In this work, firstly a fracture-based interface constitutive theory, aimed at simulating the cracking mechanisms of Fiber Reinforced Cementitious Composites (FRCCs), is presented. The discontinuous formulation assumes a hyperbolic maximum strength criterion in terms of normal and shear joint stresses. The latter are evaluated on each crack front to simulate the failure behavior of plain and FRCC systems. A non-associated plastic flow rule, in conjunction with a post-cracking softening law, is defined to complete the modeling approach. On the other hand, the use of the most-classical Mixture Theory is followed for taking into account the actions of fibers in concrete matrix. The bridging mechanisms between fibers and active cracks are defin...