Full Copper / Nickel / Chrome Plating Stack

Brushed Nickel Faucets Built to Hold the Finish

Brass body, multi-layer electroplating, 48-hour salt spray rated. CE, cUPC, and WaterMark certified. OEM from 200 units with in-house surface finishing.

17+ Years Manufacturing In-House Brushed Nickel Finishing North America · Europe · Australia
Brushed nickel faucet showing directional matte finish and brass body construction

Surface Engineering

The Plating Stack Is the Product

Brushed nickel faucets look nearly identical across suppliers on day one. The difference shows up at month 14 in a coastal Florida bathroom, or in a humid Bangkok hotel room, or in a Pacific Northwest kitchen where the faucet sees hard water and daily cleaning spray. By then, a faucet built on a thin or incomplete plating stack has started tarnishing, and your buyer is filing a warranty claim.

The finish we run on our brushed nickel faucets is a three-layer electroplating stack: copper base coat, nickel mid-coat, brushed nickel top coat. The copper base improves adhesion between the brass substrate and the nickel layers. The nickel mid-coat — typically 8–12μm thick — is the actual corrosion resistance layer. The brushed nickel top coat gives the finish its characteristic matte, directional texture.

Skipping or thinning the nickel mid-coat is the most common cost-cutting move in this category, and it's why you see brushed nickel faucets from some factories failing salt spray at 48 hours and showing early tarnishing in the field.

Batch-Level Salt Spray Testing

Our brushed nickel passes 24-hour salt spray as a minimum. Most production batches clear 48 hours. We pull a statistical sample from every batch for salt spray testing — not just on new product introductions, not just on first orders. Every batch. The test reports travel with the shipment documentation so your QC team has the data without requesting it separately.

Our QC manager pushed us to add the 48-hour extended protocol after we saw a batch of brushed nickel product show early tarnishing in a humid climate market — that was years ago, and the protocol has been standard since.

For your distribution business, the commercial translation is straightforward: a brushed nickel faucet that holds its finish in coastal and humid markets generates zero warranty claims from those accounts. A faucet that tarnishes at 14 months generates returns, replacement costs, and a conversation with your buyer about whether to continue the line. The plating stack is the difference between those two outcomes.

Three-Layer Electroplating Stack

Layer 3 — Top Coat

Brushed Nickel

Directional matte texture. The visible finish surface. Applied after mechanical brushing to create the characteristic grain.

3

Layer 2 — Mid-Coat

Nickel 8–12μm

The corrosion resistance layer. Thickness here is the primary determinant of long-term finish durability. Skipping or thinning this layer is the most common cost-cutting move in the category.

2

Layer 1 — Base Coat

Copper

Improves adhesion between the brass substrate and the nickel layers. Provides a uniform foundation for the mid-coat to bond to.

1

Substrate

Brass Body (C36000-equivalent)

Free-machining brass. Dimensionally stable, corrosion-resistant base material for the full plating stack.

B
Close-up of brushed nickel faucet finish showing directional matte texture and plating quality

Minimum Rating

24h

Salt spray — all batches

Extended Protocol

48h+

Most production batches

Product Data

Technical Specifications

Specifications shown are standard values for this product line. Contact us for exact parameters on specific SKUs or custom configurations.

Parameter Specification
Body Material Brass (C36000-equivalent free-machining brass)
Plating Stack Copper base coat → nickel mid-coat (8–12μm) → brushed nickel top coat
Finish Texture Directional brushed, matte surface
Valve / Cartridge Ceramic disc, 500,000-cycle endurance rated
Operating Pressure 0.05–0.8 MPa
Flow Rate 1.5–8 L/min (aerator-adjustable)
Temperature Range Cold water / mixed (up to 90°C)
Salt Spray Rating 24h minimum · 48h+ on most production batches
Connection Standard 1/2" supply connections (3/8" adapter available)
Certifications
CE cUPC WaterMark SGS
MOQ (standard catalog) 200 units
MOQ (OEM / custom) 200 units
Lead Time (standard) 25–35 days from order confirmation
Lead Time (OEM) 35–50 days (new tooling) · 15–20 days (catalog body modification)

