SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

          PROXY STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(A) OF THE SECURITIES
                    EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 (AMENDMENT NO.   )

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     (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
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[ ]  Definitive Additional Materials
[ ]  Soliciting Material Pursuant to Section 240.14a-12

                                 TIFFANY & CO.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than Registrant)

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                                                              April 8, 2003



TIFFANY & CO.

727 Fifth Avenue
New York, N.Y. 10022

Michael J. Kowalski
Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer

James E. Quinn
President

Dear Stockholder:

      You are cordially invited to attend the Annual Meeting of Stockholders of
Tiffany & Co. on Thursday, May 15, 2003, at 10:00 a.m. in the Roof/Penthouse of
the St. Regis Hotel, 2 East 55th Street at Fifth Avenue, New York, New York.

      We hope that you can join us at this meeting. As a stockholder, your
participation in the affairs of Tiffany & Co. is important, regardless of the
number of shares that you hold. Therefore, whether or not you are able to
personally attend, please vote your shares as soon as possible by completing and
returning the enclosed proxy card, by calling the telephone number listed on the
card, or by accessing the Internet site to vote electronically.

      Enclosed are Tiffany & Co.'s 2002 Annual Report and Proxy Statement. We
hope you find it informative reading.

      Thank you for your interest in Tiffany & Co.

                                               Sincerely,

                                               /s/ Michael J. Kowalski
                                               Michael J. Kowalski


                                               /s/ James E. Quinn
                                               James E. Quinn

                       2003 Annual Meeting of Stockholders

                                 Proxy Statement

                                    [graphic]

                                  Tiffany & Co.

                             PROXY STATEMENT FOR THE
                       2003 ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                                             
Attendance and Voting Matters...............................................................     1
         Introduction.......................................................................     1
         Matters To Be Voted On at the 2003 Annual Meeting..................................     1
         How To Vote Your Shares............................................................     1
         The Number of Votes That You Have..................................................     2
         What a Quorum Is...................................................................     3
         What a Broker Non-Vote Is..........................................................     3
         What Vote Is Required To Approve Each Proposal.....................................     3
         Proxy Voting on Proposals in the Absence of Instructions...........................     4
         How Proxies Are Solicited..........................................................     5

Ownership of Tiffany & Co...................................................................     5
         Stockholders Who Own At Least Five Percent of Tiffany & Co.........................     5
         Ownership by Executive Officers and Directors......................................     7
         Compliance of Directors, Executive Officers and Greater-Than-Ten-
                  Percent Stockholders with Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership
                  Reporting Requirements....................................................     8

Fees Paid to the Independent Accountants....................................................     9

Tiffany & Co.'s Board of Directors and Executive Officers...................................     9
         The Board of Directors, In General.................................................     9
         Committees of the Board of Directors...............................................    10
         Compensation of Directors..........................................................    13
         Compensation of the CEO and Other Executive Officers...............................    15
         Compensation Committee Report on Executive Compensation............................    23

Performance of Tiffany & Co. Stock..........................................................    26

Discussion of Proposals Presented by the Board..............................................    27
         Item I   - Election of the Board of Directors......................................    27
         Item II  - Amendment of Employee Incentive Plan....................................    30
         Item III - Appointment of Independent Accountants..................................    38

Other Matters ..............................................................................    40
         Stockholder Proposals, In General..................................................    40
         Stockholder Proposals for Inclusion in the Proxy Statement
                  for the 2004 Annual Meeting...............................................    40
         Reminder to Vote...................................................................    40
Appendix ...................................................................................    41


                          ATTENDANCE AND VOTING MATTERS

INTRODUCTION

      The Annual Meeting of the stockholders of Tiffany & Co. will be held on
Thursday, May 15, 2003, at 10:00 a.m. in the Roof/Penthouse of the St. Regis
Hotel, 2 East 55th Street at Fifth Avenue, New York, New York.

      You are entitled to vote at our 2003 Annual Meeting because you were a
stockholder, or held Tiffany & Co. stock through a broker, bank or other
nominee, at the close of business on March 25, 2003, the record date for this
year's Annual Meeting. That is why you were sent this Proxy Statement and
accompanying material.

      We have also enclosed for your review a copy of our 2002 Annual Report to
Stockholders. This Report contains financial and other information about our
business during our last fiscal year (February 1, 2002 to January 31, 2003).

MATTERS TO BE VOTED ON AT THE 2003 ANNUAL MEETING

      There are three matters scheduled to be voted on at this year's Annual
Meeting:

      -     the election of the Board of Directors,
      -     the amendment of our 1998 Employee Incentive Plan to increase the
            number of shares of common stock that may be delivered to
            participating employees by 4,000,000, and
      -     the approval of independent accountants to audit our fiscal 2003
            financial statements.

HOW TO VOTE YOUR SHARES

      You can vote your shares at the Annual Meeting by proxy or in person.

      You can vote by proxy by having one or more individuals who will be at
the Annual Meeting vote your shares for you. These individuals are called
"proxies" and using them to cast your ballot at the Annual Meeting is called
voting "by proxy."

      If you wish to vote by proxy, you must do one of the following:

      -     complete the enclosed form, called a "proxy card," and mail it in
            the envelope provided, or
      -     call the telephone number listed on the proxy card (1-800-435-6710)
            and follow the pre-recorded instructions, or


                                       1

      -     use the Internet to vote by pointing your browser to
            http://www.eproxy.com/tif; have your proxy card in hand as you will
            be prompted to enter your control number and to create and submit an
            electronic vote.

      If you do one of the above, you will have designated three officers of
Tiffany & Co. to act as your proxies at the 2003 Annual Meeting. One of them
will then vote your shares at the Annual Meeting in accordance with the
instructions you have given them on the proxy card, the telephone or the
Internet with respect to each of the proposals presented in this Proxy
Statement.

      Alternatively, you can vote your shares in person by attending the Annual
Meeting. You will be given a ballot at the meeting to complete and return.

      While we know of no other matters to be acted upon at this year's Annual
Meeting, it is possible that other matters may be presented at the meeting. If
that happens and you have voted by proxy, your proxy will vote on such other
matters in accordance with his best judgment.

      If you decide to vote by proxy (including by mail, telephone or Internet),
you can revoke - that is, change or cancel - your vote at any time before your
proxy casts his vote at the Annual Meeting. Revoking your vote by proxy may be
accomplished in one of three ways:

      -     you can send an executed, later-dated proxy card to the Secretary of
            the Company, call in different instructions, or access the Internet
            voting site.
      -     you can notify the Secretary of Tiffany & Co. in writing that you
            wish to revoke your proxy, or
      -     you can attend the Annual Meeting and vote in person.

      A special note for those who plan to attend the Annual Meeting and vote in
person: if your shares are held in the name of a broker, bank or other nominee,
you must bring a statement or letter from the person or entity in whose name the
shares are registered indicating that you are the beneficial owner of those
shares as of the record date. If you do not bring such a statement or letter,
your vote at the meeting will not be counted.

THE NUMBER OF VOTES THAT YOU HAVE

      Each share of Tiffany & Co. common stock has one vote. The number of
shares, or votes, that you have at this year's Annual Meeting is indicated on
the enclosed proxy card.


                                       2

WHAT A QUORUM IS

      A "quorum" is the minimum number of shares that must be present at an
Annual Meeting for a valid vote. For our stockholder meetings, a majority of
shares outstanding on the record date must be present.

      The number of shares outstanding at the close of business on March 25,
2003, the record date, was 144,832,574. Therefore, 72,416,288 shares must be
present at our 2003 Annual Meeting for a quorum to be established.

      To determine if there is a quorum, we consider a share "present" if:

      -     the stockholder who owns the share is present at the Annual Meeting,
            whether or not he or she chooses to cast a ballot on any proposal,
            or
      -     the stockholder is represented by proxy at the Annual Meeting.

      If a stockholder is represented by proxy at the Annual Meeting, his or her
shares are deemed present for purposes of a quorum, even if:

      -     the stockholder withholds his or her vote or marks "abstains" for
            one or more proposals; or
      -     there is a "broker non-vote" on one or more proposals.

WHAT A "BROKER NON-VOTE" IS

      Shares held in a broker's name may be voted by the broker, but only in
accordance with the rules of the New York Stock Exchange. Under those rules,
your broker must follow your instructions. If you do not provide instructions to
your broker, your broker may vote your shares based on its own judgment or it
may withhold a vote. Whether your broker votes or withholds its vote is
determined by the New York Stock Exchange rules and depends on the proposal
being voted upon.

      If your broker withholds its vote, that is called a "broker non-vote." As
stated above, broker non-votes are counted as present for a quorum.

WHAT VOTE IS REQUIRED TO APPROVE EACH PROPOSAL

      Directors are elected by a plurality of the votes cast for directors at
the Annual Meeting. Of all nominees, the top eight in terms of "for" votes
received will be elected directors.

      You may withhold your vote "for" any nominee, but there is no means for
you to vote "against" any nominee. To withhold your vote "for" any or all of the
nominees named in this Proxy Statement, you can so mark your proxy card or
ballot or, if you vote via telephone or Internet, so indicate by telephone or

                                       3

electronically. A broker non-vote is the same as a withheld vote: neither will
have any effect on the outcome of the election of directors.

      To approve the amendment to our 1998 Employee Incentive Plan two things
must happen. First, a majority of shares outstanding as of March 25, 2003, must
actually vote on the proposal. For this purpose, abstentions will count as votes
cast but broker non-votes will not. Second, a majority of those shares actually
voting on the proposal must vote in favor of it. For this purpose, abstentions
will have the same legal effect as a vote "against" the proposal and broker
non-votes will be disregarded. That means that holders of 72,416,288 shares of
common stock must actually vote "for" or "against" the proposal (or submit their
proxies but "abstain" from voting on the proposal) and at least a majority of
those voting must vote "for" the proposal in order to increase the number of
shares of common stock that may be delivered to participating employees and
their beneficiaries by 4,000,000.

      The proposal to ratify the approval of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as
independent accountants for fiscal 2003 will be decided by a plurality of the
votes cast "for" or "against" the proposal. Therefore, if you "abstain" from
voting on this matter - in other words, you do not vote on the matter or you
indicate "abstain" on the proxy card, the telephone or by Internet, it will not
affect the outcome of votes on this proposal. That is because only votes cast
"for" or "against" this proposal will be counted in determining whether or not
it has been approved. Broker non-votes on this proposal will be treated the same
as abstentions: neither will have any effect on the vote on the proposal.

PROXY VOTING ON PROPOSALS IN THE ABSENCE OF INSTRUCTIONS

      If you do not give any specific instructions as to how your shares are to
be voted when you sign a proxy card or vote by telephone or by Internet, your
proxies will vote your shares in accordance with the following recommendations
of the Board of Directors:

      -     FOR the election of all eight nominees for director named in this
            Proxy Statement,
      -     FOR approval of an amendment to our 1998 Employee Incentive Plan
            increasing the number of shares of common stock that may be
            delivered to participating employees and their beneficiaries by
            4,000,000 and
      -     FOR approval of the appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as
            independent accountants to examine our fiscal 2003 financial
            statements.

      Shares held in the Company's Employee Profit Sharing and Retirement
Savings Plan will not be voted by the plan's trustee unless specific
instructions for voting are given by plan participants to whose accounts such
shares have been allocated.


                                       4

HOW PROXIES ARE SOLICITED

      We have hired the firm of Georgeson Shareholder Communications Inc. to
assist in the solicitation of proxies on behalf of the Board of Directors.
Georgeson Shareholder Communications Inc. has agreed to perform this service for
a fee of not more than $7,000 plus out-of-pocket expenses.

      Employees of Tiffany and Company, a subsidiary of Tiffany & Co., may also
solicit proxies on behalf of the Board of Directors. These employees will not
receive any additional compensation for their work soliciting proxies and any
costs incurred by them in doing so will be paid for by Tiffany and Company.

      This particular solicitation is being made by mail, but proxies may also
be solicited in person, by facsimile, by telephone or by electronic mail
(e-mail).

      In addition, we will pay for any costs incurred by brokerage houses and
others for forwarding proxy materials to beneficial owners.

                           OWNERSHIP OF TIFFANY & CO.

STOCKHOLDERS WHO OWN AT LEAST FIVE PERCENT OF TIFFANY & CO.

      The following table shows all persons who were known to us to be
"beneficial owners" of at least five percent of Tiffany & Co. stock as of March
25, 2003. Footnote 1 below provides a brief explanation of what is meant by the
term "beneficial ownership." This table is based upon reports filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission, commonly referred to as the SEC. These
reports are publicly available. You may therefore obtain copies of them from the
SEC, if you so desire.



