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Is Phone Insurance Worth It? We Did the Math for Repair Professionals | TCA
Series A: Market Intelligence • Post #2 • State of Tech Repair 2026

Is Phone Insurance Worth It? We Did the Math for Repair Professionals

We analyzed the $13.3 billion phone insurance market, from commission structures to claim rates. The data should change how every repair professional thinks about insurance, and what you tell your customers.

Consumers are paying $180 to $300 a year for phone insurance. Their carrier made it sound like a no-brainer at the store. "For just $15 a month, you're covered." But when was the last time they actually used it? And when they did, how much did they really save?

We ran the numbers on every scenario: premiums, deductibles, claim rates, commissions, and the actual cost of a repair at a local shop. What we found should change how every repair professional in this industry thinks about the phone insurance question. Because for most consumers, phone insurance is a money pit. And for you, the people who actually fix these devices, understanding that math is the single biggest competitive advantage you're not using yet.

But this story goes deeper than consumer economics. Insurance companies are now actively recruiting repair shops to sell their plans. New players like AKKO are pitching "commission plus repair revenue" as a win-win. And you're hearing from all sides that "insurance is taking over the repair market." Before you sign up for anything or panic about the competition, let's look at what the data actually says.

Tech repair is critical business in the US because everything is becoming tech, and every one of those devices will eventually need a fix. The question isn't whether people will pay for repairs. It's whether they'll overpay for insurance they barely use, and whether you should be the one selling it to them.

The $13.3 Billion Machine and Where the Money Really Goes

The US mobile phone insurance market is now valued at approximately $13.3 billion as of 2025, with North America representing roughly 35 to 39 percent of the $43.7 billion global mobile insurance ecosystem. That's a massive number. But where does all that money actually go?

Here's the part the insurance companies don't advertise: only 25 to 35 percent of premium revenue actually goes toward paying claims (fixing or replacing someone's phone). The biggest single expense? Marketing and sales commissions, eating up 30 to 50 percent of every premium dollar. That's not a typo. The insurance companies spend more money paying carriers and retailers to sell the plan than they spend actually fixing phones.

Where Your Customer's Insurance Premium Dollar Goes
Sales Commissions 30–50% Paid to carriers & retailers Claim Payouts 25–35% Actual repairs & replacements Admin & Operations 10–15% Tech & Infrastructure 5–10% Profit (EBITDA) 10–15% For every $1 in premiums, only 25–35¢ goes toward fixing phones. The sales channel makes more than the customer ever gets back.
Source: Assurant 2025 Annual Report, Asurion credit agency filings, TCA industry analysis

This isn't speculation. Assurant, one of the two giants in this space and a publicly traded company, reported $12.35 billion in total consolidated revenue for 2025. Their financial filings confirm that "Underwriting, Selling, General and Administrative" expenses, which consist primarily of commissions, are a dominant cost center. As of early 2025, Assurant held $585.7 million in "Commissions Payable" on their balance sheet, money owed but not yet paid to distribution partners. Industry analysis confirms that in the mobile device protection space, commissions to partners range from 30 to 55 percent of the premium.

Asurion, the other giant, is privately held so we can't see the same SEC-level detail, but credit rating agencies and industry reports paint an identical picture. Asurion generates approximately $10.6 billion in annual revenue and holds a dominant 70 percent market share in US mobile device protection. For a standard $15-per-month plan, roughly $7 (nearly 50 percent) goes to covering the split between Asurion and the wireless carrier. The company carries over $15.6 billion in debt, used largely to fund acquisitions and maintain its massive carrier distribution network.

Key Insight for Repair Pros

When a consumer pays $180 a year for phone insurance, somewhere between $54 and $90 goes to the carrier or retailer who sold the plan. Only $45 to $63 is earmarked for actually fixing their phone. The rest covers overhead and profit.

Who Actually Has Insurance, and Has That Really Changed?

You've probably heard the narrative: "More and more people have phone insurance now, and it's eating into the repair market." It's one of the most repeated claims in our industry. But is it true?

Approximately 30 to 33 percent of smartphone owners in the US have insurance or an extended warranty on their devices. That percentage has hovered around the 30 percent mark for several years. The growth rate in adoption is steady at about 5 to 7 percent annually. Not the dramatic shift that some would have you believe.

So who's pushing the "insurance is taking over" narrative? Follow the money. The companies and individuals saying this tend to be the ones who want to sell more insurance. It's in their interest to make the market sound like it's already moved in that direction so you feel like you need to get on board.

Here's what has actually changed: the value of the policies has grown faster than the number of policyholders. Premium smartphones now exceed $900 in average selling price, which means the plans cost more and the claims cost more. Average policy premiums have risen 25 to 30 percent in the last two years, but that's the price going up, not a flood of new customers signing up. Consumer awareness of phone insurance has increased to 70 percent in 2025, up from 55 percent the year before. But awareness isn't the same as adoption. Most people know insurance exists. Most of them still choose not to buy it.

