
Pricing
contact sales
Best For
Maintenance teams in Spain and Latin America prioritizing native Spanish support
Rating
8.2/10
Last Updated
Feb 2026
TL;DR
Fracttal is the dominant CMMS choice across Spain and Latin America for good reason. It speaks your language—literally and figuratively. Support is in Spanish, the interface is localized, and pricing is transparent in euros. Not the most powerful CMMS in the world, but the best fit for Spanish-speaking markets.
What is Fracttal One?
The CMMS Built for the Spanish-Speaking World
Most CMMS tools are built by North American or European companies, translated into Spanish as an afterthought. Fracttal is different. Founded with a focus on the Spanish-speaking market, it is the tool of choice across manufacturing, hospitality, and healthcare maintenance teams throughout Spain, Mexico, Colombia, Chile, and Argentina.
The practical benefit is real. When a maintenance technician in a hotel in Seville needs help, support answers in Spanish during Spanish business hours. Documentation, training videos, and onboarding materials are native Spanish—not Google-translated. That sounds minor until you watch a Spanish-speaking maintenance team struggle with an English-first CMMS.
What Fracttal Does Well
Work order management and preventive maintenance scheduling are solid. The mobile app handles field work cleanly—technicians receive assignments, update status, and close work orders from their phones. QR code scanning pulls up equipment history instantly. The calendar and meter-based PM scheduling covers the standard manufacturing and hospitality maintenance workflows.
Asset management includes a multi-level hierarchy that handles complex facilities: a hotel with hundreds of rooms, each with HVAC, electrical, and plumbing assets. Or a manufacturing plant with production lines, machines, and components. The reporting covers the basics—work order status, PM compliance, technician productivity—without requiring data science skills to interpret.
Where Fracttal Shows Its Limits
Fracttal is not an enterprise system. Deep reliability engineering—MTBF trending, OEE calculations, complex failure mode analysis—is limited compared to tools like Fiix or eMaint. Inventory management is basic. API integrations exist but require technical effort.
Pricing requires a conversation with sales, which is frustrating when you want to compare options quickly. Published price ranges (€25–€60/user/month) are estimates from customer reports, not official pricing.
Who Should Choose Fracttal
Maintenance teams in Spain and Latin America where native Spanish support and localization matter. Hotels, hospital facilities, and manufacturing SMBs across the Spanish-speaking world. Any organization that previously struggled with adoption on North American CMMS tools due to language and cultural barriers.
Pros and Cons
Pros
- Native Spanish-language software, support, and training—not a translation afterthought
- Dominant CMMS in Spain and Latin America with a strong local partner network
- Mobile app designed for field technicians with offline capability
- Clear asset hierarchy handles hotels, hospitals, and manufacturing plants well
Cons
- Not suited for deep reliability engineering—MTBF trending and OEE analysis are limited
- Pricing requires talking to sales—no self-serve signup with published rates
- Inventory management is basic compared to eMaint or Fiix
- Limited integrations outside the Spanish-market ERP ecosystem
Fracttal One Pricing
Fracttal One
- Work order management
- Preventive maintenance scheduling
- Asset hierarchy management
- Mobile app (iOS and Android)
- QR code scanning
- Reporting and dashboards
- Spanish-language support
Pricing last verified: February 19, 2026
Who is Fracttal One Best For?
- Maintenance teams in Spain and Latin America prioritizing native Spanish support
- Hotel and hospitality facilities managing building systems across multiple properties
- Healthcare facility maintenance departments in Spanish-speaking countries
- Manufacturing SMBs in the Spanish-speaking world moving from paper-based systems