Key Highlights

  • Ceramic disc valve — 500,000-cycle rated, drip-free for the product lifetime
  • 8–12μm nickel mid-coat — the corrosion resistance layer most competitors thin out
  • 48h+ salt spray on most production batches, 24h minimum guaranteed
  • Aerator-adjustable flow — 1.5–8 L/min to meet regional water efficiency codes
  • CE, cUPC, WaterMark, SGS — covers North American, Australian, and European market entry
  • 200-unit MOQ — same threshold for standard catalog and OEM custom orders
Brushed nickel faucet technical detail showing valve and connection points

Production Lead Times

Standard catalog 25–35 days
OEM (new tooling) 35–50 days
OEM (catalog mod) 15–20 days

From order confirmation. Subject to current production schedule.

OEM Services

Customization Options

Most buyers start with a catalog body and modify the finish, handle, or spout. Full custom tooling is available for volume programs. Here's what's practical at each level.

Tier 1 — No Tooling Cost

Finish & Packaging

Switch the surface finish on an existing catalog body. Available finishes include brushed nickel, chrome, matte black, brushed gold, and ORB. Custom packaging, private label, and branded inserts are included at this tier.

Brushed Nickel Chrome Matte Black Brushed Gold ORB

Tier 2 — Minor Tooling

Handle & Spout Modification

Modify handle shape, spout reach, or spout height on an existing catalog body. Tooling cost is low because the core body casting is unchanged. Lead time for modified catalog bodies is 15–20 days.

Handle shape Spout reach Spout height Lever style

Tier 3 — Full Custom

New Body Tooling

Full custom body geometry from your drawings or 3D files. We handle tooling fabrication, sample approval, and production. Lead time is 35–50 days for new tooling. Minimum volume applies — contact us to discuss your program.

Custom geometry Your drawings / 3D files Tooling fabrication Sample approval

How the OEM Process Works

  1. 1

    Share your requirements

    Send us your target finish, handle style, spout dimensions, certifications needed, and annual volume estimate.

  2. 2

    We recommend a path

    We'll identify the closest catalog match and tell you exactly what tooling, if any, is needed to hit your spec.

  3. 3

    Sample approval

    Physical samples are produced and shipped for your review. Production starts only after written approval.

  4. 4

    Production & QC

    Full production run with in-line QC, salt spray testing, and pre-shipment inspection. Third-party inspection available on request.

OEM customization options for brushed nickel faucets showing finish and handle variants

Ready to discuss your program?

Send us your spec and we'll respond within one business day.

Start OEM Inquiry

Manufacturing Standards

Quality Control

Every production batch goes through a defined inspection sequence before it ships. Here's what that looks like in practice.

Step 1 — Incoming

Raw Material Inspection

Brass billets are verified for alloy composition before entering the machining line. Plating chemistry is checked at bath setup for each production run.

Step 2 — In-Process

Dimensional & Plating Checks

Critical dimensions are checked at machining. Plating thickness is measured by XRF at defined intervals during the plating run to confirm the 8–12μm nickel layer is within spec.

Step 3 — Finish

Salt Spray & Adhesion Testing

Batch samples are run through salt spray (ASTM B117 protocol). Minimum pass threshold is 24 hours with no blistering or corrosion. Most batches exceed 48 hours. Adhesion cross-cut test is run in parallel.

Step 4 — Functional

Pressure & Leak Testing

100% of assembled units are pressure-tested at 1.6 MPa (2× operating maximum) before packaging. Any unit that shows leakage at the valve, body, or connections is rejected and not reworked into the shipment.

Step 5 — Pre-Shipment

Final Inspection & Documentation

AQL 2.5 visual and functional inspection on the packed cartons. Inspection report, test certificates, and packing list are issued with every shipment. Third-party inspection (SGS, Bureau Veritas, Intertek) available on request.

Certifications

CE European conformity
cUPC North America (US & Canada)
WaterMark Australia & New Zealand
SGS Third-party material & finish

Certificate copies available on request with your inquiry.

Quality control inspection of brushed nickel faucets during production

Third-Party Inspection

SGS, Bureau Veritas, and Intertek inspections can be arranged at your cost. We coordinate access and documentation. Most buyers on repeat programs waive this after the first two orders.

Buyer's Guide

Sourcing Considerations

What to verify before placing an order — and the questions most buyers don't think to ask until after a quality problem.