Name and Address                                              Amount and                             Percent
      of                                                 Nature of Beneficial                          of
Beneficial Owner                                             Ownership (1)                            Class
----------------                                             -------------                            -----
                                                                                                
Bank of America Corporation                              20,511,157 (2)                               14.13
      100 North Tryon Street
      Charlotte, NC 28255

Prudential Financial, Inc.
      751 Broad Street
      Newark, NJ 07102-3777                              13,998,501 (3)                                9.60


-------------------------

(1)  "Beneficial ownership" is a term broadly defined by the SEC and includes
     more than the typical form of stock ownership, that is, stock held in the
     person's name. The term also includes what is referred to as "indirect
     ownership" such as where, for example, the person has or shares the power
     to vote the stock, sell it or acquire it within 60 days. Accordingly, some
     of the shares reported as beneficially owned in this table may actually be
     held by other persons or organizations. Those other persons and
     organizations are described in the reports filed with the SEC.


                                       5

(2)  Bank of America Corporation, 100 North Tryon Street, Charlotte, NC 28255
     ("BOA"), reported to the SEC on its form Schedule 13G that it beneficially
     owned 20,511,157 shares of the Company's common stock as of December 31,
     2002 and that it had sole voting power over zero shares. BOA filed as a
     parent holding company or control person with respect to several other
     owners of the Company's common stock, including Marsico Capital Management,
     LLC, which reported sole voting power with respect to 18,710,214 shares of
     the Company's common stock and sole dispositive power over 20,037,489 such
     shares.

(3)  Prudential Financial, Inc. ("Prudential") reported to the SEC on its form
     Schedule 13G that it may be deemed the beneficial holder of securities
     beneficially owned by Registered Investment Advisers and Broker Dealers of
     which it is the direct or indirect parent company. Prudential stated that
     it reported the combined holdings of such entities for administrative
     convenience and, as of December 31, 2002, may have direct or indirect
     voting and/or investment discretion over 13,979,901 shares of Tiffany & Co.
     stock held for its own benefit or for the benefit of its clients by its
     separate accounts, externally managed accounts, registered investment
     companies, subsidiaries and/or other affiliates. In addition, Prudential
     stated that through its beneficial ownership of the Prudential Insurance
     Company of America ("PICOA") it may be deemed to hold 18,600 shares of
     Tiffany & Co. stock for the benefit of PICOA's general account.


                                       6

OWNERSHIP BY DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

         The following table shows the number of shares of Tiffany & Co. common
stock beneficially owned as of March 25, 2003 by those persons who were, as of
the end of the last fiscal year (January 31, 2003), directors, the Chief
Executive Officer (the "CEO"), and the four next most highly compensated
executive officers of Tiffany & Co.



                                                            Amount and                               Percent
                                                        Nature of Beneficial                           of
Name                                                         Ownership                               Class (1)
----                                                         ---------                               ---------
                                                                                               
DIRECTORS:
William R. Chaney (Executive Officer)                      1,190,000 (2)                                *
Rose Marie Bravo                                              52,466 (3)                                *
Samuel L. Hayes III                                          216,213 (4)                                *
Abby F. Kohnstamm                                              9,500 (5)                                *
Michael J. Kowalski (CEO)                                  1,432,000 (6)                               1.0
Charles K. Marquis                                          212,082  (7)                                *
James E. Quinn (Executive Officer)                           766,131 (8)                                *
William A. Shutzer                                           273,812 (9)                                *

EXECUTIVE OFFICERS:
Beth O. Canavan                                              179,781 (10)                               *
James N. Fernandez                                           442,131 (11)                               *

ALL EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND
DIRECTORS AS A GROUP (16 PERSONS):                         5,490,360 (12)                              3.8


-------------------------

(1) An asterisk (*) is used to indicate less than 1% of the class outstanding.

(2) Includes 240,000 shares issuable upon the exercise of "Vested Stock Options"
which are stock options that either are exercisable as of March 25, 2003 or will
become exercisable within 60 days of that date, and 150,000 shares held by Mr.
Chaney's wife.

(3) Includes 48,466 shares issuable upon the exercise of Vested Stock Options.

(4) Includes 54,000 shares held in trust for the benefit of children of Prof.
Hayes by Barbara L. Hayes, his wife, as trustee, and 2,079 shares held by Prof.
Hayes's wife. Also includes 141,534 shares issuable upon the exercise of Vested
Stock Options.

(5) Includes 7,500 shares issuable upon the exercise of Vested Stock Options.

(6) Includes 1,280,000 shares issuable upon the exercise of Vested Stock
Options.

(7) Includes 130,494 shares issuable upon the exercise of Vested Stock Options.

(8) Includes 720,000 shares issuable upon the exercise of Vested Stock Options;
131 shares credited to Mr. Quinn's account under the Tiffany & Co. Employee
Profit Sharing and Retirement Savings Plan; 33,000 shares held by Mr. Quinn's
wife; and 4,000 shares owned by Mr. Quinn's children under the UGMA.


                                       7

(9) Includes 64,126 shares issuable upon the exercise of Vested Stock Options
and 5,200 shares held by or for Mr. Shutzer's minor children, 400 shares held by
Mr. Shutzer's son and 114,000 shares held by KJC Ltd. of which Mr. Shutzer is
the sole general partner and disclaims beneficial ownership of Tiffany & Co.
stock held by KJC Ltd.

(10) Includes 179,250 shares issuable upon the exercise of Vested Stock Options
and 531 shares credited to Mrs. Canavan's account under the Tiffany & Co.
Employee Profit Sharing and Retirement Savings Plan.

(11) Includes 430,000 shares issuable upon the exercise of Vested Stock Options
and 131 shares credited to Mr. Fernandez's account under the Tiffany & Co.
Employee Profit Sharing and Retirement Savings Plan.

(12) Includes 3,944,620 shares issuable upon the exercise of Vested Stock
Options and 1,607 shares held in the Tiffany & Co. Employee Profit Sharing and
Retirement Savings Plan.

COMPLIANCE OF DIRECTORS, EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND GREATER-THAN-TEN-PERCENT
STOCKHOLDERS WITH SECTION 16(A) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING REQUIREMENTS

      Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 requires Tiffany &
Co.'s directors, executive officers and greater-than-ten-percent stockholders to
file reports of ownership and changes in ownership with the SEC and the New York
Stock Exchange. These persons are also required to provide us with copies of
those reports.

      Based on our review of those reports and of certain other documents we
have received, we believe that, during and with respect to our last fiscal year
(February 1, 2002, to January 31, 2003), all filing requirements under Section
16(a) applicable to our directors, executive officers and
greater-than-ten-percent stockholders were satisfied except as follows: NONE.

                                       8


                    FEES PAID TO THE INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS

        PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP ("PwC") serves as the Company's independent
accountants.

        The following table presents fees for professional audit services
rendered by PwC for the audit of the Company's consolidated financial statements
as of and for the years ended January 31, 2002 and 2003, and for its limited
reviews of the Company's unaudited condensed consolidated interim financial
statements. This table also reflects fees billed for other services rendered by
PwC.



                                      January 31,    January 31,
                                         2002           2003
                                      -----------    -----------
                                               
Audit Fees                            $  721,000     $  883,000
Audit-related Fees (1)                    32,000        224,400
                                      ----------     ----------
     Audit and Audit-related Fees        753,000      1,107,400
Tax Fees (2)                             266,000        643,000
All Other Fees (3)                       610,000             --
                                      ----------     ----------
     TOTAL FEES                       $1,629,000     $1,750,400


(1)   Audit-related fees consist principally of fees for audits of financial
      statements of certain employee benefit plans and due diligence services.
(2)   Tax fees consist of fees for tax consultation and tax compliance services.
(3)   All other fees consist of fees for services for non-recurring and certain
      benefits related services.

                                       ***

        In making its recommendation to ratify the appointment of PwC as the
Company's independent accountants for the fiscal year ending January 31, 2004,
the Audit Committee has considered whether PwC's provision of services other
than audit services is compatible with maintaining independence of our outside
accountants.

            TIFFANY & CO.'S BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS, IN GENERAL

        Tiffany & Co. is a Delaware corporation. Our principal subsidiary is
Tiffany and Company, a New York corporation. In this Proxy Statement, Tiffany &
Co. will be referred to as "Tiffany & Co." or "the Company" and Tiffany and
Company will be referred to as simply "Tiffany."

        Our Board of Directors is currently comprised of eight members.

        Directors are required by our By-laws to be less than age 72 when
elected or appointed unless the Board of Directors waives that provision with
respect to an individual director whose continued service is deemed uniquely
important to Tiffany &


                                       9

Co. The Board of Directors can also fill vacancies and newly created
directorships, as well as amend the By-laws to provide for a greater or lesser
number of directors.

        The Board of Directors met six times during fiscal 2002. With respect to
the eight nominees for director, their attendance rate at Board and committee
meetings averaged 93.69% in fiscal 2002.

COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

        The Board of Directors has an Audit Committee, a Compensation Committee,
a Stock Option Subcommittee, a Nominating/Corporate Governance Committee and a
Dividend Committee.

                                 Audit Committee

        The primary function of the Audit Committee is to assist the Board of
Directors in fulfilling its oversight responsibilities with respect to the
Company's financial matters. The Board of Directors has adopted and approved a
charter for the Audit Committee. The charter was last amended on January 16,
2003. Under its charter, which is attached as Appendix 1, the Audit Committee's
responsibilities include:

        -   retaining and terminating the Company's independent accountants,
            reviewing the quality-control procedures and independence of such
            firm and evaluating their proposed audit scope, performance and fee
            arrangements,
        -   approving in advance all audit and non-audit services to be rendered
            by the independent accountants,
        -   reviewing the adequacy of our system of internal financial controls,
        -   establishing procedures for complaints regarding accounting,
            internal accounting controls or auditing matters, and
        -   conducting a post-audit review of our financial statements and audit
            findings in advance of filing, and
        -   reviewing in advance proposed changes in our accounting principles.

        Prof. Hayes, Mr. Marquis and Mr. Shutzer currently serve as members of
the Audit Committee. During fiscal 2002, there were seven meetings of this
committee. The Board of Directors has determined that all members of the Audit
Committee are "independent," as that term is defined in Section 303.01 of the
New York Stock Exchange's listing standards as now in effect. The Board of
Directors has not made a determination as to "independence" under new standards
proposed by the New York Stock Exchange for adoption.


                                       10

        Following is the report of the Audit Committee:

        Included in the Company's Annual Report to Stockholders are the
consolidated balance sheets of the Company and its subsidiaries as of January
31, 2003 and 2002, and the related consolidated statements of earnings,
stockholders' equity and comprehensive earnings, and cash flows for each of the
three years in the period ended January 31, 2003. These statements (the "Audited
Financial Statements") are the subject of a report by the Company's independent
accountants, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (" PwC"). The Audited Financial
Statements are also included by reference in the Company's Annual Report on Form
10-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

        The Audit Committee reviewed and discussed the Audited Financial
Statements with the Company's management.

        The Audit Committee also reviewed and discussed with PwC the matters
required to be discussed by Statement of Auditing Standards No. 61
(Communication with Audit Committees).

        The Audit Committee received from PwC the written disclosure and letter
required by Independence Standards Board Standard No. 1 (Independence Discussion
with Audit Committees) and has discussed the independence of PwC with that firm.
The Audit Committee has considered whether the provision by PwC of the tax
consultation, tax compliance and other non-audit-related services disclosed
above under "FEES PAID TO INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS - Tax Fees and All Other Fees"
is compatible with maintaining PwC's independence and has concluded that
providing such services is compatible with that firm's independence from the
Company and its management.

        Based upon the review and discussions referred to above, the Audit
Committee recommended to the Company's Board of Directors that the Audited
Financial Statements be included in the Company's Annual Report to Stockholders
which is incorporated by reference in the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K
for the fiscal year ended January 31, 2003 for filing with the Securities and
Exchange Commission.

Signed:

Samuel L. Hayes III
Charles K. Marquis
William A. Shutzer, Chair
         Members of the Audit Committee

                             Compensation Committee

        The functions performed by the Compensation Committee include

        -   approval of remuneration arrangements for executive officers, and
        -   approval of compensation plans in which officers and employees of
            Tiffany are eligible to participate.

        Prof. Hayes (Chair), Ms. Bravo, Ms. Kohnstamm, Mr. Marquis and Mr.
Shutzer currently serve as members of the Compensation Committee. In fiscal
2002, there were two meetings of this committee.


                                       11

        Stock Option Subcommittee

        The Stock Option Subcommittee, a subcommittee of the Compensation
Committee, determines the grant of options and other matters under our 1998
Employee Incentive Plan.

        Prof. Hayes (Chair), Ms. Bravo, Ms. Kohnstamm and Mr. Marquis currently
serve as members of the Stock Option Subcommittee. The Stock Option Subcommittee
met seven times in fiscal 2002.


