Key Takeaways
- Tritium watches are safe to wear - beta radiation from sealed glass tubes cannot penetrate your skin under normal use.
- The tubes are hermetically sealed - tritium gas is locked inside glass capsules with no exposure risk during daily wear.
- Tritium is a soft beta emitter - the radiation doesn't carry enough energy to penetrate glass, skin, or reach living tissue.
- Breakage is manageable - a cracked tube outdoors poses minimal risk; ventilate the area and avoid ingestion.
- Tritium watches are regulated - compliant with UK, EU, and international radiological standards for manufacture, sale, and disposal.
- Our GTLS comes from mb-microtec, Switzerland - the global originator of Gaseous Tritium Light Source technology, used by military and professional services worldwide.
- Tritium glows for up to 20 years - no charging, no batteries, no fading overnight. Continuous light through beta decay.
Are Tritium Watches Safe?
Yes. The tritium in a Nite watch is sealed inside hermetically closed glass tubes known as GTLS - Gaseous Tritium Light Sources. Tritium emits low-energy beta radiation. Those electrons cannot penetrate the glass, cannot penetrate your skin, and will not reach internal tissue during normal wear.
Is tritium dangerous? Not in a sealed watch. The radiation dose from a tritium watch on your wrist is negligible - less than the background radiation you absorb every day from soil, buildings, and cosmic rays.
The one scenario worth knowing about is tube damage. A cracked tube in a confined, unventilated space could release a small amount of tritium gas. Tritium is one of the least hazardous radioactive materials used in any consumer product. What to do if it happens is covered in the breakage section below.
T25 tritium illumination, sealed for the working life of the watch. MX10 Shadow - 39mm field watch, Swiss quartz movement, 100m water resistance.
What Tritium Radiation Actually Is
Tritium is a radioactive isotope of hydrogen. It decays by emitting a low-energy electron - a beta particle that converts into a stable, harmless gas.
That beta particle is why tritium watch safety isn't a concern under normal use. The energy is too low to penetrate glass, too low to penetrate skin. A sheet of paper stops it. A few centimetres of air stops it. It does not reach living tissue through external contact.
Key properties at a glance:
- Low-energy beta emission only - no gamma radiation, no penetration of skin or sealed glass
- Hermetically sealed inside glass tubes - no tritium gas escapes during normal wear
- Dose from daily wear is a fraction of natural background radiation absorbed every day
- Low-hazard classification under UK, EU, and US radiological standards
- Does not accumulate in bone tissue the way historical luminous compounds did
- Clears the body within roughly 10 days if ingested
How the GTLS Tube Works
A GTLS is a small glass vial lined on the inside with phosphorescent material. The tube is filled with tritium gas under pressure, then sealed hermetically using a laser. Beta particles from tritium's decay strike the phosphor layer continuously, producing a cold, steady glow.
No battery. No charging. No daylight required. Brightness depends on the activity level of the tritium, measured in millicuries, and the efficiency of the phosphor coating. Because tritium has a half-life of roughly 12.3 years, output reduces gradually over time. Our tritium half-life guide covers exactly what to expect at each stage.
All GTLS tubes in Nite watches come from mb-microtec in Switzerland - the originators of this technology and the global standard for military and professional supply.
Myths vs Facts
Much of the concern around tritium watches comes from one question: Is tritium radioactive? Yes, but radioactive does not mean dangerous. The two are not the same.
| Myth | Fact |
|---|---|
| Tritium watches are radioactive and therefore dangerous | Tritium is radioactive, but radioactive does not mean dangerous. Beta emissions cannot penetrate skin or sealed glass. |
| Tritium is the same as radium used in old dial watches | Radium emits gamma radiation that penetrates the body. Tritium emits only low-energy beta radiation, stopped by skin. They are entirely different technologies. |
| You should not wear a tritium watch near children or pets | Normal wear poses no measurable risk to anyone nearby. See our guide on tritium watches around children and pets. |
| Breaking a tube causes serious radiation exposure | A broken tube releases a very small amount of gas. Ventilate, avoid ingestion, and the risk is minimal. |
| Tritium watches are illegal in many countries | Legal across the UK, EU, US, and most markets when activity thresholds are met. See our UK and EU legality guide. |
| The glow fades overnight and needs recharging | That describes traditional lume. Tritium glows continuously, 24 hours a day, for up to 20 years. No charging required. See our tritium vs lume comparison. |
What to Do if a Tube Breaks
A T100 tube contains a maximum of 100 millicuries of tritium. The amount of gas a single broken tube releases into a room is far below any occupational safety threshold. Tritium does not accumulate in bone and clears the body within roughly 10 days.