What to Verify Before Ordering

Nickel layer thickness

Ask for the XRF measurement report from the last production batch. The number to look for is the nickel mid-coat — anything under 6μm is a durability risk. Many suppliers quote a total plating thickness that includes the copper base coat to make the number look larger.

Salt spray test hours — and the protocol

A "salt spray test" without a protocol reference is meaningless. Ask for ASTM B117 or ISO 9227 results. Also ask whether the number quoted is the minimum across all batches or the best result from a single sample.

Certificate validity and scope

Check that the certificate covers the specific SKU you're ordering, not just a similar product. cUPC and WaterMark certificates are model-specific — a certificate for a different spout height or handle style does not cover your product.

Valve source and cycle rating

Ask for the valve manufacturer and the cycle test report. A ceramic disc valve rated to 500,000 cycles is the standard for a product that will last in a residential bathroom. Anything below 200,000 cycles is a warranty liability.

Packaging and transit protection

Brushed nickel surfaces scratch easily in transit. Ask whether the faucet body is individually wrapped in foam or PE film before boxing. Loose packing in a single carton is a common cause of finish damage that only shows up after delivery.

Questions Most Buyers Don't Ask

Is the plating done in-house or subcontracted?

Subcontracted plating means the supplier has less control over bath chemistry and thickness consistency. It's not automatically a problem, but you should know — and ask whether the sub-plater is audited and how often.

What happens to a rejected unit?

Some factories re-strip and re-plate rejected units and put them back into the shipment. Ask explicitly whether reworked units are included in your order or scrapped. The answer tells you a lot about how the supplier thinks about quality.

What is the lead time for a repeat order vs. a first order?

First orders often get quoted with optimistic lead times. Ask what the lead time is for a repeat order of the same SKU when you're not the only customer in the queue. That number is closer to what you'll actually experience at scale.

Can you hold safety stock for me?

If you're running a retail or e-commerce program, ask whether the supplier can hold a buffer stock against a blanket PO. Many factories will do this for established buyers — it cuts your effective lead time to days rather than weeks.

Who owns the tooling?

If you've paid for custom tooling (handle shape, spout profile, private label), confirm in writing that the tooling is yours and can be transferred. Tooling ownership disputes are one of the most common reasons buyers get locked into a supplier they want to leave.

Typical MOQ & Lead Time Reference

Order Type MOQ Lead Time Notes
Sample order 1–5 pcs 7–10 days Standard stock SKUs only
Trial / first order 50–100 pcs 25–35 days Includes full QC documentation
Repeat / stock order 100–500 pcs 20–30 days Priority scheduling for repeat buyers
OEM / custom 500+ pcs 45–60 days Includes tooling and sample approval
Blanket PO / safety stock 1,000+ pcs/yr 3–7 days (from stock) Requires annual volume commitment

Lead times are from order confirmation and deposit receipt. Shipping transit time is additional.

Where It's Used

Applications & Markets

Brushed nickel faucets serve a wide range of end markets. Understanding where your buyers are placing the product helps align spec, certification, and packaging requirements before you order.

Brushed nickel faucet installed in a residential bathroom

Residential

Bathroom & Vanity

The largest single end-use segment. Brushed nickel is the dominant finish in mid-range new construction and renovation projects in North America and Australia. cUPC certification is required for US and Canadian distribution.

Brushed nickel kitchen faucet over a sink

Residential

Kitchen & Utility

Kitchen faucets in brushed nickel are a strong seller in the mid-to-premium retail segment. Pull-out and pull-down spout variants are the most requested. Higher cycle ratings on the valve are expected given daily use frequency.

Brushed nickel faucet in a hotel bathroom

Commercial

Hospitality & Hotels

Hotel and serviced apartment fit-outs specify brushed nickel for its ability to hide water spots and fingerprints — a practical advantage in high-turnover environments. Bulk orders with consistent finish matching across batches are the key requirement.

Brushed nickel faucets installed across multiple units in a property development

Commercial

Property Development

Multi-unit residential developers buy in volume and need finish consistency across hundreds of units. Lot traceability and batch documentation are important — if a finish issue appears in unit 47, the developer needs to know which other units came from the same production run.