                    Nominating/Corporate Governance Committee

        The role of the Nominating/Corporate Governance Committee is to
recommend to the Board of Directors

        -   policies on the composition of the Board of Directors,
        -   criteria for the selection of nominees for election to the Board of
            Directors,
        -   nominees to fill vacancies on the Board of Directors, and
        -   nominees for election to the Board of Directors.

        Mr. Marquis (Chair), Ms. Bravo, Prof. Hayes, Ms. Kohnstamm and Mr.
Shutzer currently serve as members of the Nominating/Corporate Governance
Committee. This committee had one meeting in fiscal 2002.

                               Dividend Committee

        The role of the Dividend Committee is to declare regular quarterly
dividends in accordance with the dividend policy established by the full Board
of Directors. Messrs. Chaney, Kowalski and Quinn currently serve as members of
the Dividend Committee. This committee did not meet in fiscal 2002 although it
has acted by unanimous written consent.


                                       12

COMPENSATION OF DIRECTORS

        Directors who are not employees of Tiffany & Co. or its subsidiaries are
paid or provided with the following for their service on the Board:

        -   an annual retainer of $49,000,
        -   an additional annual retainer of $3,500 if the director is also a
            chairperson of the Compensation, Audit or Nominating/Corporate
            Governance Committee,
        -   a per-meeting-attended fee of $2,000 for meetings attended in
            person, except that no fee is paid for attendance at any committee
            or subcommittee meetings which occur on the same day as a meeting of
            the full Board of Directors,
        -   a fee of $500 for each telephonic meeting in which the director
            participates,
        -   stock options, as discussed below, and
        -   a retirement benefit, also discussed below.

        Under Tiffany's Amended and Restated Executive Deferral Plan, directors
may defer up to one hundred percent (100%) of their cash compensation and invest
the amounts they defer in various accounts and funds established under the plan.

        Tiffany & Co. also reimburses directors for expenses they incur in
attending Board and committee meetings, including expenses for travel, food and
lodging.

        As indicated above, non-employee directors may receive options to
purchase shares of Tiffany & Co. common stock. These options vest in two equal
installments - 1/2 after one year of service on the Board following the grant of
the option, and the balance, after two years of service. However, as explained
below, all installments become immediately exercisable in the event there is a
"change in control" of Tiffany & Co.

        These options typically expire after 10 years, but they expire sooner
if, before the end of that 10-year period, the director leaves the Board. The
option's exercise price is the fair market value of Tiffany & Co. common stock
on the date of grant, which is calculated as the average of the highest and
lowest sales prices of the stock on the New York Stock Exchange on the date of
grant.

        Current policy provides that new non-employee directors will be granted
options to purchase 7,500 shares of Tiffany & Co. common stock upon their
election or appointment to the Board and in January of each year an option grant
is typically made. In January 2003, each non-employee director was granted an
option to purchase 7,500 shares.


                                       13

        Non-employee directors with five or more years of Board service when
they retire are also entitled to receive an annual retirement benefit equal to
the lesser of the annual retainer in effect during the year in which they retire
or $38,000. Subject to adjustment for partial years served, this benefit is
payable quarterly and continues for a period of time equal to the director's
length of service on the Board including periods served as an employee director.
However, this particular benefit will not apply to any new director appointed or
elected after January 1, 1999; accordingly, Ms. Kohnstamm does not participate
in this benefit plan.

        Messrs. Kowalski and Quinn are employees of Tiffany. They therefore
receive no separate compensation for their service as directors. Mr. Chaney
retired as an employee of the Company effective at the close of business on
January 31, 2003. He will be compensated as a non-employee director as of
February 1, 2003.


                                       14

COMPENSATION OF THE CEO AND OTHER EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

        This section includes a summary of salaries, bonuses and other
compensation paid to our CEO and each of the four (4) next highest paid
executive officers during the last three fiscal years. Also presented in this
section are options granted to and exercised by each of them in fiscal 2002,
retirement benefits currently available to them and any special employment,
termination or change-in-control arrangements that have been made with any of
them.

                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE



                                                                                Long Term
                                                Annual Compensation           Compensation
                                             ------------------------      ---------------------
Name and                                                                   Securities Underlying    All Other
Principal Position (1)            Year         Salary       Bonus(2)           Options/SARs        Compensation
----------------                 ------      ----------    -----------     ---------------------   -------------
                                                                                          
Michael J. Kowalski               2002        $841,082      $451,000         195,000 shares        $11,390  (3)
  President and CEO               2001        $814,730      $219,000         150,000 shares        $141,076 (4)
                                  2000        $765,247    $1,125,000         100,000 shares        $157,336 (5)

William R. Chaney                 2002        $498,658            $0          50,000 shares          $2,841 (6)
  Chairman of the                 2001        $498,658            $0          50,000 shares        $144,676 (7)
  Board                           2000        $498,658      $250,000          30,000 shares        $169,716 (8)

James E. Quinn                    2002        $645,090      $230,000         140,000 shares         $11,953 (9)
  Vice Chairman                   2001        $621,788      $112,000         110,000 shares        $105,836 (10)
                                  2000        $581,128      $575,000          75,000 shares        $119,486 (11)

Beth Owen Canavan                 2002        $405,006      $115,000          85,000 shares          $9,761 (12)
  Executive Vice President        2001        $392,022       $55,000          75,000 shares         $94,756 (13)
                                  2000        $354,814      $280,000          50,000 shares         $66,696 (14)

James N. Fernandez                2002        $544,994      $174,000         118,000 shares         $12,214 (15)
  Executive Vice President        2001        $526,659       $84,000         100,000 shares         $93,508 (16)
  and Chief Financial Officer     2000        $490,219      $436,500          65,000 shares         $65,767 (17)


(1)     Titles are as of the end of fiscal year 2002 (January 31, 2003) and do
        not reflect changes that became effective as of the close of business on
        that date. Those changes were, the resignation of Mr. Chaney as Chairman
        of the Board, the appointment of Mr. Kowalski to that position and the
        appointment of Mr. Quinn to the position of President.

(2)     Bonus amounts are earned in the fiscal year ended January 31, paid in
        the following March, and in 2000 and 2002 included cash incentive awards
        under the 1998 Employee Incentive Plan on the basis of achieved
        Performance Goals, specifically, increases above target amounts for the
        Company's consolidated earnings per share.


                                       15

(3)     Includes $0 attributable to split-dollar life insurance premiums, $5,890
        attributable to premiums for executive long-term disability insurance
        and $5,500 for the Company's matching contributions to the 401(k)
        feature of the Company's Employee Profit Sharing and Retirement Savings
        Plan. The split-dollar life insurance provided to Mr. Kowalski and other
        executive officers is discussed below under "Other Compensation
        Arrangements."

(4)     Includes $133,600 attributable to split-dollar life insurance premiums,
        $2,376 attributable to premiums for executive long-term disability
        insurance and $5,100 for the Company's matching contributions to the
        401(k) feature of the Company's Employee Profit Sharing and Retirement
        Savings Plan. The split-dollar life insurance provided to Mr. Kowalski
        and other executive officers is discussed below under "Other
        Compensation Arrangements."

(5)     Includes $149,860 attributable to split-dollar life insurance premiums,
        $2,376 attributable to premiums for executive long-term disability
        insurance and $5,100 for the Company's matching contributions to the
        401(k) feature of the Company's Employee Profit Sharing and Retirement
        Savings Plan.

(6)     Includes $0 attributable to split-dollar life insurance premiums and
        $2,841 attributable to premiums for executive long-term disability
        insurance. Mr. Chaney's deferred compensation arrangement is discussed
        below under "Other Compensation Arrangements."

(7)     Includes $142,300 attributable to split-dollar life insurance premiums
        and $2,376 attributable to premiums for executive long-term disability
        insurance. Mr. Chaney's deferred compensation arrangement is discussed
        below under "Other Compensation Arrangements."

(8)     Includes $167,340 attributable to split-dollar life insurance premiums
        and $2,376 attributable to premiums for executive long-term disability
        insurance.

(9)     Includes $0 attributable to split-dollar life insurance premiums, $6,453
        attributable to premiums for executive long-term disability insurance
        and $5,500 for the Company's matching contributions to the 401(k)
        feature of the Company's Employee Profit Sharing and Retirement Savings
        Plan.

(10)    Includes $98,360 attributable to split-dollar life insurance premiums,
        $2,376 attributable to premiums for executive long-term disability
        insurance and $5,100 for the Company's matching contributions to the
        401(k) feature of the Company's Employee Profit Sharing and Retirement
        Savings Plan.

(11)    Includes $112,010 attributable to split-dollar life insurance premiums,
        $2,376 attributable to premiums for executive long-term disability
        insurance and $5,100 for the Company's matching contributions to the
        401(k) feature of the Company's Employee Profit Sharing and Retirement
        Savings Plan.

(12)    Includes $0 attributable to split-dollar life insurance premiums, $4,261
        attributable to premiums for executive long-term disability insurance
        and $5,500 for the Company's matching contributions to the 401(k)
        feature of the Company's Employee Profit Sharing and Retirement Savings
        Plan.

(13)    Includes $87,280 attributable to split-dollar life insurance premiums,
        $2,376 attributable to premiums for executive long-term disability
        insurance and $5,100 for the Company's matching contributions to the
        401(k) feature of the Company's Employee Profit Sharing and Retirement
        Savings Plan.


                                       16

(14)    Includes $59,220 attributable to split-dollar life insurance premiums,
        $2,376 attributable to premiums for executive long-term disability
        insurance and $5,100 for the Company's matching contributions to the
        401(k) feature of the Company's Employee Profit Sharing and Retirement
        Savings Plan.

(15)    Includes $0 attributable to split-dollar life insurance premiums, $6,714
        attributable to premiums for executive long-term disability insurance
        and $5,500 for the Company's matching contributions to the 401(k)
        feature of the Company's Employee Profit Sharing and Retirement Savings
        Plan.

(16)    Includes $86,032 attributable to split-dollar life insurance premiums,
        $2,376 attributable to premiums for executive long-term disability
        insurance and $5,100 for the Company's matching contributions to the
        401(k) feature of the Company's Employee Profit Sharing and Retirement
        Savings Plan.

(17)    Includes $58,291 attributable to split-dollar life insurance premiums,
        $2,376 attributable to premiums for executive long-term disability
        insurance and $5,100 for the Company's matching contributions to the
        401(k) feature of the Company's Employee Profit Sharing and Retirement
        Savings Plan.

                        OPTION GRANTS IN FISCAL YEAR 2002



                                                Percent of
                                               Total Options
                                              Granted to all
                                               Employees in        Per
                                                  Fiscal          Share
                                Options            Year          Exercise        Expiration         Grant Date
Name                          Granted (1)          2002          Price (2)        Date (3)       Present Value (4)
--------                     ------------     --------------     ---------       ----------      -----------------
                                                                                  
Michael J. Kowalski          195,000 shares         8.9          $25.84            1/16/2013          $1,802,931
William R. Chaney             50,000 shares         2.3          $25.84            1/16/2013            $462,290
James E. Quinn               140,000 shares         6.4          $25.84            1/16/2013          $1,294,412
Beth O. Canavan               85,000 shares         3.9          $25.84            1/16/2013            $785,893
James N. Fernandez           118,000 shares         5.4          $25.84            1/16/2013          $1,091,004


-------------------------

(1) Options vest (become exercisable) over a four-year period in four equal
annual installments, each contingent on continued employment. However, all
installments immediately vest if there is a "change in control", death or
disability. The term "change in control" is discussed below.

(2) The exercise price for each share is its fair market value on the date of
grant. This is determined by averaging the highest and lowest sales prices of
Tiffany & Co. common stock on the New York Stock Exchange on the date of grant.

(3) Options expire no later than the 10th anniversary of the grant date, subject
to earlier expiration in the event of voluntary or involuntary pre-retirement
termination of employment (three months after termination), death, disability or
retirement (two years after the event).

(4) The amounts stated are hypothetical values calculated under the
Black-Scholes model, a mathematical formula used to value options covering
securities traded on stock exchanges. This formula considers a number of factors
in estimating an option's present value, including the stock's


                                       17

volatility rate (37.5%), expected term (5 years), interest rate (2.9%) and
dividend yield (0.6%). The actual value, if any, that the executive officer will
realize from these options will depend solely on the increase of the stock price
over the $25.84 share exercise price when the options are exercised.

                 AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN FISCAL YEAR 2002
                        AND FISCAL YEAR-END OPTION VALUES



                                                               Number of                 Value (2) of
                           Shares                         Unexercised Options        In-The-Money Options
                          Acquired          Value       at Fiscal Year-End (1)      at Fiscal Year-End (1)
Name                     on Exercise      Realized     Exercisable/Unexercisable   Exercisable/Unexercisable
--------------           -----------     ----------    -------------------------   -------------------------
                                                                       
Michael J. Kowalski         48,000       $1,529,464      1,280,000 / 395,000           $14,339,888/  $0
William R. Chaney                0                0        240,000 / 110,000           $ 2,255,518/  $0
James E. Quinn              60,000       $2,119,037        720,000 / 285,000           $ 6,555,688/  $0
Beth O. Canavan              9,000       $  239,409        179,250 / 178,750           $ 1,045,233/  $0
James N. Fernandez               0                0        430,000 / 243,000           $ 3,255,000/  $0


(1)     Options are deemed "exercisable" in this table if they are exercisable
        as of January 31, 2003, or will become exercisable within 60 days of
        that date.

