Established in 1960 in Italy, FIMA Carlo Frattini has spent over six decades perfecting the way water is delivered in homes and hospitality spaces.
From its beginnings as a family-run company focused on high-quality tapware, FIMA has grown into a recognised international name in bathroom and kitchen fittings – known for combining Italian design, technical precision, and long-lasting performance.
Today, that legacy continues in India, where every product reflects the same commitment to thoughtful engineering and timeless aesthetics, adapted to suit Indian needs and spaces.
In India, we carry forward a legacy built on care, clarity, and detail. Our fittings are designed not just to be seen, but to be used – and lived with. They are born of deep technical knowledge, shaped by modern aesthetics, and refined through constant listening.
Every curve, every finish, every function exists for a reason. Because
what we make enters your space – and becomes part of your rhythm.
We honour that responsibility. And we take it personally.
elegance in details
Behind every product is a team of thinkers, engineers, and collaborators – across continents, cultures, and perspectives. We do not work in isolation. We work with the architects who imagine new lifestyles, the builders who bring structure to life, and the homeowners who want beauty with reliability.
In India, we are here not only to offer fittings, but to share knowledge, co-create experiences, and build something lasting together.
At FIMA, simplicity isn’t a design choice – it’s a commitment. A quiet discipline that guides how we shape, refine, and resolve. Every product begins with a question: What must remain? What we remove is as important as what we keep.
The result is not minimalism for style’s sake, but clarity that endures. Surfaces that invite touch. Lines that serve purpose. Every mixer, every fitting, is a study in balance – between precision and restraint, presence and silence.
Because for us, beauty is not decoration.
It’s the outcome of honest thinking.
To us, innovation isn’t an act of invention. It’s an act of understanding. Every fitting we create begins with observing how people move, interact, and live with water. We study behaviours before we shape surfaces. We work with materials only when we know they’ll endure. This allows us to create not just what looks right, but what feels right.