By Rob Link, Founder & CEO, Tech Care Association · June 1, 2026 · 8 min read
Last month a shop owner in Maryland told me he had been doing data recovery for years. I asked what he meant. He said when someone brings in a clicking drive, he ships it to a national lab and the lab sends him a check. He had not recovered any data himself in over a decade. He collected a commission on cases his customers thought he was handling.
He is not unusual. A shop owner here in Virginia ran the same play for years as a formal partner of a large recovery lab. His job was to be a shipping point. Customers handed him their drives, he boxed them up, and the lab did whatever it did at whatever it charged.
Neither man thought this was dishonest. The industry has normalized it. The customer never asks where the drive goes. The shop never says.
I am writing this because that model is fading, and the shops that move first will own the next decade of data services revenue in their markets. Done right, data recovery is not a one-off referral. It is an expanding profit center you can build, tier by tier, if you take it seriously and add the skills.
One thing up front. Everything here is a proposal. The five-tier model, the certification behind it, the directories, and the consumer platform are all things the TCA is building right now, in the open, because we should not write this standard alone. We have a draft. We do not have it all figured out. The feedback ask at the end is the most important part of this post.
Data recovery is a bigger market than you think
Most shop owners file data recovery under "work I send out." That instinct is costing the independent channel a fortune.
The global data recovery services market was about $4.5 billion in 2024 and grew to roughly $5.2 billion in 2025, on a growth rate near 16 percent. Analysts put it close to $9.5 billion by 2029. The US is a meaningful slice of that on its own. Widen the lens to local backup, migration, secure wipe, and helping families recover the data of someone who has died, and the number climbs further.
Here is the reframe. Repair revenue is capped by how many devices break in your market. Data revenue is capped by data growth, and data is growing faster than devices are breaking.
Where the data recovery money actually goes
A handful of large, heavily marketed national labs capture most of the US consumer and small-business market. To be clear, those labs have a real place. The hardest cases need them. The problem is that they have become the default answer for everything, including work a local shop could do itself.
And the brand most consumers trust with a dead drive is not a lab at all. It is the retail counter. When a drive stops working, people walk into Best Buy and hand it to Geek Squad, or drop it at Staples, because those are the names they know. Here is what they never learn. For anything past a simple software fix, the big-box counter does not recover the data itself and does not own a cleanroom. It boxes the drive up, ships it to one of those same labs, then bills the customer several hundred to a couple thousand dollars and keeps a margin on the handoff. The most trusted name in consumer data recovery is running the exact same shipping-point play as that shop in Maryland, just with a national logo on the door. I will put real numbers on that in Part 3 of 4 of this series.
Louis Rossmann has been saying this for years
You probably already know the name. Louis Rossmann runs an independent recovery lab in Austin and a popular YouTube channel with a large following in this industry. He is loud about a lot of things, and you will not agree with all of it. But strip away the volume, and his core complaint lines up exactly with the gap I am describing.
He argues the big labs charge consumers far more than the work warrants, sometimes several thousand dollars for a routine head swap, and that those prices fund advertising and overhead, not better outcomes. That should sound familiar. It is the same machine we took apart in our phone insurance breakdown, where only about a quarter to a third of every premium dollar actually pays for a repair and the rest goes to commissions and marketing. Different industry, same trick.
He also calls out the local shops that act as middlemen, charging a markup just to ship a drive off, and tells consumers to skip them. And he challenges the industry's favorite excuse: the sterile cleanroom. Rossmann argues that safe recovery for standard hardware failures needs a clean laminar flow bench, not a multimillion-dollar cleanroom. You can argue where that line sits. The point is the line is up for debate, and it matters for how we define the top of the tier ladder.
His own lab runs on published pricing, direct contact with the engineer, and a no data, no fee policy. That last one is the standard we think every shop should adopt. If you cannot get the data back, the customer pays nothing.
We are not affiliated with Rossmann and this is not an endorsement from him. He is just the loudest proof that the market is hungry for honest, transparent recovery, and that an independent can win on exactly that.
Your biggest advantage is that you are local
No national lab and no big-box counter can copy this. You are local. People prefer local. They want to hand their device to someone they can drive back to, look in the eye, and call with a question. A drive in a box headed to a city they have never seen is the opposite of that. That trust is your edge. Use it.
The Five-Tier Model, as a starting point
This is a draft, and the whole reason this post exists is to get your reaction before it sets. We sort data work by access difficulty, not device type. A phone, a laptop, and a NAS can land in the same tier depending on what is actually wrong.
Cloud setup, migration, local backup, password help, customer education. Basic gear. The skill is patience and a clean, verifiable backup across iPhone, Android, Windows, and Mac. Almost every shop can do this. Almost none are built around it. And the demand is everywhere. Not everyone has a cloud account, and plenty of people just need help getting data off a full device. I have a friend whose phone storage is always full. She deletes photos every week just to keep it working. She does not need a recovery lab. She needs a shop to set her up right, once. Multiply her by every customer in your town. This is the most consistent recurring revenue in the whole category, and it is where you start.
The storage is fine. Something else is in the way, and most of your volume here will be phones, not drives. A water-damaged board, a dead charge port, a screen that blocks access. Here is the part that should excite you. Our research shows most consumers think data recovery is complicated and expensive. Often it is neither. Sometimes the data was never at risk at all. A dead battery or a bad charging port was the only thing between the customer and their photos. A simple fix. You already do this work. You just are not framing it as data recovery, and that framing changes both the ticket and the loyalty. Getting someone's photos back off a "dead" phone earns a customer for life.
The drive reads fine, the file system is broken. Software work, with discipline. Licensed tools like R-Studio, UFS Explorer, ReclaiMe, or DMDE, and an image-first workflow on a dedicated machine.
