Posts

From cracked screens to enterprise processing, the entrepreneurs building the future of the $40 billion Tech Care Industry prove that the repair bench can be a starting line, not a destination.

Series B: Business Opportunities · State of Tech Repair 2026

By Rob Link, Founder & CEO, Tech Care Association · June 15, 2026 · 13 min read

Key Takeaways

  • The Tech Care Industry is one connected ecosystem of repair, support, returns, refurbishment, data destruction, resale, and recycling. Independent repair shops are its foundation, not a separate world.
  • Operators in motion are repair shop owners who treat the bench as a starting line and build toward owning more of the device lifecycle, or building tools and services the industry needs.
  • Repair shop growth into a larger operation like refurbishment, IT asset disposition, software, and resale is a proven path. uBreakiFix, iCracked, Gopher Mods, Refreshed Tech, and eWaste Direct all started small.
  • The US tech repair market is about $40 billion, with close to 40,000 independent tech repair shops across North America.
  • Staying a great local lifestyle business is an equally valid choice. Both paths are winning.

What's in this post

  1. What is the Tech Care Industry?
  2. The Tech Care Value Chain
  3. What is an operator in motion?
  4. Most repair shops are lifestyle businesses
  5. The companies that started small
  6. Two ways to win
  7. Common questions about repair shop growth

Not long ago I was talking shop with someone in the industry. He knows the market well. But the longer we talked, the clearer one thing got. He saw the big companies and the small ones as two separate worlds. On one side, the enterprise asset-disposition firms, the bulk wholesalers, the refurbished marketplaces, the recyclers. On the other, the local shop with a bench and a sign in the window. To him they barely belonged in the same conversation.

I see it the other way around. They are not two worlds. They are one industry, and every layer of it leans on the others to stand up.

What is the Tech Care Industry?

Direct answer
The Tech Care Industry is the full ecosystem that keeps the world's devices working, supported, moving, and out of the landfill: tech support, repair, returns and reverse logistics, IT asset disposition, refurbishment, resale, and recycling. Independent tech repair shops are the frontline of this industry, and the larger players that sit above them depend on that frontline to function.

I started calling this whole thing the Tech Care Industry back in 2020, when I founded the TCA, because that is what it is. The Tech Care Industry is the business of keeping the world's devices working, supported, moving, and out of the landfill for as long as possible. The repair piece alone is roughly a forty-billion-dollar market in the United States, a number the TCA broke down in The $40B Truth. Add asset disposition, refurbishment, wholesale distribution, and recycling on top of that, worldwide, and the full industry runs several times larger. The exact totals swing depending on who is counting. The scale does not.

Picture how a single device moves through the Tech Care Industry. Someone buys a phone or a laptop. Right away, plenty of people need help setting it up, moving their data, or solving a problem they cannot crack alone, and tech support handles that, on day one and for years after. Many devices do not even stay bought. They come back, for buyer's remorse, a defect, the wrong model, a hundred reasons, and the reverse logistics industry processes that flood. The scale is staggering. Reverse logistics is worth more than a trillion dollars worldwide in 2026, and the slice dedicated to electronics alone, covering e-waste recycling, device repair, and asset recovery, is a market of about $18.7 billion, according to Fortune Business Insights. When a device breaks, the frontline is a repair shop, local independent or big retail chain. When a company retires a fleet of hundreds or thousands of machines, asset-disposition firms and data-destruction specialists wipe the drives to certified standards and sort what can live again from what cannot. The survivors flow into wholesale channels, get tested and graded by software, and move by the pallet to distributors, then on to refurbished marketplaces for resale. The ones that are truly finished go to certified recyclers, who pull out the gold, copper, and other materials and keep the toxic parts out of the ground. It is a loop, not a straight line.

Two giant industries sit on top of all this and rely on it completely, even though they are not really part of it. Insurance companies cannot pay out a device-protection claim without a repair network or a refurbished replacement to draw on. Wireless carriers cannot move a single traded-in phone without the refurbishers, wholesalers, and recyclers downstream. Both industries are bigger and richer than tech care, and both quietly depend on it to function. The repair shop does not work for them. They work because of it.

Here is what my colleague missed. None of those layers work without the others. Marketplaces do not generate inventory; they depend on refurbishers and shops to supply it. Wholesalers depend on a steady stream of devices coming up from repair counters and corporate trade-ins. Recyclers depend on the whole chain routing dead units their way. And the local shop, in turn, runs on the parts, software, and resale platforms the bigger players built. Pull out any one layer and the rest wobble. Co-existence is not a feel-good idea here. It is the structure.