(2)     The market price per share on which the option value was calculated was
        $23.085

                      EQUITY COMPENSATION PLAN INFORMATION
                             (as of fiscal year end)



        Plan category           Number of securities to be    Weighted average exercise      Number of securities
                                  issued upon exercise of       price of outstanding        remaining available for
                                   outstanding options,         options, warrants and        future issuance under
                                    warrants and rights                rights              equity compensation plans
                                                                                             (excluding securities
                                                                                           reflected in column (a))
                                            (a)                          (b)                          (c)
-----------------------------   --------------------------    -------------------------    -------------------------
                                                                                  
  Equity compensation plans             13,205,139                    $22.3817                   1,333,502 (1)
 approved by security holders
Equity compensation plans not                0                            0                            0
 approved by security holders
            Total                       13,205,139                    $22.3817                   1,333,502


(1) Shares indicated are the aggregate of those issuable under the Company's
1998 Employee Incentive Plan (the "Employee Plan") and the Company's 1998
Directors Option Plan (the "Directors Plan"). Both plans provide for the
issuance of options and stock awards. To date it has been the Company's practice
to issue only options. However, under the Employee Plan up to 1,000,000 shares
could be issued as stock awards (only 591,002 shares remaining for issuance),
and under the Directors Plan all shares of the 742,500 remaining for issuance
could be issued as stock awards.


                                       18

           COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION

        As indicated above, the following directors served as members of the
Compensation Committee during the 2002 fiscal year: Ms. Bravo, Professor Hayes,
Ms. Kohnstamm, Mr. Marquis and Mr. Shutzer. None of the members of the
Compensation Committee was, at any time either during or before such fiscal
year, an employee of Tiffany & Co. or any of its subsidiaries.

              PENSION PLAN AND SUPPLEMENTAL RETIREMENT INCOME PLAN

        Tiffany has established two separate retirement plans for eligible
employees: a Pension Plan and a Supplemental Retirement Income Plan.

        The Pension Plan is a "qualified plan," that is, it is designed to
comply with those provisions of the Internal Revenue Code applicable to
retirement plans. The Pension Plan provides participants with a retirement
benefit based on the participant's "average final compensation" multiplied by
his or her years of service with Tiffany. The amount of the benefit payable
under the Pension Plan is subject to Internal Revenue Code limitations and
mandatory vesting.

        The Supplemental Retirement Income Plan is not a qualified plan and is
not subject to Internal Revenue Code limitations on the amount of benefits it
may pay. It was established to supplement the Pension Plan and Social Security
by providing additional payments upon a participant's retirement. Except in the
event of a change of control (see below), benefits under the Supplemental
Retirement Income Plan do not vest until a participant attains age 60 while
employed by Tiffany and until he or she has provided 15 years of service.

        Payments under the Supplemental Retirement Income Plan, together with
payments under the Pension Plan and from Social Security, would equal a variable
percentage of the participant's "average final compensation." This assumes that
the vesting requirements under the Supplemental Retirement Income Plan are met.

        Depending upon the participant's years of service with Tiffany, the
combined benefit under the Pension Plan and the Supplemental Retirement Income
Plan and from Social Security would be as follows:



                                                            Combined Benefit as a
                                                                Percentage of
                  Years of Service                        Average Final Compensation
                  ----------------                        --------------------------
                                                       
                    less than 10                                      (1)
                    10-14                                             20%
                    15-19                                             30%
                    20-24                                             40%
                    25-29                                             50%
                    30 or more                                        60%



                                       19

        A participant's "average final compensation" is the average annual
compensation he or she received over the five highest paid plan years (January 1
to December 31) during his or her last 10 years of service. In general,
compensation reported in the Summary Compensation Table above as "Salary" and
"Bonus" is compensation for purposes of the Pension Plan and the Supplemental
Retirement Income Plan; amounts attributable to the exercise of stock options
are not included.

-----------------
(1) A participant retiring with less than 10 years of service would not, except
in certain instances where a change of control has occurred, receive any benefit
under the Supplemental Retirement Income Plan, but would receive a benefit under
the Pension Plan. However, the formula for benefits under the Pension Plan is a
function of years of service and covered compensation (subject to Internal
Revenue Code limitations) and not any specific percentage of the participant's
average final compensation.

        The following table sets forth the estimated combined annual benefit
payable on retirement to participants under the Supplemental Retirement Income
Plan, Pension Plan and Social Security.



                                               Annual Total Benefit for Years of Service
                       -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average Final
Compensation               15                  20                   25                 30                  35
-------------          ---------            --------            ---------          ---------            --------
                                                                                         
$125,000                $37,500              $50,000             $62,500            $75,000              $75,000
$150,000                $45,000              $60,000             $75,000            $90,000              $90,000
$175,000                $52,500              $70,000             $87,500           $105,000             $105,000
$200,000                $60,000              $80,000            $100,000           $120,000             $120,000
$225,000                $67,500              $90,000            $112,500           $135,000             $135,000
$250,000                $75,000             $100,000            $125,000           $150,000             $150,000
$300,000                $90,000             $120,000            $150,000           $180,000             $180,000
$400,000               $120,000             $160,000            $200,000           $240,000             $240,000
$450,000               $135,000             $180,000            $225,000           $270,000             $270,000
$500,000               $150,000             $200,000            $250,000           $300,000             $300,000
$600,000               $180,000             $240,000            $300,000           $360,000             $360,000
$700,000               $210,000             $280,000            $350,000           $420,000             $420,000
$800,000               $240,000             $320,000            $400,000           $480,000             $480,000
$900,000               $270,000             $360,000            $450,000           $540,000             $540,000
$1,000,000             $300,000             $400,000            $500,000           $600,000             $600,000
$1,200,000             $360,000             $480,000            $600,000           $720,000             $720,000


        All executive officers except Mr. Chaney are eligible to participate in
the Pension Plan and the Supplemental Retirement Income Plan. At the end of the
last fiscal year (January 31, 2003), the current years of creditable service and
average final compensation under both plans for each of the eligible executive
officers named in the Summary Compensation Table were as follows:



Name                                Years of Service          Average Final Compensation
---------                           ----------------          --------------------------
                                                        
Michael J. Kowalski                         24                      $1,252,891
James E. Quinn                              16                        $854,583
Beth O. Canavan                             15                        $465,347
James N. Fernandez                          24                        $688,501



                                       20

                         OTHER COMPENSATION ARRANGEMENTS

        Mr. Chaney's Retirement Benefits. As indicated above, Mr. Chaney is not
eligible for benefits under either the Pension Plan or the Supplemental
Retirement Income Plan. An alternative arrangement to fund retirement benefits
for Mr. Chaney was in effect until he retired as Chief Executive Officer. Prior
to his retirement as Chief Executive Officer, Tiffany credited $25,000 per
calendar quarter, plus accrued interest at a prime rate, to an account in his
favor. This was done under the terms of a deferred compensation agreement
entered into with Mr. Chaney in December 1989. The account is maintained on the
books of Tiffany as a liability to Mr. Chaney.

        Upon Mr. Chaney's resignation as Chief Executive Officer on January 31,
1999, the deferred compensation agreement was amended to provide for the
discontinuance of accruals to his account after December 31, 1998. As of
February 1, 1999, the balance in this account was $2,644,701.78. Commencing in
March 1999, Tiffany became obligated under the Agreement to pay Mr. Chaney a
monthly annuity of $22,449.35 from the account. This obligation terminates on
Mr. Chaney's death. On his death, the excess, if any, of the balance in his
account as of February 1,1999, over the sum of all annuity payments actually
made will be paid to Mr. Chaney's estate. Mr. Chaney is also entitled to
participate in the annual retirement benefit for non-employee directors.

        Retention Agreements. The Company and Tiffany have entered into
retention agreements with each of the executive officers. These agreements would
provide a covered executive with compensation if he or she should incur an
"involuntary termination" after a "change in control." The purpose of these
agreements is to keep our management team in place and focused on their job
duties should discussions of a "change in control" ever occur. An "involuntary
termination" does not include a termination for cause, but does include a
resignation for good cause.

        When, if ever, a "change in control" occurs, the covered executives
would have fixed, or guaranteed, terms of employment under their retention
agreements as follows: three years in the case of Mr. Kowalski and Mr. Quinn and
two years for all other executive officers. If the executive incurs an
involuntary termination during his or her term, compensation, keyed to the
length of his or her term, would be payable to the executive as follows:

        -   two or three times salary and bonus as severance,
        -   a payment equal to the present value of two or three years of
            additional years of service credit under the Supplemental Retirement
            Income Plan, and
        -   two or three years of benefits continuation under Tiffany's health
            and welfare plans.


                                       21

        Other Benefits on a Change in Control. The covered executives may
receive other benefits in connection with a "change in control," such as
accelerated vesting of stock options or pension benefits under the Supplemental
Retirement Income Plan. Because a covered executive's receipt of payments and
benefits in connection with a "change in control" may trigger a 20% excise tax
under Section 280G of the Internal Revenue Code, the retention agreements
contain "gross-up" provisions. Under these provisions, the Company or Tiffany
must pay the covered executive's excise tax and any additional income tax
resulting from the gross-up provisions. If the gross-up provisions are
triggered, the Company or Tiffany, as the case may be, will be unable to deduct
most of the "change in control" payments and benefits.

        Split Dollar Agreements. Tiffany maintains split-dollar life insurance
agreements with its executive officers, including Mr. Kowalski, Mr. Chaney, Mr.
Quinn, Mrs. Canavan and Mr. Fernandez. Under those agreements, Tiffany pays the
premiums for executive life insurance and will be repaid for those premium
payments from the death benefit. In fiscal 2002 no premium payments were made in
respect of the any split-dollar life insurance policy out of concern that such
payments might be prohibited as loans under Section 402(a) of the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act of 2002.

        Unless and until there is a "change in control," Tiffany has the right
to terminate those split-dollar agreements. If there is a "change in control,"
Tiffany loses that right, and will then be bound to continue to pay premiums
until the maturity date of each executive's agreement, which is when the
executive reaches age 65, or age 75 in the case of Mr. Chaney. At the maturity
date, the cash value of each policy will be sufficient for the following
purposes:

        -   to repay Tiffany its premium investment, and
        -   to continue the policy in force, without payment of further
            premiums, with a death benefit equivalent to twice the executive's
            average annual salary and bonus compensation for the last three
            calendar years prior to termination of employment.

        Vesting of Options and Retirement Benefits on a Change in Control. In
the event of a "change in control" of Tiffany & Co., all options granted under
its various stock option plans become exercisable in full. In addition, all
benefits under the Supplemental Retirement Income Plan become vested and payable
at retirement age, but only if, at the time of the "change in control," benefits
are also vested under the Pension Plan.

        Definition of a Change in Control. For purposes of the split-dollar
agreements, the Supplemental Retirement Income Plan and the stock options, the
term "change in control" means that one of the following events has occurred:

        -   any person or group of persons acting in concert, and by person we
            mean an individual or organization, acquires thirty-five percent or
            more in voting


                                       22

                  power or stock of Tiffany & Co., including the acquisition of
                  any right, option, warrant or other right to obtain such
                  voting power or stock, whether or not presently exercisable,
                  unless the acquisition is authorized or approved by the Board
                  of Directors;
         -        a majority of the Board of Directors is, for any reason, not
                  made up of individuals who were either on the Board on January
                  21, 1988, or, if they became members of the Board after that
                  date, were approved by the directors; or
         -        any other circumstance which the Board deems to be a "change
                  in control."

         For purposes of the retention agreements, a "change in control"
includes the above events, as well as additional events amounting to a change in
control of the Company or Tiffany, even if the Board has approved of such
events. Such events could include a so-called "friendly" acquisition of the
Company or Tiffany.

COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

         The following is the Compensation Committee's report on executive
compensation:

         The Committee's overall compensation policy is to provide a reward
         structure that will motivate the officers to achieve the Company's
         strategic and financial goals, retain and attract competent personnel
         and link the interests of management with those of the stockholders.

                  (i) Incentive Awards and other Cash Bonuses

                  The Committee believes that the portion of an officer's
         compensation that is "at risk" (subject to adjustment for corporate
         and/or individual performance factors) should vary proportionally to
         the amount of responsibility the officer bears for the Company's
         success. The Committee adheres to that philosophy in establishing
         target bonuses.

