Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Apple finally launches its self-service repair program

Add as a preferred source on Google

Apple has finally opened up its self-service repair program, allowing customers access to tools and manuals to service their own phones without needing to go to an Apple Store or third-party certified repair stores. This follows an announcement made in late 2021 that has spurred a series of similar moves from industry competitors such as Samsung and Google.

The company will charge customers $49 for rental access to tools for a single repair, while also offering access to purchases of parts and tools for those who would prefer more permanent access.

Recommended Videos

“The new online store offers more than 200 individual parts and tools, enabling customers who are experienced with the complexities of repairing electronic devices to complete repairs on the iPhone 12 and iPhone 13 lineups and iPhone SE (3rd generation), such as the display, battery, and camera. Later this year the program will also include manuals, parts, and tools to perform repairs on Mac computers with Apple silicon,” Apple shared in a press release.

Apple Self Service Repair
Apple

In a further push for sustainability, the company also says that Apple will offer credits for certain parts if they are returned for recycling. Like many other tech companies of its size, Apple prides itself on using a high number of recycled parts in its products.

Apple is not the only company to start working on allowing its customers to repair their phones at home. Samsung and Google both announced initiatives in partnership with iFixit earlier this year, with Google extending it to all Pixel phones rather than a subset. But Apple remains uniquely positioned in this market due to its long software support time scales.

While someone could repair a Pixel 2 or a Pixel 3 and bring it up to working order, the lack of ongoing software support means such a phone will still remain of limited usefulness. In contrast, an Apple iPhone XR or iPhone XS would still have a year or two of utility due to its excellent hardware and Apple’s ongoing delivery of security and software updates. The situation has gotten better for Samsung and Google, with both offering up to five years of security updates, but Apple undeniably keeps an edge.

At the same time, it’s hard not to notice that the phones that would need repair most — starting with the iPhone 11s and older — can’t be repaired at home. Digital Trends has reached out to the company for clarification on this point and will update this story when we hear back.

Michael Allison
Former Mobile News Writer
A UK-based tech journalist for Digital Trends, helping keep track and make sense of the fast-paced world of tech with a…
Google just teased a Pixel 11 feature we have been waiting months to see
Pixel Glow appears beside the cameras in Google’s first Pixel 11 video
Lighting, Appliance, Ceiling Fan

Last week, Google confirmed that its 2026 Made by Google event will take place on August 12. The Pixel 11 series is expected to lead the announcements, alongside the fifth-generation Pixel Watch. Google has now released its first video teaser ahead of the event, and it appears to reveal both the Pixel 11 Pro and the rumored Pixel Glow feature.

What does the teaser reveal?

Read more
OnePlus is leaving the US and a global market exit could follow by 2027, says report
Financial strain and rising component costs are driving OnePlus out of the US and Europe.
OnePlus Nord 6 in hand

If you have been following OnePlus' exit rumors for a while, this news probably feels familiar. Reports about OnePlus scaling back in the US and Europe have surfaced multiple times over the past several months, only for the company to firmly deny them.

Now, Bloomberg reports OnePlus will actually begin ceasing operations in the US and Europe as soon as this week, and this time it looks real. The move is part of a larger restructuring at parent company Oppo, and OnePlus plans to eventually exit the rest of the world, including India, sometime in 2027, though it will remain active in China for now.

Read more
Xiaomi beats Samsung to become the first non-Pixel phone with stable Android 17
The stable Android 17 rollout begins with Xiaomi's latest flagship, putting it ahead of Samsung and other rivals.
Xiaomi 17 Ultra

Android 17 rolled out to Pixel phones last month, and if you were hoping your non-Pixel Android phone would catch up anytime soon, you might have to wait. Samsung is still running the One UI 9 in Public beta, and most other manufacturers haven't even announced when their skins will get the Android 17 treatment. 

So it's a genuine surprise that Xiaomi, of all companies, just jumped the queue. Xiaomi has started rolling out HyperOS 3 updates based on stable Android 17, and it's currently limited to the Xiaomi 17 series.

Read more