And here is the part that should matter most to the companies at the top of that chain. The big players were not born big. Most started at the bench, which is the whole reason for this article. So the smart move for the larger players is not to look down on the small shops. It is to help them succeed, the way a good senior staffer mentors a new hire. Not out of charity, out of self-interest. Today's one-person shop is tomorrow's regional processor, software vendor, supplier, or acquisition target. Strengthen the base and you strengthen your own supply. Ignore it or talk down to it, the way my colleague did, and you are sawing at the branch you sit on.

The giant was small once.

The Tech Care Value Chain

Independent repair shops touch nearly every stage of the device lifecycle. That is the whole thesis in one picture.

Buy & use Support Repair Returns ITAD &data wipe Wholesale& grading Recycle Resale THE TECH CARE INDUSTRY one connected loop
The device lifecycle runs as a loop. A repaired phone goes back into use, a refurbished one gets resold, and the work flows on. Independent shops sit at the center of it.

What is an operator in motion?

Operators in motion are repair shop owners who treat the bench as a starting line, not a destination, and build toward something larger. Operators in motion generally move in one of two directions:

  • Owning more of the device lifecycle: sourcing, refurbishment, data sanitization, and resale at volume.
  • Building the tools and services the industry needs: software, marketing and advertising platforms, distribution, and training, anything that makes the trade work better and helps more people in it.

An operator in motion runs the same diagnostics and board-level repairs as everyone else, but looks at a broken phone and sees more than a repair ticket. They see one move in a much bigger game, and they decide to play more of it. It is a mindset before it is a business plan. The most interesting repair shop growth right now belongs to the owners who think that way.

The bench is not always the destination. Sometimes it is the starting line.

Are you an operator in motion?

Check every box that sounds like you, then add them up.

  • ☐  You already resell devices.
  • ☐  You have thought about B2B or fleet contracts.
  • ☐  You buy inventory instead of waiting for walk-ins.
  • ☐  You enjoy building systems and processes.
  • ☐  You see opportunities beyond the repair ticket.
  • ☐  You regularly attend industry events.

Your score

  • 0–2 · Lifestyle Builder. You are running the business on your own terms, and that is a win.
  • 3–4 · Emerging Operator. You are already moving. Pick one next step.
  • 5–6 · Operator in Motion. The bench is your starting line. Go build.

Most repair shops are lifestyle businesses, and that is fine

Most coverage of independent repair still treats the shop as a fixed object. A storefront. A bench. A queue of cracked screens. And for a lot of owners, that is exactly the point.

A huge share of repair shops are lifestyle businesses. A lifestyle business is one built to give its owner a specific way of living, rather than to chase rapid growth, massive scale, or a corporate buyout. The goal is freedom, flexibility, and a good living on your own terms. You set your hours, answer to no one, make enough to live well, and go home. That is a completely legitimate reason to own a shop, and plenty of the best operators in this trade want nothing more. Not everyone wants the grind of building something bigger. That is okay.

But a segment of this industry does want more. They have never seen the bench as the destination. They treat it as a starting line. The companies below are proof of where that mindset can lead.

The companies that started small

The on-ramp from a repair bench to something much larger has been there since the iPhone era began. Look across these companies and the shared DNA is obvious. Every one started small, with no outside money and no warehouse. Every one used skills a good shop already owns. Every one kept more devices in use and out of the ground.

uBreakiFix and iCracked: the early playbook

uBreakiFix started in 2009, when Justin Wetherill shattered his new iPhone, balked at the repair price, and fixed it himself with parts and instructions he found online. He and two friends from the University of Central Florida turned that into a single Orlando storefront, then a franchise. By 2017 they had opened their 500th location. In 2019, with more than 500 stores and a quarter of a billion dollars in annual revenue, uBreakiFix was acquired by Asurion. Today it runs more than 700 locations under the Asurion banner. One cracked screen became a national chain.

iCracked took a different route to the same place. AJ Forsythe kept breaking his iPhone as a Cal Poly student, taught himself to fix it, and started repairing classmates' phones for seventy-five dollars out of his dorm room. With co-founders Anthony Martin and Leslee Lambert, he built that into a Y Combinator-backed network of on-demand technicians, the iTechs. By 2014 iCracked was doing twenty-five million dollars in revenue. At its peak the network reached more than sixty major metro areas across the United States and Canada. On February 11, 2019, iCracked was acquired by the insurance giant Allstate and folded into SquareTrade, the device-warranty business Allstate already owned. The repair was just the door in.