                  Each January, the Committee establishes a target bonus for the
         coming fiscal year as a percentage of the base salary of each executive
         officer. For fiscal 2002 and 2003, 75% was the target for Mr. Kowalski;
         the target ranged from 35% to 50% for the other executive officers. Mr.
         Chaney was not assigned a target.

                  Under the terms of the 1998 Employee Incentive Plan, bonuses
         that are calculated solely on the basis of an increase or decrease in
         the Company's consolidated net earnings in accordance with a formula
         are "Incentive Awards." Incentive Awards are "performance-based
         compensation" under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code. See
         below. The bonus arrangements for Mrs. Canavan and Messrs. Kowalski,
         Quinn and Fernandez for both fiscal 2002 and 2003 were structured as
         Incentive Awards. The bonus arrangements for the other executive
         officers were not.

                  The Incentive Award calculation for fiscal 2002 was performed
         by the Committee in January of 2003 on the basis of estimated net
         earnings. As permitted by the 1998 Employee Incentive Plan, the
         Committee applied an

                                       23

         adjustment to estimated net earnings to calculate reduced Incentive
         Awards; this reduction was deemed necessary to eliminate the positive
         effect on earnings arising from the recognition of certain tax benefits
         and the negative effect caused by the acquisition of Little Switzerland
         Inc. Both these events were not anticipated when the Incentive Award
         formula was set. As a consequence of these adjustments, Incentive
         Awards were reduced by approximately 29% from target. Bonuses to the
         other executive officers were reduced by the same percentage. Actual
         bonus payments were recalculated in March on the basis of actual
         reported earnings, as so adjusted.

                  In awarding bonuses to executive officers that were not
         Incentive Awards, the Committee was largely influenced by the Incentive
         Award calculation.

                  (ii)  Salaries and Benefits

                  The Committee believes that the Company's compensation and
         benefits program for its executives is generally competitive with the
         program generally offered by comparable retailers and direct marketing
         organizations. This program enables the Company to retain and attract
         competent management personnel.

                  To assess the competitiveness of the compensation offered to
         the Company's executive officers, the Committee reviewed an analysis
         prepared by a nationally recognized compensation consulting firm. That
         analysis included data concerning compensation provided by companies in
         the Peer Company Group referred to under "PERFORMANCE OF TIFFANY & CO.
         STOCK" below (to the extent data was available), a survey of 11
         companies in the specialty retail industry with revenues in the $2
         billion range, a survey of 51 companies in the retail/wholesale
         industry, a general industry sample of 119 companies with revenues in
         the $1 billion to $3 billion range and a general industry sample of 657
         companies. The Committee believes that a competitive market for the
         services of retail executives exists, even among firms that are not
         peers of the Company or that operate in a different line of business.

                  Executive salaries are reviewed by the Committee in January of
         each year and typically are adjusted on the basis of merit and relevant
         competitive factors.

                  (iii)  Stock Options

                  Options to purchase the common stock of the Company are
         granted to executive officers in January of each year, and may be
         exercised, when vested, to purchase common stock at its fair market
         value as of the date of the option grant. Options vest and become
         exercisable in four equal annual installments beginning with the first
         anniversary of the grant date; non-vested installments are forfeited if
         the option holder leaves the Company.

                  Option grants are authorized by the Subcommittee. The
         Subcommittee believes that the greater the officer's position and level
         of responsibility within the Company, the greater the desirability for
         compensation that is linked to the long-term interests of the
         stockholders. For that reason, the size of option grants is generally
         tied to the individual's level of responsibility within the Company. In
         determining the size of each option grant the Subcommittee also
         considers, in certain cases, subjective factors, such as the
         individual's potential for further growth within the Company and his or
         her past

                                       24

         performance. The size of an option grant in any one year is not
         necessarily indicative of the size of option grants to be awarded in
         future years.

                  (iv) Limitation Under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue
         Code

                  Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code generally denies a
         federal income-tax deduction to a publicly-held corporation for
         compensation in excess of $1 million per year paid to certain persons.
         These include persons who were, as of the last day of the corporation's
         taxable year, (i) the chief executive officer or (ii) among the four
         highest-compensated officers. This denial of deduction is subject to an
         exception for certain "performance-based compensation," including the
         stock options and Incentive Awards discussed above. The Board of
         Directors does not believe that it would be in the best interests of
         the Company to adopt a policy that would preclude compensation
         arrangements subject to deduction limitations.

         Signed:

         Rose Marie Bravo
         Samuel L. Hayes III
         Abby F. Kohnstamm
         Charles K. Marquis
         William A. Shutzer

           Members of the Compensation Committee




                                       25

                       PERFORMANCE OF TIFFANY & CO. STOCK

         The following graph compares changes in the cumulative total
shareholder return on Tiffany & Co.'s stock for the previous five fiscal years
to returns for the same five-year period on (i) the Standard & Poor's 500 Stock
Index, and (ii) a peer group index. Cumulative shareholder return is defined as
changes in the closing price of our stock on the New York Stock Exchange,
adjusted to reflect two-for-one stock splits that occurred in July 1999 and
2000, plus the reinvestment of any dividends paid on our stock.

              COMPARISON OF FIVE YEAR CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN AMONG
             TIFFANY & CO., S&P 500 INDEX, AND THE PEER GROUP INDEX


                              (PERFORMANCE GRAPH)




                          1/31/1998    1/31/1999    1/31/2000    1/31/2001    1/31/2002    1/31/2003
                          ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------    ---------
                                                                         
Tiffany & Co.             $   100.00   $   149.93   $   386.73   $   390.56   $   374.18   $   245.00
Standard & Poors 500      $   100.00   $   130.68   $   142.40   $   139.50   $   115.42   $    87.38
Peer Group                $   100.00   $   150.68   $   141.79   $   141.10   $   160.63   $   159.13


ASSUMES AN INVESTMENT OF $100 ON JANUARY 31, 1998 IN TIFFANY & CO. STOCK AND
EACH OF THE TWO INDICES AND THE REINVESTMENT OF ANY SUBSEQUENT DIVIDENDS.

TOTAL RETURNS ARE BASED ON MARKET CAPITALIZATION; INDICES ARE WEIGHTED AT THE
BEGINNING OF EACH PERIOD FOR WHICH A RETURN IS INDICATED.

PEER COMPANY GROUP: Coach, Inc.; Gucci Group N.V.; Movado Group Inc.; Neiman
Marcus Group, Inc.; Nordstrom Inc.; Sotheby Holdings Inc.; Williams Sonoma Inc.;
and Zale Corp. (LVMH, Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton, which, in previous years was
a part of the Peer Company Group is no longer traded in the United States).




                                       26

                 DISCUSSION OF PROPOSALS PRESENTED BY THE BOARD

ITEM I - ELECTION OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

         Each year, we elect directors at an Annual Meeting of Stockholders. At
the 2003 Annual Meeting, eight directors will be elected. Each of them will
serve until he or she is succeeded by another qualified director or until his or
her earlier resignation or removal from office.

         It is not anticipated that any of this year's nominees will be unable
to serve as a director, but if that should occur before the Annual Meeting, the
Board may either propose another nominee or reduce the number of directors to be
elected. If another nominee is proposed, you or your proxy will have the right
to vote for that person at the Annual Meeting.

         Information concerning each of the nominees is set forth below:

------------------------------------

Michael J. Kowalski                 Mr. Kowalski, 51, is Chairman of the Board
                                    of Directors and Chief Executive Officer of
                                    Tiffany & Co. He succeeded Mr. Chaney as
                                    Chairman at the end of fiscal year 2002 and
                                    as Chief Executive Officer in February of
                                    1999. Prior to his appointment as President
                                    in January 1996, he was an Executive Vice
                                    President of Tiffany & Co., a position he
                                    had held since March 1992. Mr. Kowalski also
                                    served as Tiffany & Co.'s Chief Operating
                                    Officer from January 1997 until his
                                    appointment as Chief Executive Officer. He
                                    became a director of Tiffany & Co. in
                                    January 1995. Mr. Kowalski also serves on
                                    the Board of Directors of Fairmont
                                    Hotels and Resorts and is awaiting
                                    confirmation of his appointment to the Board
                                    of Directors of The Bank of New York. The
                                    Bank of New York is Tiffany's principal
                                    banking relationship, serving as
                                    Administrative Agent and a lender under a
                                    Revolving Credit Facility and as trustee of
                                    Tiffany's Employee Pension Plan.

------------------------------------

Rose Marie Bravo                    Ms. Bravo, 52, is Worldwide Chief Executive
                                    of Burberry Limited and is a member of its
                                    Board of Directors. Ms. Bravo previously
                                    served as President of Saks Fifth Avenue
                                    from 1992 to 1997. Ms. Bravo became a
                                    director of Tiffany & Co. in October 1997
                                    when she was selected by the Board of
                                    Directors to fill a newly created
                                    directorship.

------------------------------------

                                       27

------------------------------------

William R. Chaney                   Mr. Chaney, 70, is the former Chairman of
                                    the Board of Directors. He resigned that
                                    office effective January 31, 2003. Mr.
                                    Chaney joined Tiffany in January 1980 as a
                                    member of its Board of Directors and was
                                    named Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
                                    of Tiffany & Co. in August 1984. He resigned
                                    as Chief Executive Officer effective
                                    February 1, 1999. Prior to joining Tiffany,
                                    he served as an executive officer of Avon
                                    Products, Inc. Mr. Chaney also serves on the
                                    Boards of Directors of The Bank of New York,
                                    the Atlantic Mutual Companies and Provident
                                    Holdings, Inc. The Bank of New York is
                                    Tiffany's principal banking relationship,
                                    serving as Administrative Agent and a lender
                                    under a Revolving Credit Facility and as
                                    trustee of Tiffany's Employee Pension Plan.

------------------------------------

Samuel L. Hayes III                 Prof. Hayes, 68, was the Jacob H. Schiff
                                    Professor of Investment Banking at the
                                    Harvard Business School from 1975 to 1998,
                                    when he became the Jacob H. Schiff Professor
                                    Emeritus. He was elected a director of
                                    Tiffany & Co. in 1984. He also serves on the
                                    Boards of Directors of the Eaton Vance Group
                                    of Funds and Telect, Inc.

------------------------------------

Abby F. Kohnstamm                   Ms. Kohnstamm, 49, is the Senior Vice
                                    President, Marketing of IBM Corporation. In
                                    this capacity, she has overall
                                    responsibility for marketing at IBM. Prior
                                    to joining IBM in June 1993, Ms. Kohnstamm
                                    held a number of senior marketing positions
                                    at American Express. Ms. Kohnstamm also
                                    serves on the Board of Trustees of Tufts
                                    University and the Board of Overseers at New
                                    York University's Stern School of Business.
                                    She became a director of Tiffany & Co. in
                                    July 2001, when she was selected by the
                                    Board of Directors to replace a retiring
                                    director. IBM Corporation and its affiliated
                                    companies provide data-processing and
                                    communication hardware, software and
                                    services to Tiffany and purchase business
                                    gifts from Tiffany.

------------------------------------

                                       28

------------------------------------

Charles K. Marquis                  Mr. Marquis, 60, is a Senior Advisor to
                                    Investcorp International, Inc. From 1974
                                    through 1998, he was a partner in the law
                                    firm of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher L.L.P. He
                                    was elected a director of Tiffany & Co. in
                                    1984. Mr. Marquis also serves on the Boards
                                    of Directors of CSK Auto Corporation,
                                    Jostens, Inc. and Werner Holding Co.

------------------------------------

James E. Quinn                      Mr. Quinn, 51, is President of Tiffany &
                                    Co., responsible for sales throughout the
                                    world. Prior to his appointment as Vice
                                    Chairman in January 1998, Mr. Quinn was an
                                    Executive Vice President of Tiffany & Co., a
                                    position he had held since March 1992. He
                                    became a director of Tiffany & Co. in
                                    January 1995. He is also a member of the
                                    Boards of Directors of BNY Hamilton Funds,
                                    Inc. and Mutual of America Capital
                                    Management.

------------------------------------

William A. Shutzer                  Mr. Shutzer, 56, is a Managing Director of
                                    Lehman Brothers. He previously served as a
                                    Partner in Thomas Weisel Partners LLC, a
                                    merchant banking firm, from 1999 through
                                    2000, as Executive Vice President of ING
                                    Baring Furman Selz LLC from 1998 through
                                    1999, President of Furman Selz Inc. from
                                    1995 through 1997 and as a Managing Director
                                    of Lehman Brothers and its predecessors from
                                    1978 through 1994. He was elected a director
                                    of Tiffany & Co. in 1984. Mr. Shutzer is
                                    also a member of the Boards of Directors of
                                    Jupiter Media Corp. Blount International,
                                    Inc., Practice Works, Inc.,

                                       29

                                    and RSI Holding Corp. Lehman Brothers
                                    provides investment banking services to the
                                    Company.

