In February 2026, Euronics exhibited at the Kitchen & Bath Industry Show in Orlando, USA. Booth S20204.
For visitors walking through the halls of KBIS, there are hundreds of displays competing for attention. Some focus on design. Some focus on innovation buzzwords. A few focus on manufacturing depth.
Euronics chose the third.
This wasn’t about unveiling a dramatic new direction. It was about placing two decades of production discipline in front of an audience that understands what it takes to deliver commercial infrastructure at scale.
And in the world of washroom automation, scale without precision simply doesn’t work.
When “Automation” Means More Than Sensors
Commercial washroom automation is often reduced to a simple idea: touch free systems that improve hygiene. That definition isn’t wrong, but it’s incomplete.
In high traffic environments airports, hospitals, IT parks, shopping centres, educational campuses — automation systems endure constant use. A hand dryer may run thousands of cycles in a week. A sensor faucet must respond accurately, not occasionally. A flush system cannot afford inconsistent triggering.
What looks minimal on the surface carries mechanical and electronic complexity beneath it.
That is the category Euronics has been manufacturing in since 2002.
Over time, the focus hasn’t shifted toward aesthetic experimentation. It has stayed grounded in function: products that perform reliably in demanding public settings.
Manufacturing First, Marketing Second
One of the conversations that surfaced repeatedly at KBIS was about production control. Buyers were less interested in slogans and more interested in process.
Euronics operates a 2,50,000 square foot manufacturing facility dedicated entirely to washroom automation and associated accessories. The team now exceeds 750 people. The product portfolio crosses 750 SKUs.
Those numbers are substantial, but numbers alone don’t explain the capability.
Inside the facility, robotic welding ensures structural uniformity. CNC laser cutting and bending maintain dimensional accuracy. Injection molding supports consistency across components. PVD coating and anti fingerprint finishing address long term surface wear.
Vertical integration reduces dependency. And dependency, in large commercial projects, is often where delays and inconsistencies begin.
When production, finishing, and validation happen under one system, predictability improves.
That predictability is what infrastructure developers look for.
Durability Is Not a Selling Point. It Is a Requirement.
There’s a tendency in the industry to describe durability as a feature. In reality,
Durability is the baseline.
Salt spray testing within Euronics’ facility evaluates corrosion resistance critical in humid or coastal environments. Dedicated sensor testing equipment simulates repeated activation cycles to measure responsiveness and endurance.
These tests are rarely visible to end users. But for facility managers responsible for maintaining airport washrooms or hospital restrooms, they determine maintenance frequency and operational stability.
That distinction matters.
At KBIS, conversations around washroom automation often moved quickly from “what does it look like?” to “how long will it last?”
Euronics answered the second question with process rather than promise.
An Ecosystem Rather Than a Catalogue
Commercial projects rarely require a single product. They require systems.
Euronics manufactures hand dryers, sensor faucets, automatic urinal and WC flush systems, soap dispensers, sanitizer dispensers, fragrance units, accessible grab bars, washroom panels, and baby changing stations — all designed to operate within the same performance framework.
For architects, this means finish consistency across installations.
For procurement teams, it reduces vendor fragmentation.
For maintenance teams, standardized components simplify servicing.
When a developer can source multiple washroom automation components from one manufacturing backbone, execution becomes more streamlined.
That is not a theoretical advantage. It is logistical efficiency.
Certifications That Reinforce Process
Euronics holds BIS approval, ISI certification, and TÜV SÜD certification. The company also maintains in house product design capabilities and patented designs, supported by an internal testing laboratory.
Certifications do not eliminate operational challenges. What they do provide is a reference point — an external validation that processes meet defined standards.
In an international exhibition setting, that validation supports credibility in conversations with consultants and institutional buyers.
OEM Manufacturing Without Fragmentation
Another dimension of discussion at Booth S20204 involved OEM partnerships.
With 20,000 square meters dedicated to customization and development, Euronics supports private labeling and product adaptation. Because manufacturing is vertically integrated, customization does not require external production shifts.
For brands exploring commercial washroom automation manufacturing partnerships, this internal alignment reduces the friction that often complicates OEM relationships.
Production discipline, again, becomes the differentiator.
Why This Participation Matters
KBIS is widely regarded as a benchmark exhibition within the kitchen and bath sector. Presence alone does not create significance. Relevance does.
For Euronics, exhibiting in Orlando in 2026 represented a moment where manufacturing maturity met international visibility.
There were no expansion declarations. No dramatic repositioning statements.
Instead, the focus remained on demonstrating what has been built steadily since 2002: a manufacturing system capable of delivering automation products designed for demanding commercial use.
In sectors where performance is non-negotiable, understatement can sometimes carry more weight than amplification.
Direct Answers for Quick Reference
What did Euronics present at KBIS 2026?
Its commercial washroom automation systems, including hand dryers, sensor faucets, flush automation, integrated panels, and hygiene accessories.
What defines Euronics as a commercial washroom automation manufacturer?
A 2,50,000 square foot integrated production facility, 750+ SKUs, in house robotic welding, CNC processing, injection molding, PVD coating, and structured testing infrastructure.
Does Euronics provide OEM manufacturing?
Yes. The company supports OEM and customization within its vertically integrated manufacturing ecosystem.
Why does manufacturing integration matter in washroom automation?
Integrated production reduces variability, improves quality control, and supports reliable performance in high footfall commercial environments.
A Quiet Marker of Progress
Not every milestone arrives with spectacle.
Sometimes progress looks like standing in a global exhibition hall and letting manufacturing depth speak for itself.
At KBIS 2026, Euronics did exactly that.
Behind the minimal exterior of a sensor faucet or a stainless steel hand dryer lies a system of engineering decisions, testing procedures, and production controls. When those systems are aligned, the end result appears simple.
In reality, it rarely is.