Notice where both companies ended up. uBreakiFix went to Asurion. iCracked went to Allstate. The two biggest repair-network exits of that era both landed inside insurance and warranty companies. That is not a coincidence. Those industries rely on repair and refurbishment to deliver what they sell, so when they wanted to own that capability outright, they bought it. The giants on top of this industry need the people inside it. They proved it with their checkbooks.

Gopher Mods: from a dorm room to a warehouse

Gopher Mods started about as small as a company can start. Casey Profita was a freshman at the University of Minnesota building custom video game controllers out of Pioneer Hall. After graduating, he skipped grad school and bet on repair, becoming one of the first shops in the Twin Cities to offer iPhone repair outside an Apple store. That bet built a real business: multiple retail locations, roughly fifty employees, around 50,000 devices serviced a year, and close to half a million devices kept out of the landfill over fifteen years.

The part worth studying is what came next. In 2025, Gopher Mods closed its flagship Minneapolis retail store and said plainly why. The business was shifting away from individual walk-in consumers and toward school districts, small businesses, and ecommerce, run out of a warehouse instead of a storefront. Read quickly, that looks like a store closing. Read closely, it is an operator in motion repositioning up the value chain, trading foot traffic for fleet contracts and online volume. Same skills, same brand, different altitude.

Refreshed Tech: from his own cracked phone to 105,000 square feet

If Gopher Mods shows the pivot in progress, Refreshed Tech shows where it can lead. Kyle Wainwright started in 2012 by fixing his own broken phone. That turned into Genius Computer and Phone Repair, an eighteen-location retail chain. Then he moved the whole operation into bulk IT asset disposition and refurbishment. Today Refreshed Tech runs a 105,000-square-foot processing facility with more than 150 employees and does millions in sales.

Kyle Wainwright did not start with enterprise contracts or a warehouse. He started with one device and one customer, the same way a lot of shop owners reading this did. The walk-in counter was the on-ramp, not the ceiling.

eWaste Direct: from an eBay side hustle to a fleet on the road

Not every operator in motion starts behind a repair counter. Some start at a kitchen table. Joe Nelson and Angie Cardona-Nelson began flipping electronics on eBay around 2008, about a year after the first iPhone shipped. It was a side hustle. Eighteen years later, eWaste Direct is an electronics recycling and refurbishment company just outside San Francisco with more than a dozen employees and a fleet of vehicles that collects old laptops, phones, and tablets from businesses across the region.

The mechanics will look familiar to anyone in this trade. Devices come in by the pallet. Each one runs through diagnostics. The ones with value get refurbished and resold, with anywhere from 1,200 to 2,000 items listed at any given time. The ones without value get responsibly recycled. Data gets wiped to government sanitization standards as part of the process, which is a paid service in its own right, not an afterthought. A couple flipping phones on eBay quietly became a regional collection and processing operation. That is the whole pattern in one sentence.

Some of them built the software

Here is a twist on the pattern. A few operators in motion did not just scale a shop. They built the tools the rest of the industry now runs on.

Fixably is the clearest example. CEO Joel Mansnerus started an electronics and Apple device repair business in 2010. He and his co-founders built the software to manage and scale their own shop, then commercialized it in 2015. The product came straight off the bench. MyRepairApp came the same way. Tony Tyshchuk built it out of firsthand experience running a repair business, solving his own problems first and turning the fix into a product.

AdCentral runs through the same kind of operator. Co-founder Israel Quintal entered repair in 2013 and went on to own fourteen physical repair shops. He also spent time as an executive at MobileSentrix, one of the largest parts suppliers in the trade. Then he co-founded AdCentral to build software and digital tools for the electronics retail and repair space. Fourteen storefronts and a parts-industry seat became a software company.

Not every tool in this space came straight from a shop. RepairDesk founder Usman Butt started his career in software development, then saw the inefficiencies of repair up close while spending time at his brother's cell phone repair shop and built for them. The point holds either way. Some of these founders stood at the bench and some stood right next to it, but the bench shaped the tools. There is a real chance the point-of-sale, ticketing, or inventory software running in your shop was designed by someone who knew the work because they lived it.