Brushed nickel faucet packaged for e-commerce retail

Retail

E-Commerce & Retail

Amazon, Wayfair, and home improvement retail channels require retail-ready packaging, compliance documentation, and fast replenishment. Private label and OEM programs are common. Return rates are directly tied to finish quality and installation ease.

OEM brushed nickel faucet with private label packaging

OEM / Private Label

OEM & Private Label

Brands and distributors sourcing under their own label need custom packaging, logo placement, and sometimes modified handle or spout geometry. Tooling costs and minimum volumes apply. Certificate re-issuance under the buyer's brand name is available for most markets.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between brushed nickel and satin nickel?

The terms are used interchangeably in most markets. Both refer to a nickel plating that has been mechanically brushed to create a fine linear grain texture. Some manufacturers use "satin nickel" to indicate a slightly warmer or softer sheen, but there is no standardized distinction. When ordering, ask for a physical sample to confirm the exact appearance.

How does brushed nickel compare to brushed stainless steel?

Brushed stainless steel faucets are made from solid stainless steel with a brushed surface — no plating involved. They are more corrosion-resistant and harder to scratch, but cost more and are heavier. Brushed nickel faucets are brass-bodied with a nickel plating, which gives more design flexibility and a warmer tone. For most residential and hospitality applications, brushed nickel is the more cost-effective choice.

Can the brushed nickel finish be matched across different product types?

Yes, within a production run. Finish consistency is controlled by bath chemistry and brushing parameters. If you're ordering faucets, towel bars, and accessories to match, they need to come from the same production batch or from a supplier who maintains a documented finish standard. Cross-batch matching is possible but requires a reference sample and explicit approval step.

What certifications are required for the US market?

cUPC (IAPMO) certification is the primary requirement for plumbing fixtures sold in the US and Canada. It covers both performance and lead-free compliance (NSF/ANSI 61 and 372). Some states and retailers also require WaterSense certification for water efficiency. Check your specific channel requirements — big-box retailers often have their own compliance checklists on top of the base certifications.

What is the minimum order quantity for a sample?

Samples of standard stock SKUs are available from 1 piece. Sample cost covers the unit and handling — shipping is at the buyer's cost or via the buyer's courier account. For custom or OEM configurations, a pre-production sample is required before bulk production and is quoted separately.

How should brushed nickel faucets be cleaned and maintained?

Wipe with a soft damp cloth and dry after use. Avoid abrasive cleaners, scouring pads, and acidic or bleach-based products — these will damage the nickel surface. For hard water deposits, a diluted white vinegar solution applied briefly and rinsed thoroughly is safe. This information is worth including in your product packaging to reduce warranty claims from finish damage caused by improper cleaning.

Can I order with my own brand name and packaging?

Yes. Private label and OEM programs are available. This includes custom packaging design, logo on the product (where geometry allows), and custom instruction manuals. Minimum quantities for private label are typically 500 pieces per SKU. Certificate re-issuance under your brand name is available for CE, cUPC, and WaterMark — timelines vary by certification body.

What payment terms are available?

Standard terms are 30% deposit on order confirmation, 70% balance before shipment. For established buyers with a track record of three or more orders, 30/70 with balance against copy of bill of lading is available. Letter of credit (LC at sight) is accepted for orders above USD 50,000. Payment is accepted via T/T bank transfer or LC.

Market & Margin

Where Brushed Nickel Faucets Move — and What the Margin Looks Like

Brushed nickel is a finish-driven purchase. The commercial opportunity is in the segments where finish selection drives the buying decision. Here's where the volume is.

Brushed nickel faucet in residential kitchen and bath renovation setting

Residential Distribution & Kitchen/Bath Retail

The Mid-Price Tier That Outperforms Chrome

The North American and European residential renovation market has shifted toward brushed and matte finishes over the past several years. Brushed nickel is the entry point into that shift — the accessible price tier below brushed gold and champagne bronze, and the finish that coordinates with stainless appliances and grey-tone cabinetry that dominates current residential design.

Distributors supplying plumbing showrooms, kitchen and bath retailers, and home improvement channels are seeing brushed nickel outperform chrome in the mid-price tier.

Margin Structure

Brushed nickel faucets retail at 20–40% above equivalent chrome products, while the manufacturing cost premium is modest. That spread is where your margin lives on this SKU.

