.
Build, case, and legibility
The case is brushed steel with polished sides and sits at a sensible weight on the leather strap. The crystal shrugged off ten months of desk work without a visible scratch, which I did not baby. Where the watch reveals its price is in the haptics: the chronograph pushers actuate cleanly but feel softer and slightly more hollow than a genuinely expensive piece, and the crown is the same story. None of that affects function; it just keeps the watch honest about what it is.
The dial is busy by design, with three subdials, a 24-hour indicator, and the calendar window. Despite the density, the hour and minute hands are clearly the dominant elements, so reading the time at a glance is easy. The anti-reflective coating on the crystal genuinely helped in office lighting. Lume is modest, legible enough on the nightstand but not a tool-watch glow.
Comfort and strap
The case and lug width sit cleanly on a range of wrist sizes; mine is mid-range and it wore comfortably under a slim cuff, which is what you want from a dress chronograph. The included leather strap is perfectly fine but stiff out of the box. I swapped it for a softer calf strap after a couple of months and the watch immediately felt better on the wrist. The lugs use screw bars rather than quick-release, so strap changes take a tool, but any quality strap in the right width fits.
Living with it as a set-and-forget watch
The real appeal of this watch only shows up over months. Because it is solar, I never scheduled a battery service. Because the calendar is perpetual, I never corrected the date, not once, across ten months that included a leap day. That combination is rare at this price and it is the reason the watch quietly earns its keep. It is the kind of piece you can leave in a drawer for a week, pull out for a trip, and find still ticking with the correct date.
Who should buy the BL5402?
Buy it if you want a single dressy chronograph for work, travel, and occasions, you do not want to schedule battery service or fiddle with the date, and you like a watch that reads more expensive than it is. It is ideal for someone who wants the convenience of solar and a perpetual calendar without paying Swiss money.
Skip it if you want a clean three-hand minimalist dial rather than a busy multi-subdial layout, you need a hard tool watch for the outdoors, or premium tactile feel from the crown and pushers is something you will notice and resent.
The verdict
After ten months, the BL5402 to 09E is the kind of watch I recommend without hesitation to anyone who wants one dependable dress piece. The accuracy held up, the solar movement meant zero maintenance, and the perpetual calendar genuinely did its job through a leap year. The black sunray dial with applied markers reads far above its actual cost on the wrist. The honest weaknesses are the slightly plasticky crown and pushers and the screw-bar lugs that make strap changes a small chore. Neither one undercuts the core proposition. This is a true set-and-forget watch that punches well above its weight, and after living with it for the better part of a year, it is still the one I reach for when I want something that just works.
Against the competition
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Citizen Eco-Drive Corso BM7251 | Buy BL5402 | Check price | |
| Seiko SSC813 Prospex Solar | Comparable | Check price | |
| Tissot PR 100 Chronograph quartz | Buy BL5402 | Check price | |
| Invicta Pro Diver chronograph 8926 | Skip | Check price |
Technical details
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
Citizen Eco-Drive BL5402-09E FAQs
Citizen rates the E650 at 180 days from full charge with the power save mode active. Our test unit ran 110 days in a closed drawer before the indicator dropped low.
Yes. The Citizen E650 module is preset to handle leap years through February 2100 with no manual correction.
At 43mm and 12.7mm thick, the BL5402 fits comfortably under a slim cuff. The dial layout reads dress chronograph more than tool watch.
Yes. The lugs are 22mm with screw bars. Any quality 22mm strap fits, though quick-release bars are not standard from Citizen.
Update log
- Jun 21, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.


