Powerconnect is the promise Black+Decker keeps returning to across its Spanish site: one 18V battery platform that drops into a drill, then a sander, then a hedge trimmer, so a household buys the pack once and shares it around the shed. It is a straightforward hook, and the catalogue is built to reward anyone who takes it up.

The address at blackanddecker.es is the manufacturer's own catalogue for the Spanish market, a shop window straight from Black+Decker rather than a third-party reseller. It runs deep. Power tools alone cover drills, screwdrivers, sanders, saws, multi-tools, grinders and polishers, nail guns and staplers, compressors, and paint sprayers, close to a full trade fit-out before the site has moved past its first department.

Buying direct from the maker changes the browsing in small ways. Spec sheets, compatible accessories, and the exact battery a given tool takes are laid out by the company that built them, so a shopper is not stuck cross-referencing a reseller's guesswork. For a first-time DIYer that clarity can be worth as much as the price.

Alongside the powered gear sits a Black+Decker hand-tool range: socket and wrench sets, screwdrivers, hex keys, laser and measuring instruments, and boxed tool sets for people starting from an empty toolbox. Accessories fill in behind all of it, with batteries and chargers plus drilling, fastening, and cutting bits sold as the consumables that keep the rest running.

Measuring and marking get their own corner of that hand-tool section, with laser levels and measuring instruments sitting beside the sockets and hex keys. For a company better known for things that spin and cut, stocking the quieter precision gear rounds the workshop out. It means a Black+Decker buyer fitting a kitchen or hanging a long run of shelves is not sent off to a rival brand just for a level.

What the Spanish catalogue covers

The catalogue reaches well past the workshop. Black+Decker files its Spanish range into clear departments, and the spread is wide enough that the brand reads less as a tool maker and more as a general household supplier. Garden equipment, home cleaning, kitchen appliances, and home and lifestyle goods each get their own aisle, and Black+Decker gives them the same shelf weight it gives the drills.

The audience splits two ways, and the range covers both. A weekend renovator finds a starter drill and a boxed tool set; a heavier user finds compressors, paint sprayers, and the Brushless line. The pricing sits in the affordable middle of the market, which is where most of this catalogue is pitched.

The home and lifestyle corner is where Black+Decker looks least like a tool brand. Decor pieces, garment care, and heating, cooling, and air units all sit under the same badge, categories a shopper would not automatically connect with a company first known for power tools. The Spanish store treats them as ordinary stock, not a novelty line.

The Powerconnect battery and the 18V line

The Powerconnect system is the practical spine of the tool range. A single battery platform runs across a set of Black+Decker cordless tools, so a drill bought one month and a strimmer bought the next share the same cells and the same charger, which keeps running costs down and the drawer of dead batteries from filling up. The Brushless 18V line sits a step above it, aimed at buyers who want longer motor life and more power out of the same voltage.

For someone assembling a kit piece by piece, that shared-battery guarantee is the clearest argument for staying inside one brand instead of mixing several.

It shapes how the site sells, too. Batteries and chargers get their own accessory listings precisely because the platform matters, and a buyer who commits to it early spends less over time than one who buys a fresh battery with every new tool.

Garden tools and the cleaning range

Outside, the Black+Decker garden section carries tool combos, cutting and pruning gear, pressure washers with their pumps and hoses, digging tools, chainsaws, and lawn mowers, the EasySteer model among them. It reads as a full seasonal kit from one supplier, the sort of range a homeowner could lean on for a spring tidy-up and a bigger reshaping of the yard alike.

Indoors, the cleaning range covers handheld vacuums, stick and broom vacuums, replacement filters, dedicated pet-hair vacuums, and steam cleaners. A pet-hair specific model is a small sign Black+Decker pays attention to who is actually buying, and the steam cleaners push the brand into everyday household cleaning well past anything that started in the garage.

Kitchen counter and home comfort

The kitchen list is longer than the company's tool origins would suggest. Coffee makers, kettles, blenders and juicers, mixers, microwaves, grills and griddles, food processors, and toasters and ovens all carry the Black+Decker name in Spain, which puts the brand on the breakfast counter as readily as on the workbench.

Small-appliance ranges like this live or die on price and availability, and a manufacturer-direct catalogue at least strips out a layer of markup. A shopper comparing a kettle here against a supermarket own-brand is weighing a known name against an unknown one, and that recognition is a fair part of what the store is selling.

That crossover is the throughline of the whole store. The same badge that sells a paint sprayer sells a toaster, and Black+Decker presents both as core business rather than a sideline, a genuine convenience for a shopper who would sooner stock a house from one familiar name.

On top of the shop, the site layers DIY project content: build guides for garage shelving, garden planters, and storage ideas, written for buyers hunting a reason to use the tools they came for. Black+Decker uses that inspiration material to move from selling a drill to selling the afternoon it makes possible, and it doubles as a reason to return to the site between purchases.

The whole catalogue rewards a shopper who buys into one brand and stays put. Shared batteries, matched accessories, and a single familiar name across tools, garden gear, cleaning, and the kitchen make Black+Decker easy to keep returning to, and the Spanish store is plainly built to encourage exactly that habit.

A promotion runs across the store as well, a discount that applies once a shopper's basket passes a set spend threshold. The offer sits in front of visitors before they have added a single item to the cart.