They started small

Company Started as What it became
uBreakiFix One cracked iPhone, 2009 700+ locations, acquired by Asurion
iCracked Dorm-room screen repair, 2010 60+ metro network, acquired by Allstate
Gopher Mods Dorm-room game controllers Multi-store chain, then B2B and ecommerce warehouse
Refreshed Tech Fixing his own phone, 2012 105,000 sq ft ITAD facility, 150+ employees
eWaste Direct eBay side hustle, ~2008 Regional collection, refurbishment, and recycling fleet

A young market with room to move

It is easy to assume the secondary market has always been here. It has not. It is barely older than the iPhone. The secondary market for mobile phones really emerged in 2007 and 2008, right alongside the first iPhone and the first modern Android devices. As people upgraded to premium, high-cost smartphones, their displaced older models started piling up, the 3G and early 4G handsets nobody knew what to do with. That pile is what sparked the first real buy-back and trade-in programs. Everything that came after, the marketplaces, the wholesalers, the grading standards, grew out of that moment.

That makes the secondary market less than twenty years old. The rules are still being written. The standards are still settling. That is not a reason to wait. It is the reason there is still so much room to move.

The platforms they plug into

A generation ago, scaling like this meant building global reach from scratch. That is no longer true, and it is a big reason these stories are becoming more common. Marketplaces like Back Market and Reebelo built the grading standards, quality control, and buyer trust that let independent refurbishers sell at volume far beyond their own zip code. Back Market grew that model into a multibillion-dollar business. Reebelo pulled a fragmented field of small refurbishers into a single trusted storefront. Live-selling channels like Whatnot and TikTok Shop opened another lane entirely, and sellers have scaled refurbished-device sales by moving inventory in front of a camera instead of a display case.

Here is the part worth sitting with. Those platforms do not compete with independent shops so much as depend on them. The inventory and refurbishment skill flowing into the secondary market comes, in large part, from operators like the ones above. Independent shops are not adjacent to that economy. They are its supply.

And plenty of shops are already in it without calling it that. Lots of repair shops refurbish and resell devices at some level already, right alongside the repairs. Many go a step further and buy pallets of lower-grade returns, fix what they can, and move them back into the market at a margin. The line between a repair shop and a small refurbisher is already blurry. That is the point. Stepping up is far less of a leap than it looks from the bench.

What actually changes when a shop scales

When a shop becomes a lifecycle operator, three things change underneath it:

  • Sourcing. Instead of waiting for a customer with a cracked screen, the operator buys devices in volume from school districts, corporate fleets, and carrier trade-in programs. Supply becomes something you go get, not something that walks in.
  • Processing. One-by-one repair gives way to assembly-line testing, automated data erasure and certification, and refurbishment at scale. The craft that made you good at a single repair becomes a system.
  • Liquidation. The display case is replaced by marketplaces and live-selling channels that move graded inventory at a volume no storefront can match.

None of those three require talent a strong repair shop does not already have. Diagnostics, board-level skill, careful data handling, and earned customer trust are exactly the inputs the larger reuse economy runs on. And the operators scaling fastest are also the ones diverting the most e-waste, which is the rare case where the business case and the right thing to do point in the same direction.

The frontline of the Tech Care Industry

Step back from the success stories for a second, because they rest on something bigger than themselves.

$40B
US tech repair market
~40,000
Independent shops, North America
$1T+
Global reverse logistics, 2026
2007–08
Secondary market began

There are close to 40,000 independent tech repair shops across North America. That is the base of this entire industry. The TCA has documented both the size of this market and the pressure these shops are under, and the headline is simple: this layer is large, foundational, and fragile. Every operator in motion in this article started as one of those shops. Every marketplace, refurbisher, and recycler moving used devices at scale is drawing, directly or indirectly, on the work those shops do.

So when someone treats repair people as a world apart from the big players, they have it backwards. This trade is not a lower rung or a separate lane. It is the ground floor of everything built above it. Which is why supporting independent shops is not charity or nostalgia. It is the industry protecting its own foundation, especially with roughly one in three shops exiting every year.

Strengthen the frontline and you strengthen everything above it.

Two ways to win

None of this means scaling is the goal. It is one good path, not the only one, and not the right one for everyone. Think about the restaurant business. A handful of operators build national chains. Most of the great ones never do, and never want to. The best restaurant in your town is not a failed franchise. It is a destination. The owner knows the regulars by name, controls the quality personally, and builds something a five-hundred-location chain can never copy.