If a tube breaks:
- Move to a well-ventilated area or open windows immediately.
- Wash your hands before touching your face.
- Do not lean directly over the watch.
- A single broken tube does not mean the others have failed. See our guide on whether tritium tubes can be replaced.
- Do not dispose of a damaged watch in household waste. Contact us for guidance on responsible disposal.
GTLS tubes are sealed under pressure and watch cases are built to protect the dial. Breakage under normal use is unlikely.
How Tritium Watches Are Regulated
Tritium watches sit within a clear regulatory framework covering manufacture, sale, and disposal. Compliance isn't optional.
In the UK, the Environment Agency and Health and Safety Executive govern tritium in consumer products. Watches fall within defined exemption thresholds and do not require individual licensing. The EU operates an equivalent framework under its Basic Safety Standards Directive. In the US, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission issues a general licence covering tritium watches within set activity limits.
Every Nite watch with tritium tubes (GTLS) is manufactured within these frameworks using tubes from mb-microtec, held to strict Swiss and international radiological standards.
Tritium vs Radium: Why the History Matters
Radium-dial watches were produced from the 1910s through to the 1960s. Radium-226 was painted directly onto dials by hand. Radium emits alpha, beta, and gamma radiation. Gamma penetrates tissue deeply. Alpha causes severe internal damage when inhaled or ingested. The workers who painted those dials suffered bone cancers, jaw deterioration, and deaths.
That history is why people approach luminous watch technology with caution. The concern is reasonable. It does not apply to tritium.
Tritium emits low-energy beta radiation only. No gamma. It does not accumulate in bone. Sealed GTLS technology replaced open radioactive compounds with an enclosed, passive light source. The two technologies are not comparable.
Tritium in Professional Use
The MX10 was selected by UK Special Forces because it performed. Operational equipment and tools get chosen on results, nothing else.
Tritium illumination works regardless of prior light exposure. There is no charge to deplete, no coating to degrade, no external condition that affects output. The beta decay producing the glow is a constant physical process. Timing a decompression stop at depth, reading a watch in complete darkness, checking elapsed time after days of equipment storage - tritium is on in all of those situations. The GTLS technology overview covers the full technical detail.
T100 illumination at maximum brightness, built for operational use at depth. Hawk Nightfall - 200m water resistance, reinforced polycarbonate case.
How Long the Sealed Tubes Last
The hermetic seal does not degrade under normal conditions. What changes over time is brightness. Tritium has a half-life of 12.32 years, meaning output roughly halves every 12 years. At 20 years, a tube produces around 25 to 30% of its original brightness - still visible in complete darkness, but reduced from peak output.
The seal is the safety mechanism, and it holds for the working life of the watch. Our full lifespan guide covers brightness at each stage in detail.
T25 and T100: Activity Levels Explained
T25 tubes contain up to 25 millicuries. T100 tubes run between 25 and 100 millicuries. Higher activity means more brightness. Neither rating presents any additional safety risk during normal wear - the difference is entirely in light output, all of it contained inside sealed glass.
T25 is used across the MX10 field watch range. T100 is used in the Hawk and Alpha dive watch series, where maximum underwater visibility is the requirement. The full breakdown is in our T25 vs T100 guide. If you are deciding between models, our watch finder and full range comparison are the right starting points.
T100 tritium illumination across dial and hands, sapphire crystal, 300m water resistance. Alpha Shadow - classic dive form built for serious use.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are tritium watches safe to wear every day? Yes. Beta radiation from tritium tubes cannot penetrate sealed glass or skin. Daily wear presents no measurable radiation risk.
What should I do if a tritium tube breaks? Ventilate the area, wash your hands, and avoid touching your face. The tritium in a single tube is a very small quantity. Don't swallow it, don't inhale directly over it. Do not dispose of a damaged watch in household waste - contact us for guidance.
Are tritium watches legal in the UK? Yes, provided they meet activity thresholds under UK radiological regulations. Our UK and EU legality guide covers the detail.
Is tritium the same as the radium in old watch dials? No. Radium emits gamma radiation and was applied as open paint. Tritium emits only low-energy beta radiation, fully sealed inside glass. They are not comparable technologies.
Are tritium watches safe around children and pets? Yes. No radiation escapes through sealed tubes. The practical precaution is keeping watches away from small children who might mouth them. Our dedicated article covers this in full.





