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Chinese repair shops have apparently figured out how to fix ugly dents on iPhones

In China, dents, scratches, and all the damage in between can be wiped from your iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max, and the results are seriously impressive.

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Rear shell of iPhone 17 Pro.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

With the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max, Apple switched back to an aluminum frame owing to the material’s better thermal conductivity and lightweight nature. While this practical change makes sense, the aluminum is softer than titanium, which also means it shows damage more readily. 

Drop it from a decent height onto a hard surface, and it will show. But here’s the thing. Aluminum is also much more forgiving to repair. Unlike titanium, it responds well to skilled hands, and Chinese repair shops are making the most of this fact, doing some crazy repairs.

Can scratched iPhones really look factory-fresh again?

As reported by Wccftech first, a video shared on X by Pixel Gamer 4K shows restoration workers in China taking visibly damaged iPhone 17 Pro Max units and bringing them back to a near-factory finish. 

In China, people are repairing phone dents like they repair cars pic.twitter.com/GmkirJIzA9

— Pixel Gamer 4k (@4k_isn) April 16, 2026

These are not minor scratches either. The phones in the video show clear signs of being dropped hard, with visible marks across the aluminum frame.

The repair results, though, are genuinely impressive. The workers methodically remove the scratches and restore the finish to a point where you would struggle to tell the phone was ever damaged. They even repaired the dents in the phone, which is a testament to their skills. 

Is this kind of repair available outside China?

That’s harder to answer. Skilled cosmetic restoration services like these are not easy to come by in the US, and when they do exist, they tend to cost considerably more.

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Even Tim Cook has made this point. When asked why it is difficult for Apple to move production out of China, he cited the country’s deep pool of vocational expertise as a key reason. Seeing repair shops perform work like this makes that argument easier to understand.

So if you have a banged-up iPhone 17 Pro Max and you happen to be in China, you are in luck. For everyone else, maybe just slap a case on it before it’s too late.

Rachit Agarwal
Rachit is a seasoned tech journalist with over ten years of experience covering the consumer technology landscape.
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