Repair is the same. Being the best shop in your community, the one people trust with their broken laptop and their kid's first phone, is not a consolation prize for the shops that did not scale. For a lot of owners it is the entire point. An operator in motion and a great local fixture are both winning. They are just playing different games.

Lifestyle Business

A destination

  • Freedom and flexibility
  • Community relationships
  • Personal craftsmanship
  • Local reputation
  • Stable income and quality of life

Operator in Motion

A starting line

  • Regional influence
  • Enterprise relationships
  • Building teams and systems
  • New revenue streams
  • Industry impact

Neither path is wrong. The key is choosing on purpose.

Common questions about repair shop growth

Can a repair shop grow into a larger business?

Yes. Repair shop growth into a larger operation like refurbishment, IT asset disposition, software, and resale at scale is a proven path, and it does not require talent a strong shop does not already have. uBreakiFix, iCracked, Gopher Mods, Refreshed Tech, and eWaste Direct all started with one device or one side hustle and built much larger lifecycle businesses on the same core skills: diagnostics, board-level repair, careful data handling, and earned customer trust.

Do refurbished marketplaces compete with independent repair shops?

Mostly no. Marketplaces such as Back Market and Reebelo do not generate their own inventory or refurbishment skill. They depend on independent shops and refurbishers to supply both. Independent repair shops are the supply side of the secondary market, not its competition, which means stepping into refurbishment and resale is closer to a natural extension than a head-to-head fight.

Is the secondary market still a good opportunity to enter?

Yes. The secondary market for mobile phones only emerged around 2007 and 2008, which makes it less than twenty years old. Standards, grading, and channels are still settling, and the reverse logistics that feeds the secondary market is already worth more than a trillion dollars worldwide. For repair shop owners, that means there is still meaningful room to move.

The choice in front of you

Either way, the choice is worth making on purpose. The value in this industry keeps moving downstream of the repair counter, into sourcing, processing, software, support, and resale at scale. If you want a bigger piece of that, the door is open and more reachable than most people think. If you want to run the best lifestyle shop in your town, that door is open too. The question is not whether you can fix the phone. It is what you want the phone to be: the end of a transaction, or the start of something you decide to build.

One move helps no matter which path you pick. Get in the room. Operators in motion already do this. They show up where distributors, refurbishers, software companies, recyclers, and marketplaces are all under one roof, and they leave with relationships that turn a shop into something larger. But you do not have to be chasing scale to benefit. Every owner who shows up finds better parts deals, new referral partners, sharper suppliers, and ideas they did not walk in with. The whole industry gets stronger when more of us are in the same room.

One of those rooms is happening soon. Mobile Disrupt runs July 7 and 8 in Miami, built around exactly this part of the industry: the secondary phone market, refurbishment, wholesale distribution, support, and the channels operators in motion plug into. The TCA worked out a deal to get repair people in the door at half price. Use code TCA-REPAIR. Details are on the Mobile Disrupt event page. And it is only one stop. The TCA keeps the only events calendar in the industry that puts every major show in one place. Before you map out your year, see what is out there on the TCA Events page and pick a few rooms worth standing in.

Remember the colleague from the top, the one who saw the big players and the small shops as two separate worlds. He had it backwards. They are one industry, and a lot of the companies he admired were built by repair people who decided the bench was a starting line.

Every warehouse started with a workbench. Every fleet started with a single pickup. Every software platform started with someone frustrated enough to build something better. The giant was small once.

Whether you choose to become an operator in motion or the most trusted shop in your community, build it on purpose. And do not build it alone. Show up, meet your people, and let's lift this whole industry together.

Just don't underestimate what can start at the bench.

Build your future with the TCA

Market data, advocacy, and community built specifically for independent tech repair professionals. Membership starts free.

Join the TCA Community

More from the State of Tech Repair 2026 series

Rob Link is the founder of the TCA. The TCA is independent of carriers, manufacturers, and insurance companies, which is exactly why it can tell the whole channel the truth about where this industry is headed.

Sources: Reverse logistics market data, Fortune Business Insights (2026). US tech repair market size and shop counts, the TCA's State of Tech Repair 2026 research and IBISWorld. Company histories: uBreakiFix (Asurion, Franchise Times), iCracked (Inc., CNBC, TechCrunch), Gopher Mods (gophermods.com, KSTP), Refreshed Tech (refreshedtech.com, Inside Indiana Business), eWaste Direct (KTLA, Rich on Tech). The Tech Care Association (TCA) is the leading nonprofit trade association for independent tech repair professionals in North America.