Brushed nickel vanity faucets specified for hotel renovation project

Hospitality Renovation & Contract Supply

Recurring Volume on 7–10 Year Renovation Cycles

Hotel renovation projects specify brushed nickel for bathroom and vanity faucets because the finish photographs well for marketing materials, resists fingerprints better than chrome in high-use environments, and holds its appearance longer under daily cleaning.

Typical Project Scale

A mid-scale hotel renovation — 150 to 300 rooms — might specify 300–600 faucets across bathroom, vanity, and public area applications.

Brushed nickel is typically the standard specification at the 3-to-4-star tier; brushed gold moves into the 4-to-5-star tier. If you're supplying hospitality procurement or FF&E (furniture, fixtures, and equipment) distributors, brushed nickel is a recurring line item on renovation cycles that run every 7–10 years per property.

Brushed nickel faucet with mail-order packaging for e-commerce channels

E-Commerce & Online Retail Channels

Lower-Risk Entry Point for Online SKU Builds

Brushed nickel faucets are a strong performer in e-commerce channels — Amazon, Wayfair, and independent online stores in North America and Europe — because the finish photographs distinctively and commands a clear price premium over chrome in search results.

For buyers building an e-commerce SKU mix, brushed nickel is a lower-risk entry point than brushed gold: the price point is accessible enough to generate volume, and the finish is established enough that buyers aren't making an unfamiliar choice.

Packaging Note

Our standard carton packaging is designed for mail-order durability — double-wall corrugated, molded pulp inserts, no polystyrene. The product arrives undamaged whether it's going to a warehouse or direct to a consumer address. We moved away from polystyrene inserts a few years back; the damage rate on transit drops noticeably with molded pulp, and it's better for your returns rate.

Brushed nickel faucet tested for coastal and high-humidity market durability

Coastal & Humid Climate Markets

Where Plating Quality Becomes a Direct Sales Argument

Buyers supplying coastal markets — Florida, the Gulf Coast, Southeast Asia, the Middle East, Australia — deal with customers who have been burned by brushed nickel faucets that tarnished within a year.

A supplier who can provide a 48-hour salt spray test report has a concrete answer to that objection. Our brushed nickel is specified for these markets by buyers who've learned the hard way that the cheaper option costs more in warranty claims.

Selling Tool, Not Just Compliance

If your distribution territory includes coastal or high-humidity accounts, the salt spray documentation is a selling tool, not just a compliance document.

Residential Retail

20–40% retail premium over chrome; modest cost delta

Hospitality Contract

300–600 units per mid-scale renovation; 7–10 year cycles

E-Commerce

Strong photography, clear price premium, lower-risk SKU entry

Coastal Markets

48h salt spray documentation as a direct sales argument

Manufacturing Process

How We Make the Brushed Nickel Finish: Process Details That Affect Your Downstream Quality

The finish starts with the brass body coming off our CNC machining line. Every step in the sequence below has a direct consequence for the quality your customers receive.

01

Pre-Treatment: Alkaline Degreasing, Acid Activation, Rinse

Before any plating, the brass body goes through a pre-treatment sequence: alkaline degreasing, acid activation, and a rinse cycle. This pre-treatment is where surface contamination and oxidation are removed. If you skip or rush it, the plating adhesion is compromised at the substrate level — and no amount of plating thickness fixes a bad bond.

02

Copper Base Coat: Electroplating in Copper Sulfate Bath

The copper base coat goes on first, applied by electroplating in a copper sulfate bath. Copper is a better adhesion surface for nickel than bare brass — the bond strength between copper and nickel is higher than between brass and nickel, which matters when the finished faucet goes through thermal cycling in use.

03

Nickel Mid-Coat: Nickel Sulfamate Bath at Controlled Current Density

The nickel mid-coat follows, applied in a nickel sulfamate bath at controlled current density to achieve the 8–12μm target thickness.

Thickness Target

8–12 μm

Batch Variation

±1 μm

Thickness measured by X-ray fluorescence (XRF) — the same equipment used for incoming brass alloy verification.