-----------------------------------

         THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" THE ELECTION OF ALL
EIGHT NOMINEES FOR DIRECTOR.

ITEM II - APPROVAL OF AN AMENDMENT TO THE 1998 EMPLOYEE INCENTIVE PLAN

The Company's 1998 Employee Incentive Plan (the "Incentive Plan") was approved
by the stockholders at their 1998 Annual Meeting. At their 2000 Annual Meeting,
the stockholders approved the first amendment to the Incentive Plan.

On January 16, 2003, the Board of Directors adopted a further amendment to the
Incentive Plan. If that amendment is approved by the stockholders at their 2003
Annual Meeting, the Company will have the authority to issue an additional four
million shares of the Company's common stock under the Incentive Plan.

If the proposed amendment is approved, the formal text of subsection 4.2 of the
Incentive Plan will be modified to read as follows:

         "4.2     Shares Subject to Plan.

         (a) (i) Subject to the following provisions of this subsection 4.2, the
         maximum number of Shares that may be delivered to Participants and
         their beneficiaries under the Plan shall be equal to the sum of: (I)
         [Eight Million (8,000,000)] TWELVE MILLION (12,000,000) Shares; (II)
         any Shares available for future awards under the Company's 1986 Stock
         Option Plan, as amended (the "1986 Plan") as of May 1, 1998; (III) any
         Shares that are represented by awards granted under the 1986 Plan which
         are forfeited, expire or are canceled without delivery of Shares or
         which result in the forfeiture of Shares back to the Company; and (IV)
         up to One Million (1,000,000) Shares, to the extent authorized by the
         Board, which are reacquired in the open market or in a private
         transaction after the Effective Date, provided, however, that the
         aggregate number of shares available under categories (II), (III), and
         (IV), shall not exceed Three Million (3,000,000) Shares." (BOLD
         indicates new material; [strikethrough] indicates deleted material)
         (text of Incentive Plan previously amended to reflect adjustments
         required for the two-for-one stock splits that became effective in July
         1999 and 2000, respectively).

                 [ABOVE STRIKETHROUGH TEXT ENCLOSED IN BRACKETS]

The Board of Directors believes the Incentive Plan is advantageous to the
Company and that the amendment should be approved because the plan:

-        provides flexible and competitive compensation programs that retain and
         attract employees for the Company and its subsidiaries,



                                       30

-        motivates key employees to achieve the Company's operating and
         strategic goals, and
-        links the interests of key employees with those of the Company's other
         stockholders.

FOLLOWING IS A SUMMARY OF THE MATERIAL FEATURES OF THE INCENTIVE PLAN.

In the summary that follows, all share numbers and option prices have been
adjusted as necessary to reflect the two-for-one splits of the Company's common
stock that became effective in July 1999 and 2000, respectively.

Increase in Maximum Number of Shares. The maximum number of shares of common
stock that may be issued under all Incentive Plan awards is now 11,000,000
shares. If the amendment to the Incentive Plan is approved by the Company's
stockholders, the maximum number of shares of common stock that may be issued
under all Incentive Plan awards will be increased to 15,000,000 shares. This
maximum is subject to adjustment. See Maximum Number of Shares and Adjustments
for Corporate Transactions below.

Stock Options Already Granted Under the Plan. To date, only awards of
non-qualified stock options ("NQSOs") and cash have been made.



                                       31

The following table provides information concerning NQSOs that have been granted
through March 25, 2003 to employees of the Company's subsidiaries under the
Incentive Plan:



                                                        PERCENT OF        WEIGHTED
          PERSON OR GROUP              AGGREGATE      SHARES GRANTED      AVERAGE
           GRANTED NQSOS             SHARES GRANTED  TO ALL EMPLOYEES  EXERCISE PRICE
           -------------             --------------  ----------------  --------------
                                                              
Michael J. Kowalski                       995,000            9%          $  25.8212
  Chairman and CEO

William R. Chaney                         220,000            2%          $  27.8559
  (former Chairman)

James E. Quinn                            725,000            7%          $  25.5125
  President

Beth O. Canavan                           308,000            3%          $  29.8526
  Executive Vice
President

James N. Fernandez                        553,000            5%          $  26.2261
  Executive Vice
President and Chief
  Financial Officer


All Executive Officers as a Group       3,825,000           36%          $  27.0418

All Employees Who Are Not Executive     6,850,200           64%          $  28.1058
  Officers as a Group

TOTAL                                  10,675,200          100%          $  27.7245


As of March 25, 2003, there were 564,022 shares remaining available for grant
under the Incentive Plan.

Market Value Per Share. As of March 25, 2003, the market value of one share of
the Company's Common Stock, $0.01 par value, was $25.9950 calculated as the mean
between the lowest and highest reported sales price of such a share on such date
as reported in the New York Stock Exchange Composite Transactions Index.

Administration of the Incentive Plan. The Incentive Plan is administered by the
Stock Option Subcommittee of the Compensation Committee which consists of two or
more directors selected by the Board of Directors (the "Committee"). The
Committee has the authority to determine:

         -        employees to whom awards are granted,
         -        the size and type of awards, and
         -        the terms and conditions of such awards.


                                       32

Number and Identity of Future Participants and Form of Awards Not Yet
Determined. The number and identity of participants to whom awards will
eventually be made has not yet been determined. The form of such awards is at
the discretion of the Committee. It is not possible at this time to provide
specific information as to actual future award recipients or the form of such
awards.

Awards Available under the Incentive Plan. Following are summaries of the
various awards available under the Incentive Plan.

                                Options and SARs

         The grant of a stock option entitles the holder to purchase a specified
         number of shares of the Company's Common Stock at an exercise price
         specified at the time of grant.

         Stock options may be granted in the form of NQSOs or incentive stock
         options ("ISOs"). Grants of ISOs must fulfill the requirements
         applicable to an "incentive stock option" described in Section 422(b)
         of the Internal Revenue Code.

         The grant of a stock appreciation right ("SAR") entitles the holder to
         receive the appreciation value, if any, for a specific number of shares
         of the Company's common stock over a specific time period. The
         Committee may provide the appreciation value in cash or in shares. The
         appreciation value is equal to all or a portion of the growth in the
         fair market value over an exercise price specified at the time of
         grant.

         The Incentive Plan limits the discretion of the Committee with respect
         to Options and SARs as follows:

                  -        the term of an option or SAR may not exceed 10 years,
                  -        the per-share exercise price of each option or SAR
                           must be established at the time of grant or
                           determined by a formula established at the time of
                           grant,
                  -        the exercise price may not be less than 100% of fair
                           market value as of the "pricing date",
                  -        the per-share exercise price may not be decreased
                           after grant except for adjustments made to reflect
                           stock splits and other corporate transactions (see
                           Maximum Number of Shares and Adjustments for
                           Corporate Transactions below),
                  -        neither an option nor an SAR may be surrendered for a
                           new option or SAR with a lower exercise price and
                  -        the pricing date must generally be the grant date,
                           subject to limited exceptions.


                                       33

                                  Stock Awards

         A stock award is the grant of shares of the Company's Common Stock or a
         right to receive such shares, their cash equivalent or a combination of
         both. Each stock award shall be subject to such conditions,
         restrictions and contingencies as the Committee shall determine.

                              Cash Incentive Awards

         Cash awards may be granted as determined by the Committee. Terms of
         cash awards must be set out by agreement, which may specify performance
         periods and goals. The Committee has the discretion to adjust
         pre-established performance goals under certain circumstances.

Settlement of Awards, Deferred Settlements Tax Withholding and Dividend
Equivalents. The Committee has the discretion to settle awards through cash
payments, delivery of Common Stock, the grant of replacement awards or any
combination thereof.

The Committee may permit the payment of the option exercise price to be made as
follows:

         -        in cash,
         -        by the tender of the Company's shares of Common Stock, or
         -        by irrevocable authorization to a third party to sell shares
                  received upon exercise of the option and remit the exercise
                  price.

Before distribution of any shares pursuant to any award, the Committee may
require the participant to remit funds for any required tax withholdings.
Alternatively, the Committee's may withhold shares to satisfy such tax
requirements. All cash payments made under the Incentive Plan may be net of any
required tax withholdings.

The Committee may provide for the deferred delivery of stock upon the exercise
of an option or SAR or upon the grant of a stock award. Such deferral can be
evidenced by use of "Stock Units" - bookkeeping entries equivalent to the fair
market value, from time to time, of a specified number of shares. Stock Units
are settled at the end of the applicable deferral period by delivery of shares
or as otherwise determined by the Committee.

The Committee has the discretion to provide participants with the right to
receive dividends or dividend equivalent payments with respect to the underlying
shares of Common Stock.

Duration of the Incentive Plan. No award may be granted under the Incentive Plan
after March 19, 2008. However, the plan shall remain in effect as long as any
awards are outstanding.


                                       34

Maximum Number of Shares and Adjustments for Corporate Transactions. Subject to
further adjustments for corporate transactions, as discussed below, the maximum
number of shares of the Company's Common Stock available for delivery to
participants under the Incentive Plan is 11,000,000. If the proposed amendment
is approved, this maximum will be increased to 15,000,000 shares.

Shares subject to an award that are not delivered because of forfeiture,
cancellation or cash settlement become available for further grant. If a
participant exercises an option by delivery of previously-owned shares in
payment of the exercise price, only the excess of the shares issued to the
employee above the number of shares delivered in payment will be counted against
the maximum.

The maximum number of shares which may be delivered under the Incentive Plan is
subject to further adjustment for corporate transactions, such as:

         -        stock splits, stock dividends and stock distributions,
         -        any other transaction in which outstanding shares of Common
                  Stock are increased, decreased, changed or exchanged, or
         -        a transaction in which cash, property, Common Stock or other
                  securities are distributed in respect of outstanding shares.

If such a corporate transaction occurs, the Committee will make appropriate
adjustments in:

         -        the number and/or type of shares for which awards may be
                  granted under the Incentive Plan after such transaction, and
         -        the number and/or type of shares or securities for which
                  awards then outstanding under the Incentive Plan may be
                  exercised after such transaction - such adjustments would be
                  made without changing the aggregate exercise price applicable
                  to the unexercised portions of outstanding options or SARs.

For example, to adjust for the last corporate transaction - the two-for-one
stock split that became effective in July 2000 - the Committee doubled the
maximum number of shares that could be issued under the Incentive Plan. The
Committee also doubled the number of unexercised shares that were the subject of
outstanding options and cut the corresponding per-share exercise price in half.

Other Limits Under the Incentive Plan. Subject to further adjustment for
corporate transactions, as discussed above, the Incentive Plan imposes the
following limits:

         -        shares that may be issued as ISOs -- 1,000,000,
         -        shares that may be issued as stock awards - 1,000,000,
         -        shares that may be granted in any one fiscal year to any one
                  participant pursuant to any and all awards -- 400,000, and
         -        maximum aggregate cash pay-out in any one fiscal year for cash
                  awards to a "covered executive" -- $2,000,000.


                                       35

The last two limits mentioned above will not apply if the Committee determines
that the award(s) in question to a "covered executive" will not be designed to
be tax deductible (see Section 162(m) of the Code below).

Amendment of Incentive Plan. The Board of Directors may, at any time, amend or
terminate the Incentive Plan. However, the approval of the Company's
stockholders will be required for any amendment (other than adjustments for
corporate transactions) which would:

         -        increase the maximum number of shares that may be delivered
                  under the Incentive Plan as described in Maximum Number of
                  Shares and Adjustments for Corporate Transactions above,
         -        increase any of the limits described above under Other Limits
                  Under the Incentive Plan, or
         -        decrease the minimum exercise price for an option or SAR or
                  permit the surrender of an option or an SAR as consideration
                  in exchange for a new award with a lower exercise price, each
                  as described above under Options and SARs, or
         -        increase the maximum term of an Option or SAR as described
                  above under Options and SARs.

Federal Income Tax Consequences of Incentive Plan Awards. The Company believes
that under present law and regulations the federal income tax treatment of the
various awards that may be made under the Incentive Plan will be as described
below. In general, the Company's and its subsidiaries' right to claim a
deduction is subject to the requirements of Section 162(m) of the Code (see
Section 162(m) of the Code below).

         The grant of an NQSO will not have any tax consequence to the Company
         nor to the participant. The exercise of an NQSO will require the
         participant to include in his or her taxable ordinary income the amount
         by which the fair market value of the acquired shares on the exercise
         date exceeds the option price. Upon a subsequent sale or taxable
         exchange of shares acquired upon the option exercise, the participant
         will recognize long- or short-term capital gain or loss equal to the
         difference between the amount realized on the sale and the tax basis of
         such shares (the fair market value on the exercise date). The Company
         will be entitled to a deduction at the same time and in the same amount
         as the participant is in receipt of income in consequence of his or
         exercise of an NQSO.

