Fatalism as a worldview is well known in science, but psychological studies of this phenomenon are few. The study of people with pronounced fatalistic attitudes through the prism of integral individuality, adopted in the Perm psychological school, is seen as promising one. The aim of this study is to identify individual-psychological characteristics of people with different levels of fatalistic attitudes. The General Fatalism Scale (GFAT) by C. Dogulu was used to diagnose fatalistic attitudes. Individual-personal characteristics were measured by the following methods: E. Diener’s life satisfaction scale, A. Shipp’s temporal focus scale, Short Ambiguity Intolerance Scale (SAIS-7), Short five-factor personality questionnaire (TIPI-RU). The results of the study (N=297) revealed differences in some individual-psychological characteristics of people with pronounced fatalistic attitudes, as well as the specificity of their structure. People with high fatalism are characterized by less acceptance of uncertainty, more future orientation and higher levels of life satisfaction. The results of the factor analysis have identified different types of people with pronounced fatalistic attitudes, which can be explained by different kinds of fatalism (active and passive). The study contributes to the development of the provisions of the Perm psychological school on the individuality of a person.