04

Brushed Nickel Top Coat: Mechanical Brushing for Directional Texture

The brushed nickel top coat is applied last, then mechanically brushed to create the directional texture. The brushing direction and pressure are controlled to produce a consistent grain pattern across the batch. Inconsistent brushing shows up as visible variation in texture when multiple faucets are installed side by side — a problem in hospitality applications where uniformity matters. We run a visual inspection on every unit at the post-plating checkpoint before parts move to assembly.

Electroplating production line for brushed nickel faucet finish — copper base coat, nickel mid-coat, and brushed top coat sequence

Post-Plating Final Inspection

After assembly, every faucet goes through our standard final inspection sequence:

  • Handle torque check
  • Flow rate at rated pressure
  • Leak test at 0.6 MPa for 60 seconds
  • Salt spray sample pull from each production batch (statistical sample, not just new product introductions)

The salt spray sample pull happens at this stage — we test a statistical sample from each production batch, not just from new product introductions.

Why the Process Sequence Matters to You

Each step in the plating sequence has a downstream consequence. Shortcuts at any stage show up as adhesion failures, thickness variation, or texture inconsistency — all of which become your warranty problem, not ours.

Adhesion at the Substrate

Pre-treatment quality determines bond strength. A compromised bond can't be corrected by adding plating thickness.

Thickness Consistency

XRF measurement on every batch. ±1μm variation across a batch means predictable corrosion resistance, not batch-to-batch surprises.

Texture Uniformity

Controlled brushing direction and pressure. Visible grain variation across installed faucets is a hospitality specification failure — we inspect every unit before assembly.

OEM & Custom Work

Customization: What You Can Specify, What You Can't, and What It Costs

Brushed nickel faucets have more customization flexibility than most buyers expect, and a few hard limits that are worth knowing upfront.

What's Customizable

  • Body Profile & Spout Configuration

    We work from 2D drawings or reference samples. Our in-house tooling room handles brass casting die modifications, so tooling revisions don't go to an outside vendor. New body tooling adds 25–35 days to the first sample timeline; modifications to existing catalog bodies run 15–20 days.

  • Handle Design

    Single-lever, two-handle, cross-handle, and lever configurations are all available. Handle tooling is typically simpler than body tooling and can often be adapted from existing catalog options.

  • Spout Reach and Height

    Within the structural constraints of the body design, spout geometry is adjustable. We'll tell you if a requested geometry creates a structural or flow issue.

  • Brushing Texture

    The grain direction and coarseness of the brushed finish can be adjusted within a range. We can match a reference sample's texture if you provide one.

  • Private Label & OEM Branding

    Logo engraving on handle or body, custom packaging, and private label documentation are all available. MOQ for private label is the same as standard OEM: 200 units.

What's Not Customizable Without Significant Cost

  • Plating Stack Composition

    We don't offer a "budget" version of the brushed nickel finish that skips the nickel mid-coat. If you need a lower-cost brushed finish, we'll discuss chrome-over-brass with a brushed top coat, but we'll be clear about the performance difference.

  • Custom PVD Color Matching

    PVD brushed gold and brushed champagne bronze are available in our standard color range. Custom PVD color matching requires a minimum run of 500 units to justify the bath chemistry setup cost.

Brushed nickel faucet handle configuration options for OEM customization

MOQ and Lead Time Summary for Custom Work

All timelines are first-sample lead times from order confirmation.

Standard Catalog Items

200 units

25–35 days

Catalog Body + Modification

200 units

15–20 days

Handle or finish modification

New Body Tooling (OEM)

200 units

35–50 days

Market Compliance

Certifications and Market Compliance

Our brushed nickel faucets carry the certifications your destination market requires. Here's what's in place and what it covers for your import and resale process.

cUPC

North America

North American plumbing code compliance. Covers lead content (NSF 61/372 compliant — maximum 0.25% weighted average lead content in wetted surfaces), pressure and flow performance, and material standards.

Required for sale through licensed plumbing channels in the US and Canada. California AB 1953 compliance is covered under cUPC.

If your buyers are in commercial procurement channels that require NSF 61 listing separately, contact us for documentation on which SKUs carry it.

CE

European Union

European conformity. Required for sale in EU markets. Covers material safety, pressure ratings, and flow performance under EN 817 and EN 200 standards.

Our brushed nickel line is CE marked.

WaterMark

Australia & New Zealand

Australian standards compliance (AS/NZS 3718). Required for sale through licensed plumbing channels in Australia and New Zealand.