         The grant of an ISO will not have any tax consequence to the Company
         nor to the participant. The exercise of an ISO will not cause the
         participant to realize ordinary taxable income nor permit the Company
         to take a deduction unless the participant disposes of the acquired
         shares within the later of two years after the grant of the option and
         one year after the date of the exercise. (However, for purposes of
         computing the participant's alternative

                                       36

         minimum tax liability, the spread between the option price and the
         stock's fair market value on the date of the ISO exercise is treated as
         income.) If the participant fails to achieve that minimum holding
         period before deposition, the participant will be treated as though he
         or she had exercised a NQSO for tax purposes and the Company will be
         treated as though the participant had exercised a NQSO (see NQSOs
         above). If the participant achieves the minimum holding period, any
         gain or loss that is realized on the subsequent disposition of such
         shares will be treated as long-term capital gain or loss.

         The grant of an SAR will not have any tax consequence to the Company
         nor to the participant. The exercise of an SAR will require the
         participant to include in his or her taxable ordinary income the amount
         of any cash received plus the fair market value of any shares issued as
         the result of the exercise. Upon a subsequent sale or taxable exchange
         of shares, if any, acquired upon an SAR exercise, the participant will
         recognize long- or short-term capital gain or loss equal to the
         difference between the amount realized on the sale and the tax basis of
         such shares (the fair market value on the exercise date). The Company
         will be entitled to a deduction at the same time and in the same amount
         as the participant is in receipt of income in consequence of his or
         exercise of an SAR.

         The grant of a stock award will not have any tax consequence to the
         Company nor to the participant if, at the time of the grant, the shares
         provided to the participant are subject to a substantial risk of
         forfeiture, and provided further that the participant chooses not to
         elect to recognize income. The participant may, however, elect to
         recognize taxable ordinary income at the time of grant equal to the
         fair market value of the stock awarded. Failing such an election, as of
         the date the shares provided to a participant under a stock award are
         no longer subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture, the participant
         will recognize taxable ordinary income equal to the fair market value
         of the stock. The Company will be entitled to a deduction at the same
         time and in the same amount as the participant is in receipt of income
         in consequence of the grant of an SAR.

         The participant will recognize taxable ordinary income when he or she
         is in receipt or constructive receipt of a cash award. The Company will
         be entitled to a deduction at the same time and in the same amount as
         the participant is in receipt of income in consequence of the grant of
         a cash award.

Section 162(m) of the Code The Company's and its subsidiaries' right to claim a
tax deduction with respect to compensation provided under the Incentive Plan to
covered executives may be subject to the limitations of Section 162(m) of the
Code. Section 162(m) provides that no deduction shall be allowed for applicable
employee remuneration with respect to any covered executive in excess of
$1,000,000 for a taxable year. However, qualified performance-based compensation
is not subject to this $1,000,000 limitation. "Covered executives" are the
Company's chief executive officer and the four other employees whose

                                       37

compensation is required to be reported to its stockholders under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 .

Options and SARs granted under the Incentive Plan will be qualified
performance-based compensation if:

         -        the exercise price is no less than fair market value on the
                  date of the grant,

         -        if such plan is approved by the stockholders of the Company
                  (the Incentive Plan was approved in 1998), and

         -        if the members of the Committee are all "outside directors" as
                  defined under the Section 162(m) and the regulations
                  promulgated thereunder.

Stock and cash awards under the Incentive Plan may be designed by the Committee
to be qualified performance-based compensation. The Committee must specify
objective performance goals to be attained over a performance period as a
condition to the award. For such awards, the measures of performance used to
determine attainment of performance goals over any performance period shall be
the Company's consolidated net earnings and/or consolidated earnings per share
on a diluted basis. The Committee retains the right to make post-award
adjustments to reflect certain extraordinary events.

It is the current intention of the Board of Directors that the Committee shall
at all times be composed of persons qualifying as "outside directors" and that
the Committee shall consider the effect of Section 162(m) in designing and
making awards under the Incentive Plan to covered executives. However, under the
Incentive Plan, the Committee has the discretion to make awards that will not be
so qualified and may find it in the best interest of the Company to do so from
time to time.

The Incentive Plan is not the exclusive means available to the Company to
provide incentive compensation to employees of the Company and its subsidiaries.

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" THE PROPOSAL.

ITEM III - APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS

         Upon the recommendation of its Audit Committee, the Board of Directors
has appointed PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP ("PwC") as independent accountants to
examine the Company's consolidated financial statements for fiscal year 2003. We
are asking you to ratify our selection.

         PwC has served as the Company's independent accountants since 1984.

         A representative of PwC will be in attendance at the Annual Meeting to
respond to appropriate questions raised by stockholders and will be afforded the
opportunity to make a statement at the meeting, if he or she desires to do so.


                                       38

         The Board of Directors may review its selection if its appointment is
not approved by the stockholders.

         THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" RATIFICATION OF THE
SELECTION OF PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS LLP AS TIFFANY & CO.'S INDEPENDENT
ACCOUNTANTS FOR FISCAL YEAR 2003.




                                       39

                                  OTHER MATTERS

STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS, IN GENERAL

         If you would like to submit the name of a candidate for the Nominating/
Corporate Governance Committee to consider as a nominee for director, you may
send your proposal at any time to the Nominating/Corporate Governance Committee,
c/o Mr. Patrick B. Dorsey, Secretary, Tiffany & Co., 727 Fifth Avenue, New York,
New York 10022.

         If you would like to nominate a candidate for director or bring other
business before the stockholders at the 2004 Annual Meeting, which is currently
expected to take place on May 20, 2004, you must comply with the following
requirements:

         -        you must notify the Secretary of Tiffany & Co. in writing no
                  earlier than January 16, 2004, and no later than February 15,
                  2004,
         -        if the matter you wish to present is other than the nomination
                  of a candidate for director, your proposal must be a proper
                  matter for stockholder action under the General Corporation
                  Law of the State of Delaware, and
         -        your proposal must contain all of the information required
                  under our By-laws, a copy of which is available, at no charge,
                  from the Secretary.

STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS FOR INCLUSION IN THE PROXY STATEMENT FOR THE 2004 ANNUAL
MEETING

         If you wish to submit a proposal to be included in the Proxy Statement
for our 2004 Annual Meeting, we must receive it no later than December 10, 2003.
Proposals should be sent to Tiffany & Co. at 727 Fifth Avenue, New York, New
York, 10022, addressed to the attention of Patrick B. Dorsey, Secretary.

REMINDER TO VOTE

         Please be sure to either complete, sign and mail the enclosed proxy
card in the return envelope provided or call in your instructions or vote by
Internet as soon as you can so that your vote may be recorded and counted.

                                    BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

                                    /s/ Patrick B. Dorsey

                                    Patrick B. Dorsey
                                    Secretary

                                    New York, New York
                                    April 8, 2003




                                       40

                                                                      Appendix 1

                         CHARTER OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE

                          OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF

                                  TIFFANY & CO.

           (AS REVISED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS ON JANUARY 16, 2003)

         This Charter governs the operations of the Audit Committee.

Composition  of the Committee.

      The Audit Committee shall be comprised of three or more directors as
determined by the Board of Directors.

      Each of the directors serving on the Audit Committee shall be
"independent" under the provisions of 10A of the Securities Act of 1934 as
amended by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and shall have been affirmatively
determined by the Board of Directors to be an "independent director" under the
New York Stock Exchange Corporate Governance Standards.

      Each of the directors serving on the Audit Committee shall be "financially
literate" as that qualification is interpreted by the Board of Directors in its
business judgment, or must become financially literate within a reasonable
period of time after his or her appointment to the Audit Committee.

      In addition, at least one member of the Audit Committee shall have
accounting or related management "expertise" as that qualification is
interpreted by the Board of Directors in its business judgment.

      Finally, at least one member of the Audit Committee shall qualify as a
"financial expert" as that term is interpreted by the SEC pursuant to the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.

      The members of the Audit Committee shall be elected by the Board of
Directors annually and shall serve until their successors are duly elected and
qualified. Unless a Chair is elected by the full Board of Directors, the members
of the Audit Committee may designate a Chair by majority vote of the full Audit
Committee membership.

Purpose of Committee.

      The Purpose of the Audit Committee is to:

                  (A)   assist the Board of Directors in its oversight of (1)
                        the integrity of the Company's financial statements, (2)
                        the Company's compliance with legal and regulatory
                        requirements, (3) the independent auditor's

                                        41

                        qualifications and independence, and (4) the performance
                        of the Company's internal audit function and independent
                        auditors;

                  (B)   prepare the report of the Audit Committee required by
                        Security and Exchange Commission Rules to be included in
                        the Company's annual proxy statement.

Duties and Responsibilities.

         The duties and responsibilities of the Audit Committee are:

                  (A)   to retain and terminate the Company's independent
                        auditors and, to that end, the Audit Committee shall be
                        directly responsible for the appointment, compensation,
                        and oversight of the work of any registered public
                        accounting firm employed by the Company (including
                        resolution of disagreements between Company management
                        and the auditor regarding financial reporting) for the
                        purpose of preparing or issuing an audit report or
                        related work, and each such registered public accounting
                        firm shall report directly to the Audit Committee;

                  (B)   at least annually, to obtain and review a report by the
                        independent auditor describing: the independent
                        auditor's internal quality-control procedures; any
                        material issues raised by the most recent internal
                        quality-control review, or peer review, of the firm, or
                        any inquiry or investigation by governmental or
                        professional authorities, within the preceding five
                        years, respecting one or more independent audits carried
                        out by the firm, and any steps taken to deal with any
                        such issues; and (to assess the auditor's independence)
                        all relationships between the independent auditor and
                        the Company;

                  (C)   discuss the annual audited financial statements and
                        quarterly financial statements with management and the
                        independent auditor, including the Company's disclosures
                        under "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial
                        Condition and Results of Operations";

                  (D)   discuss earnings press releases, as well as financial
                        information and earnings guidance provided to analysts
                        and rating agencies;

                  (E)   as appropriate, obtain advice and assistance from
                        outside legal, accounting or other advisors;

                  (F)   discuss policies with respect to risk assessment and
                        risk management;

                  (G)   meet separately, periodically, with management, with
                        internal auditors and with independent auditors;

                                        42

                  (H)   review with the independent auditor any audit problems
                        or difficulties and management's response;

                  (I)   set clear hiring policies for employees or former
                        employees of the independent auditors;

                  (J)   report regularly to the Board of Directors;

                  (K)   establish procedures for the receipt, retention and
                        treatment of complaints received by the Company
                        regarding accounting, internal accounting controls or
                        auditing matters and for the confidential, anonymous
                        submission by employees of the Company of concerns
                        regarding questionable accounting or auditing matters;

                  (L)   to review the adequacy of the Company's systems of
                        internal accounting and financial controls;

                  (M)   to approve in advance all audit services, including
                        comfort letters, as well as non-audit services,
                        including tax services, to be rendered by the Company's
                        public accounting firm;

                  (N)   to report its conclusions and concerns to the Board of
                        Directors; and

                  (O)   to conduct, or have conducted, an annual performance
                        evaluation of the Audit Committee as required by the New
                        York Stock Exchange Corporate Governance Standards.

 Authority and Funding.

      The Audit Committee shall have all authority necessary or implied in order
to carry out its duties and responsibilities. Without limitation to the
generality of the foregoing, the Audit Committee shall have the authority to
engage independent counsel, outside auditors for special audits, reviews and
other procedures, and other advisers, experts and consultants, as it determines
necessary to carry out its duties and responsibilities.

      The officers of the Company shall provide and make available to the Audit
Committee, as it may determine, in its capacity as a committee of the Board of
Directors, funds for payment of compensation to the registered public accounting
firm employed by the issuer for the purpose of rendering or issuing an audit
report and to any advisers employed by the Audit Committee pursuant to the
foregoing paragraph.

      The Audit Committee may require that the head of the Company's internal
audit department, any other officer or employee of the Company, the Company's
outside

                                       43

counsel or the external auditor attend a meeting of the Audit Committee
or to meet with any members of, or consultants to, the Audit Committee.

Meetings.

      The Audit Committee shall meet as often as necessary to fulfill its
functions, but no less than quarterly.

Responsibilities of Others.

      In the performance of its duties and responsibilities, it is not the duty
of the Audit Committee to plan or conduct audits, to determine that the
Company's financial statements are complete and accurate and are in accordance
with generally accepted accounting principles or to assure compliance with laws.
These are the responsibilities of management and the internal audit department.
The external auditor is responsible for the audit of the Company's financial
statements in accordance with the standards of the profession.

Processes.

      In carrying out its responsibilities, the Audit Committee's policies and
procedures should remain flexible in order to react to changing conditions and
circumstances.

      The following shall be the principal recurring processes of the Audit
Committee in carrying out its oversight responsibilities. The processes are set
forth as a guide with understanding that the Audit Committee may alter or
supplement them as appropriate.