The drive is failing, firmware is corrupt, or a board is damaged. Real tools, a DeepSpar or PC-3000, donor inventory, and for phones, microsoldering. This is the frontier for shops that already do board-level work. A phone that will not power on often has good NAND behind a dead power or charging fault. Fix the board and the data comes back. The hardest cases mean pulling and reading the NAND directly. If you can already microsolder, Tier 4 phone recovery is the highest-value skill you can add.
The drive must be opened or the storage physically extracted. This is full-time lab capability, and most shops never reach it, which is fine. This is exactly where the legitimate labs earn their place. The open question is where the equipment bar sits here, full cleanroom or a properly run laminar flow bench, and that is one we want help settling.
Most of the money for independents lives in Tiers 1 through 3. The opportunity is not climbing to Tier 5. It is making a plan, starting at Tier 1, and doing it really well before you move up. Part 2 of 4 of this series breaks every tier down in full.
One rule that has to hold: do no harm
We all see the videos. The botched job from a shop that never should have touched it. Do not be that guy. And when your reach exceeds your skill and the data is gone, own it. Do not tell the customer it was unrecoverable when the truth is you killed a recoverable case by trying something you had no business trying. That lie poisons trust for every honest shop in the channel.
This cuts both ways. The big labs get it wrong too. We have all seen the videos where an independent pulls off a recovery on a drive a major provider already wrote off as a lost cause. That is the real point of everything here. This industry is full of hardworking, creative people who can do the job, and more of those stories deserve to be heard. We want to help tell them.
Honest tier discipline is not a limit. It is the pitch. One shop says "we do all data recovery." Another says "we handle most cases in-house and route the hard ones to a verified partner lab, with price and process up front." In any market where customers can see the difference, the second shop wins.
What we want to build with you
As a nonprofit industry association, the TCA is built to carry something like this, with no carrier, manufacturer, or insurer steering it. The model is step one. Three things sit on top of it, and all three are still taking shape.
Certification
So a shop can prove the tier it operates at instead of claiming it. A common floor at every tier, triage, customer disclosure, chain of custody, transparent pricing, with equipment and skill checks added per tier. When a shop says Tier 3, the claim should mean something. What makes that credential worth carrying is exactly what we need to hear from you.
A verified directory and consumer platform
So a device owner can describe their problem, get matched to the right shop at the right tier nearby, and see honest pricing before they hand over their data. Legitimate, verified shops can get into the directory now, ahead of the public launch.
A shop-to-shop routing network
So you can send work you cannot handle to a verified shop that can, fast and tracked. No more scrolling the Facebook groups posting "ISO someone who can do a Tier 4 on an iPhone" and hoping a stranger answers. A real network, built on verified capability.
We are not building any of this alone. We are forming a committee to help review and write the standards, and we will consult professionals across the industry who genuinely want to push this initiative forward. If that is you, we want you in the room.
What I am actually asking you for
Read the five tiers and tell us where we are wrong, what you like, and how we could make it better. We are open to all of it.
- Are the boundaries in the right places for how cases show up on your bench?
- Is anything in the wrong tier, or missing?
- Where should the Tier 5 equipment bar sit, and is the cleanroom line right?
- What would make certification worth carrying instead of a box-checking tax?
- Would the directories actually send you work, or are there failure modes we cannot see from here?
Drop it in the comments so the rest of the channel can build on it, or reach out directly. And if you run a legitimate recovery operation and want early entry into the verified directory, or a spot in the DMV pilot cohort, say so.
One thing. We are not trying to debate this to death. We want to launch something solid, then make it better with real use. Tell us what would break it, and help us get it out the door.
What is coming in this series
This is a four-part series, and I want it to be a working session, not a lecture. Part 2 of 4 takes the tiers apart and asks you to pressure-test the boundaries. Part 3 of 4 builds the revenue model in the open, with a spreadsheet you can run your own numbers in, plus a hard look at why the big-box counter treats data recovery as one of its highest-margin services. Part 4 of 4 works through what certification and the directories should require, shaped by what you tell us.
We are building this in public, on purpose. The plan is to launch a pilot in the next two to three months, ship a more complete product before the end of the year, and reach a full launch in 2027. It will be a lot better if the people who do the work help write it.
Up to you. Let's build it.
Key Takeaways
- The market is real and growing. Data recovery services run past $5 billion globally and climb from there, but most of it flows to national labs and big-box counters acting as shipping points.
- Your money is in Tiers 1 through 3. Backup, repair-first recovery, and logical recovery are work most shops can already do, or learn fast.
- It is simpler than customers think. Often the "lost" data was behind a dead battery or a bad charging port. Frame and price that as data recovery.
- Do no harm. Image first, never experiment on the only copy, and adopt a no data, no fee policy.
- The model is a draft. Help shape it. Verified shops can join the directory now and apply for the DMV pilot cohort.
This is a draft. Help us build it.
The Five-Tier Model, certification, the directories, and the consumer platform are all still taking shape. Tell us where we are wrong, what you like, and what would make it work on your bench. Drop a comment below, or join the working group.
Join the TCA CommunityRun a legitimate recovery operation? Reach out about the verified directory and the DMV pilot cohort.
More from the State of Tech Repair 2026 series
- Beyond Phone Repair: Your Skills Already Work on All 10 Consumer Electronics Categories · Series B · Post #1
- Is Phone Insurance Worth It? We Did the Math for Repair Professionals · Series A · Post #2
- Why Tech Repair Shops Fail: The Data Behind the Crisis · Series A · Post #3
- Right to Repair 2026: What It Means for Your Repair Shop · Series C · Post #1
Rob Link is the founder of the TCA. The TCA is independent of carriers, manufacturers, and insurance companies, which is exactly why it can put a draft standard like this in front of the whole channel and ask for the truth back.