Our brushed nickel faucets carry WaterMark certification — relevant if you're supplying the Australian residential or commercial renovation market.

SGS

Third-Party Testing

Third-party testing and audit. SGS test reports covering material composition, salt spray performance, and endurance testing are available for all brushed nickel SKUs.

Useful for buyers whose import process requires third-party verification independent of manufacturer documentation.

Certification documentation package for brushed nickel faucets including cUPC CE WaterMark SGS

Documentation Ships With Every Order

All certification documentation ships with the order. Your customs broker and compliance team get the paperwork without having to request it separately — same documentation package, container to container.

Included Markets

US, Canada, EU, AU/NZ

Third-Party Audit

SGS Reports Available

Lead Compliance

NSF 61/372 · AB 1953

EU Standards

EN 817 · EN 200

Logistics & Fulfillment

Packaging and Container Loading

How faucets are packed determines whether they arrive in sellable condition. Here's the full picture — from carton construction to container optimization to e-commerce labeling.

Carton Construction

Double-wall corrugated + molded pulp insert

Standard carton packaging uses double-wall corrugated outer cartons with molded pulp inner inserts. The molded pulp holds the faucet body and handle assembly in fixed position without contact between metal surfaces — transit damage from surface-to-surface contact is the most common source of finish damage on faucets in shipping, and the molded pulp eliminates it.

No Polystyrene Foam

Recyclable packaging, lower damage rate

We moved away from polystyrene foam inserts several years ago. The damage rate on transit drops measurably with molded pulp, and the packaging is recyclable — which matters for buyers selling into markets with packaging waste regulations.

E-Commerce Fulfillment Ready

FBA, 3PL, and parcel carrier compatible

The standard carton is designed to survive parcel carrier handling without additional outer packaging. If your fulfillment model involves FBA or third-party warehouse receiving, we can add FNSKU labels, ASIN barcodes, or warehouse-specific labeling to the carton before shipment. White-label packaging with your brand name and product photography is available on OEM orders.

Brushed nickel faucet in double-wall corrugated carton with molded pulp insert

Container Loading

We calculate carton dimensions against 20GP and 40HQ floor plans and provide a packing list with CBM and gross weight per SKU before you confirm the order.

For buyers consolidating multiple SKUs — brushed nickel kitchen faucets, bathroom faucets, and shower faucets in the same container — we coordinate the packing sequence to minimize void space and keep the container weight balanced for port handling.

CBM and gross weight documentation provided per SKU before order confirmation — no surprises at freight booking.

OEM Packaging Options

FNSKU / ASIN Labels

Applied to carton before shipment for FBA receiving

3PL Labeling

Warehouse-specific labeling per your 3PL requirements

White-Label Carton

Your brand name and product photography on OEM orders

Parcel-Ready

Standard carton survives parcel carrier handling without outer wrap

Product Range

Sibling Products: Other Finishes in This Category

Brushed nickel is one finish in a broader brushed and specialty finish range. If your market or project requires a different finish, here's where to look.

Not sure which finish fits your market?

The full specialty faucet range covers brushed, stainless, sensor, and more — all available for OEM specification.

View All Specialty Faucets
Buyer Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Decision-support answers for distributors, importers, and OEM buyers evaluating brushed nickel faucets.

What is the minimum order quantity for brushed nickel faucets, and can I mix kitchen and bathroom SKUs?

MOQ is 200 units for standard catalog items. You can mix SKUs within the brushed nickel line to reach the MOQ — for example, 100 kitchen faucets and 100 bathroom faucets. For OEM orders with new body tooling, MOQ is 200 units per SKU.

Market trial note: If you're testing a new SKU in your market before committing to volume, 200 units is low enough to run a meaningful trial without a full container commitment.

Standard Catalog MOQ

200 units — SKU mixing allowed within the brushed nickel line

OEM / New Tooling MOQ

200 units per SKU — applies when new body tooling is required

Brushed nickel vs. matte black: which finish has better margin potential for residential distribution?

Both finishes command a premium over chrome, but they serve different buyer segments. The right choice depends on your market position and risk tolerance.