      1.    Annually, the Audit Committee shall appoint and determine the
            compensation of the registered public accounting firm to be employed
            by the Company for the purpose of preparing or issuing an audit
            report or related work and such registered public accounting firm
            shall report directly to the Audit Committee.

      2.    The Audit Committee shall discuss with the internal auditors and the
            external auditor the overall scope and plans for their respective
            audit work.

      3.    The Audit Committee shall ensure that the external auditor submits
            annually a formal written statement delineating all relationships
            between the external auditor and the Company. The Audit Committee is
            responsible for engaging in a dialogue with the external auditor
            with respect to such disclosed relationships that may affect the
            objectivity and independence of the external auditor and taking
            appropriate action to satisfy itself or the external auditor's
            independence.

                                        44

      4.    The Audit Committee shall establish policies and procedures for the
            engagement of the external auditor to provide such non-audit
            services as may be legally performed, and for determining the
            compensation to be paid for such services, and consider whether the
            external auditor's performance of any non-audit services is
            compatible with the external auditor's independence.

      5.    The Audit Committee shall discuss with management, the internal
            auditors and, to the extent appropriate, the external auditor the
            adequacy and effectiveness of the Company's accounting and financial
            records and system for monitoring and managing business risk and
            legal compliance programs. Further, the Audit Committee shall meet
            separately with the head of the Company's internal auditor
            department and the external auditor, with and without management
            present, to discuss the results of their examinations.

      6.    The Audit Committee shall review and discuss with management and the
            external auditor the Company's interim financial results to be
            included in the Company's quarterly reports to be filed with the
            SEC, and the matters required to be discussed by Statement on
            Auditing Standards No. 61 (Communications with Audit Committees), as
            it may be modified or supplemented.

      7.    The Audit Committee shall review with management and the external
            auditor the financial statements to be included in the Company's
            Annual Report on Form 10-K, as well as the auditor's judgment about
            the quality, not just acceptability, of the Company's accounting
            principles as applied to its financial reporting. The review shall
            also include a discussion of the reasonableness of judgments and
            estimates made in the preparation of the financial statements that
            may be viewed as critical, as well as the clarity of financial
            statement disclosure. In addition, the Audit Committee shall discuss
            the results of the annual audit and any other matters required to be
            communicated to the Audit Committee by the external auditor under
            generally accepted auditing standards, including the matters
            required to be discussed by Statement on Auditing Standards No. 61
            (Communications with Audit Committees), as it may be modified or
            supplemented.

      8.    Based on its review and discussions of items 3 and 7, the Audit
            Committee shall recommend to the Board of Directors whether the
            financial statements should be included in the Annual Report on Form
            10-K.

      9.    As a whole, or through the Chair, the Audit Committee shall review
            the impact on the financial statements of significant events,


                                       45

            transactions, or changes in accounting principles or estimates,
            which potentially affect the quality of the financial reporting with
            management and the external auditor prior to the filing of the
            Company's reports on Form 10-Q or 10-K, or as soon as practicable if
            the communications cannot be made prior to its filing.

      10.   Management and the external auditor shall discuss with the Audit
            Committee significant changes to the Company's auditing and
            accounting principles, policies, controls, procedures and practices
            proposed or contemplated by the external auditor, the internal
            auditors or management.

      11.   The Audit Committee shall review and reassess this Charter annually
            and recommend any appropriate changes to the Board of Directors.

      12.   The Audit Committee shall maintain minutes of its meetings and
            regularly report its activities to the Board of Directors.

      13.   Annually, the Audit Committee shall review the compensation and
            performance of the head of the internal audit department. Any change
            in the incumbent in such position or in his/her compensation shall
            not be made without the approval of the Audit Committee.

      As required, the Audit Committee shall inquire into and review any
significant disagreement that is brought to its attention among or between
management and the external auditor or among or between management and the
internal auditor in connection with the preparation of the Company's financial
statements.

      As required, the Audit Committee shall review with management and the
external auditor any pending or threatened action by regulators or government
agencies and any employee complaints or published reports that raise material
issues regarding the Company's financial statements or accounting policies.

Reliance on Information Provided.

      In adopting this Audit Committee Charter, the Board of Directors
acknowledges that the Audit Committee members are not employees of the Company
and are not providing any expert or special assurance as to the Company's
financial statements or any professional certification as to the external
auditor's work or auditing standards. Each member of the Audit Committee shall
be entitled to rely on the integrity of those persons and organizations within
and outside the Company that provide information to the Audit Committee and the
accuracy and completeness of the financial and other information provided to the
Audit Committee by such persons or organizations absent actual knowledge to the
contrary.


                                       46

                                                           Please Mark Here  [ ]
                                                           for Address
                                                           Change or
                                                           Comments
                                                           SEE REVERSE SIDE


                                                                                                   

                                                                                       FOR ALL              WITHHELD FOR NOMINEES
Item 1: Election of the following nominees as directors:                               NOMINEES                    NAMED BELOW
        01 Michael J. Kowalski,       05 Abby F. Kohnstamm                               [ ]                         [ ]
        02 Rose Marie Bravo,          06 Charles K. Marquis
        03 William R. Chaney,         07 James E. Quinn
        04 Samuel L. Hayes III        08 William A. Shutzer

Withheld for (write in each nominee's name in the space provided below):

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Item 2: Approval of an amendment to the Company's 1998 Employee Incentive Plan           FOR      AGAINST        ABSTAIN
        to increase the maximum number of shares of common stock, $.01 par               [ ]        [ ]              [ ]
        value, that may be delivered to participating employees under the plan from
        8,000,000 to 12,000,000.

Item 3: Approval of the appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as independent         FOR      AGAINST         ABSTAIN
        accountants of the Company's fiscal 2003 financial statements.                   [ ]        [ ]              [ ]


I PLAN TO ATTEND THE  ANNUAL MEETING                                                     [ ]


THIS PROXY IS CONTINUED ON THE REVERSE SIDE.


THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS: A VOTE FOR ALL NOMINEES FOR DIRECTOR IN ITEM
1, FOR APPROVAL OF THE AMENDMENT TO THE 1998 EMPLOYEE INCENTIVE PLAN IN ITEM 2
AND FOR APPROVAL OF THE APPOINTMENT OF PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS LLP AS INDEPENDENT
ACCOUNTANTS IN ITEM 3. SHARES REPRESENTED BY THIS PROXY WILL BE SO VOTED UNLESS
OTHERWISE INDICATED, IN WHICH CASE THEY WILL BE VOTED AS MARKED.

SIGNATURE    ---------------------SIGNATURE------------------DATE---------------

NOTE: PLEASE DATE AND SIGN EXACTLY AS YOUR NAME APPEARS PRINTED ON THIS CARD.
WHEN SHARES ARE HELD BY JOINT OWNERS, ALL SHOULD SIGN. WHEN SIGNING AS FIDUCIARY
(E.G., ATTORNEY, EXECUTOR, ADMINISTRATOR, CONSERVATOR, TRUSTEE OR GUARDIAN),
PLEASE GIVE TITLE. IF A CORPORATION OR PARTNERSHIP, PLEASE SIGN IN CORPORATE OR
PARTNERSHIP NAME BY AN AUTHORIZED PERSON.

                              FOLD AND DETACH HERE

                      VOTE BY INTERNET OR TELEPHONE OR MAIL
                          24 HOURS A DAY, 7 DAYS A WEEK

  INTERNET AND TELEPHONE VOTING IS AVAILABLE THROUGH 11PM EASTERN TIME THE DAY
                          PRIOR TO ANNUAL MEETING DAY.

    YOUR INTERNET OR TELEPHONE VOTE AUTHORIZES THE NAMED PROXIES TO VOTE YOUR
SHARES IN THE SAME MANNER AS IF YOU MARKED, SIGNED AND RETURNED YOUR PROXY CARD.



                 INTERNET                                  TELEPHONE                                     MAIL
                                                                                     
     HTTP://WWW.EPROXY.COM/TIF                         1-800-435-6710
Use the Internet to vote your proxy.              Use any touch-tone telephone to                 Mark, sign and date
Have your proxy card in hand when                 vote your proxy. Have your proxy                 your proxy card
you access the Web site. You will be       OR     card in hand when you call. You will           and return it in the
prompted to enter your control                    be prompted to enter your control              enclosed postage-paid
number, located in the box below, to              number, located in the box below,                    envelope.
create and submit an electronic  ballot.          and then follow the directions
                                                  given.



                    IF YOU VOTE YOUR PROXY BY INTERNET OR BY
            TELEPHONE, YOU DO NOT NEED TO MAIL BACK YOUR PROXY CARD.

                                  TIFFANY & CO.
                            PROXY FOR ANNUAL MEETING

SOLICITED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS FOR USE AT THE ANNUAL MEETING OF
STOCKHOLDERS OF TIFFANY & CO. (THE "COMPANY") TO BE HELD MAY 15, 2003, AT 10:00
A.M. NEW YORK TIME IN THE ROOF/PENTHOUSE OF THE ST. REGIS HOTEL, 2 EAST 55TH
STREET AT FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK, NEW YORK. THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS: A
VOTE "FOR" ALL NOMINEES FOR DIRECTOR IN ITEM 1, "FOR" APPROVAL OF AN AMENDMENT
TO THE 1998 EMPLOYEE INCENTIVE PLAN INCREASING THE MAXIMUM NUMBER OF SHARES OF
COMMON STOCK THAT MAY BE DELIVERED UNDER THE PLAN IN ITEM 2, AND "FOR" APPROVAL
OF THE APPOINTMENT OF PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS LLP AS INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS IN
ITEM 3.

SHARES REPRESENTED BY THIS PROXY WILL BE SO VOTED UNLESS OTHERWISE INDICATED, IN
WHICH CASE THEY WILL BE VOTED AS MARKED. IF NO DIRECTION IS GIVEN, SUCH SHARES
WILL BE VOTED "FOR" ITEMS 1, 2 AND 3. IF ANY NOMINEE NAMED ON THE REVERSE SIDE
OF THIS CARD IS UNABLE TO SERVE AS A DIRECTOR, THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS MAY
NOMINATE ANOTHER PERSON OR PERSONS IN SUBSTITUTION FOR SUCH NOMINEE AND THE
PROXIES NAMED BELOW WILL VOTE FOR THE PERSON OR PERSONS SO NOMINATED OR FOR SUCH
LESSER NUMBER OF DIRECTORS AS MAY BE PRESCRIBED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS.

The undersigned hereby appoints M.J. KOWALSKI, J.N. FERNANDEZ, and P.B. DORSEY,
and each of them, proxies, with full power of substitution, to act for the
undersigned, and to vote all shares of common stock represented by this proxy
which the undersigned may be entitled to vote at the 2003 Annual Meeting of
Stockholders (and any adjournment thereof) as directed and permitted on the
reverse side of this card and, in their judgment, on such matters as may be
incident to the conduct of or may properly come before the meeting.

                                    IMPORTANT

                   THIS PROXY IS CONTINUED ON THE REVERSE SIDE

    ADDRESS CHANGE/COMMENTS (MARK THE CORRESPONDING BOX ON THE REVERSE SIDE)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



                              FOLD AND DETACH HERE

TIFFANY & CO.
727 Fifth Avenue
New York, N.Y. 10022

   NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS TO BE HELD THURSDAY, MAY 15, 2003

The Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Tiffany & Co. (the "Company") will be held
in the Roof/Penthouse of The St. Regis Hotel, 2 East 55th Street at Fifth
Avenue, New York, New York on Thursday, May 15, 2003, at 10:00 a.m. New York
time to consider and take action on the following:

1.    Election of eight (8) directors to hold office until the next annual
      meeting of stockholders and until their respective successors have been
      elected and qualified;

2.    Approval of an amendment to the Company's 1998 Employee Incentive Plan to
      increase the maximum number of shares of common stock, $.01 par value,
      that may be delivered to participating employees under the plan from
      8,000,000 to 12,000,000; and

3.    Approval of the appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as independent
      accountants of the Company's fiscal 2003 financial statements.

All stockholders are cordially invited to attend, although only those
stockholders of record as of the close of business on March 25, 2003 will be
entitled to notice of and to vote at the meeting or any adjournments thereof.
The transfer books will not be closed.

A list of stockholders entitled to vote will be available for inspection by
interested stockholders at the offices of the Company, 600 Madison Avenue, 8th
Floor, New York commencing on April 25, 2003 during ordinary business hours.

BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Patrick B. Dorsey
Secretary
New York, New York
April 8, 2003

YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT. EVEN IF IT IS YOUR DESIRE TO ATTEND THE ANNUAL MEETING,
PLEASE SIGN AND RETURN THE ENCLOSED PROXY IN THE ACCOMPANYING POSTAGE PAID
ENVELOPE, VOTE BY INTERNET OR CALL IN YOUR VOTE.