Ir para o conteúdo principal

Repairable Products Make Good Sense

Repair is good for people, the planet, and product longevity.

We rate products to make it easier to buy repairable devices.

Smartphones

Tablets

Laptops

What is Repairability?

Repairability means making it possible—and ideally easy—to repair a product. A repairable product is designed with disassembly in mind (it should be easy to take apart and put back together). It must also have parts, tools, service documentation, and software available, as well as no artificial barriers to repair such as parts pairing. Together, these aspects make up the repair ecosystem.

Repairable Products Make a Difference

80% choose repairable

France now requires that electronics manufacturers put a repairability score at the point of sale. The vast majority of French consumers say they would give up their favorite brand for a more repairable one.

92% less waste

Microsoft found that repairing a product creates far less waste and 89% reduced greenhouse gas emissions compared to replacing it.

6 in 10 need more

The majority of Americans think that consumers don’t have enough options for getting things repaired, a Consumer Reports survey found.

$49.6 billion

Americans could save $49.6 billion annually by repairing rather than replacing some common household products. Offering DIY repair solutions provides circular economy business models.

Buy cheap,
buy twice.

Say no to cheap, breakable stuff and support companies that make quality products. You’ll save more in the long term when you spend a bit more on a product that will last three times longer.

Patagonia, for example, will repair any product you buy from them. Fairphone designed a smartphone that you can upgrade yourself. And Vaude bags come with repair instructions.

Great products build brand loyalty.

Repair isn’t just good for consumers—it offers great benefits to businesses, too. Many companies embrace DIY repair. They know that people who fix their stuff are dedicated customers.

Providing the information and tools needed to fix products cuts down on support costs. Customers love it when they can get their stuff fixed quickly—whether by themselves or at a local repair shop.

The Biggest Barriers to Repair

Designed for the dump

Sometimes manufacturers use proprietary screws, requiring drivers only available to their own repair techs—like Apple’s pentalobe and Jura’s oval. Sometimes designers make opening a product destructive. The original Microsoft Surface laptop had a felt case that had to be cut open and spot welds underneath that (newer models are much better!).

Missing access to parts, tools, and documentation

Repairability isn’t just about design—it’s about the whole ecosystem. If people can’t get access to parts, tools, documentation, or software, they can’t finish a repair. A study of repair behavior named the unavailability of parts, tools, and manuals as three of the main reasons for unsuccessful repairs.

Parts pairing

Even if a product can physically be repaired, too many products have additional software barriers to repair. Nearly half of iPhone parts today are paired, meaning that you need special manufacturer-only software to repair them without errors. A truly repairable product doesn’t have software limitations like this.

There’s a better way.

iFixit is working on both sides of the table, supporting
legislation to enforce Right to Repair initiatives and help
manufacturers make repairable products.

Learn More

Take Action

  • Buy durable products—look for lifetime warranties and products that come with repair manuals.
  • Help us write open-source repair manuals for everything.
  • Join the Right to Repair Movement
  • Are you a manufacturer? Get support building your repair ecosystem.