Brushed Nickel

  • Established premium finish — broader market acceptance
  • Lower buyer education required
  • Consistent demand across North America and Europe
  • Lower-risk core SKU for building reliable volume

Matte Black

  • Higher-margin finish in the current market cycle
  • Strongest in the design-forward segment
  • More trend-dependent — narrower buyer base
  • Best as a complementary SKU once brushed nickel is established

Our recommendation: For a distributor building a core SKU mix, brushed nickel is the lower-risk choice with reliable volume. We manufacture both finishes — if you want to compare the margin structure for your specific market, send us your target retail price points and we'll spec both options.

How do I verify brushed nickel plating quality before committing to a supplier?

There are three specific things to ask for — and the answers will tell you quickly whether a supplier's quality commitment is real.

1

Request the salt spray test report — in hours, not pass/fail

Ask for the result in hours, not just a pass/fail statement. 24 hours is the industry floor; 48 hours is the standard for quality product. A supplier who only offers pass/fail is likely testing to the minimum threshold.

2

Ask whether testing is batch-level or introduction-only

Ask whether the test is run on every production batch or only on new product introductions. Batch-level testing is the meaningful commitment — introduction-only testing tells you nothing about production consistency.

3

Ask about the plating stack — specifically the copper base and mid-coat

A full-quality brushed nickel finish includes a copper base coat, nickel mid-coat, and brushed nickel top coat. If a supplier describes their process as "nickel plating" without mentioning the copper base or the mid-coat thickness, the stack is likely incomplete.

Wfaucet standard: We provide salt spray test reports as standard with shipment documentation and will describe our plating stack in detail on request.

What lead time should I plan for a first order of brushed nickel faucets?

Standard Catalog Items

25–35 days

From order confirmation to container loading

OEM — New Body Tooling

35–50 days

New mold or tooling required for body

OEM — Modified Catalog Body

15–20 days

Handle change or spout adjustment on existing body

For first orders, we recommend confirming the order with a 10% deposit and requesting a pre-shipment sample inspection. We can arrange third-party inspection — SGS, Bureau Veritas, or your preferred inspector — at the factory before the container loads.

Does brushed nickel require special installation or maintenance instructions for end users?

Installation

The installation process is standard for faucets — no special requirements beyond what applies to any deck-mount or wall-mount faucet. No additional documentation or tooling is needed compared to chrome or other finishes.

Maintenance & After-Sales Burden

Brushed nickel is more forgiving than chrome: water spots and fingerprints are less visible on the matte surface, and the finish doesn't show micro-scratches from cleaning as readily as polished chrome.

Practical end-user guidance

Avoid abrasive cleaners and steel wool, which can damage the brushed texture. For your downstream customers, this translates to a lower after-sales support burden compared to polished finishes.

What certifications are required to sell brushed nickel faucets in the US market?

cUPC certification is the primary requirement for sale through licensed plumbing channels in the US. It covers lead content compliance under NSF 61/372, pressure and flow performance, and material standards. California AB 1953 compliance is covered under cUPC.

Lead Content

NSF 61/372

Maximum 0.25% weighted average lead in wetted surfaces

Performance

Pressure & Flow

Covered under cUPC certification scope

California

AB 1953

Covered under cUPC — no separate filing required

E-Commerce & Retail Channels

For e-commerce and retail channels that don't require licensed plumbing installation, cUPC is still the credibility signal that separates quality product from commodity imports. Buyers who've been burned by non-compliant product will ask for it.

Our brushed nickel faucets carry cUPC certification, and the documentation ships with every order.

Get a Quote

Start the Sourcing Conversation

Send us your target market, volume expectations, and any finish or configuration requirements — we'll come back with a quote and the relevant certification documentation for your destination market.

Seeing Tarnishing or Warranty Claims?

We can usually identify the plating root cause

If you're currently sourcing brushed nickel faucets from another supplier and seeing tarnishing or warranty claims, send us a photo of the failure. We can usually identify the plating root cause and tell you whether our process addresses it.

Start With a 200-Unit Sample Order

Test with your own customers before committing

Most new buyers in this category start with a 200-unit sample order to test with their own customers before committing to a full container.

Standard catalog items ship within 7–10 days

Contact Our Sourcing Team

Reach us directly via email, WhatsApp, or phone. We respond to all sourcing inquiries within one business day.