Your Market: 200 Million Uninsured Devices
30% Insured 87–96M devices 82% sold by carriers 57% Millennials · 29% Boomers 70% Uninsured = YOUR Market 194–203 million devices These consumers rely entirely on out-of-pocket repair. This number has not changed dramatically. 290 million total US smartphones · Adoption steady at ~30% for several years
Source: TCA State of Tech Repair 2026 white paper, carrier enrollment data, industry surveys

The numbers tell the real story. With 290 million smartphones in the US and roughly 30 to 33 percent insured, that gives us 87 to 96 million insured devices and 194 to 203 million uninsured ones. Seventy percent of the smartphone market has no insurance at all and relies entirely on out-of-pocket repair. That is your market. It has not shrunk. Don't let anyone tell you otherwise without showing you the data to prove it.

Some other demographic details worth knowing: carrier-sold plans dominate, with roughly 82 percent of policies sold directly through mobile carriers rather than standalone insurers. Parents are highly likely to insure children's phones, with 71 percent adoption in that group. Millennials lead general adoption at 57 percent, while baby boomers trail at 29 percent. Subscription-based plans now account for roughly 45 percent of the market, up from 35 percent in 2020, which represents a shift in how plans are sold, not a surge in how many people have them.

Who Actually Files a Claim? The Usage Spectrum Explained

Now here's the data that really puts the insurance business model in perspective. Industry data shows that only 20 to 33 percent (roughly 1 in 5 to 1 in 3) of people who purchase a protection plan will file a claim during the typical 24-month lifecycle of their device. The majority of policyholders pay every single month and never use the coverage. For the insurance company, these are the most profitable customers imaginable.

The Insurance Policyholder Usage Spectrum
65–70% "Never" Users 0 claims · Pure profit Pay every month, never use it. Many are "ghost users" who forget they're paying. $0 value received for $360–$600 paid ~25% Medium Users 1 claim over 2 years Usually a cracked screen May or may not break even 5–8% Heavy 2+ claims Good ROI <2% Super 3+ claims Hit caps 65–70% of policyholders never file a single claim. They pay $180–$300/yr for nothing. Insurance is profitable precisely because most customers never use it. Key behavioral factors: • Claims spike in the first 6–9 months of device ownership • Younger users (Gen Z, Millennials) file at significantly higher rates • "Moral hazard": insured users are less careful with devices • Low deductibles ($29) used to discourage waiting for total failure
Source: Insurance industry claim frequency data, carrier analytics, TCA analysis

A few additional patterns worth understanding: claims are significantly higher in the first six to nine months of ownership. People are more likely to insure and repair a brand-new $1,000 device than a three-year-old one. Younger users (Gen Z and Millennials) file claims at a significantly higher rate than older demographics, primarily due to higher daily screen time and more active lifestyles.

Insurers also track what's called "moral hazard," the phenomenon where consumers who have insurance are less careful with their devices because they know they're covered. This is exactly why providers like Apple and Asurion have shifted toward low-cost screen repairs at $29 deductibles. It encourages users to stay in the "medium" category rather than waiting for the phone to completely break and requiring a $200 replacement.

What does all this mean for repair professionals? When you hear that "everyone has insurance now," remember: 65 to 70 percent of the people who do have it never file a single claim. They're paying $180 to $300 a year for nothing. And the 70 percent of the market that doesn't have insurance at all? They're walking straight to your shop.

The Math That Changes Everything: Phone Insurance vs. Repair Cost

Here's where the rubber meets the road. Let's walk through the most common scenario your customers face: a cracked iPhone screen.

Repair Option Cost Breakdown Total Cost Wait Time
Insurance (Tier 2) $15/mo ($180/yr) + $99 deductible $279/yr 5–10 days (mail-in)
Apple Store Out-of-warranty screen repair ~$279 Same day (if parts in stock)
Independent Repair Shop One-time screen repair $150–$180 30 minutes

The insurance route costs the same as or more than an Apple Store repair, and the customer has been paying premiums all year on top of it. Your shop? It's the cheapest option by a wide margin and the fastest.

Remember the "deductible barrier" from the usage data above: many medium users choose not to file a claim if the damage is minor because the deductible ($29 to $250) is higher than the perceived value of the fix. That's a customer who paid for insurance all year and still ends up at your counter paying out of pocket. They just don't know it yet.

The Deductible Paradox: Your Best Marketing Message

This is the data point that should be at the center of your marketing. Many customers who have insurance still walk into independent repair shops to get their phones fixed. Why? Because the deductible is often equal to or higher than the cost of the repair itself.

Think about it from the customer's perspective. They've been paying $12 to $18 a month for coverage. Their screen cracks. They call the insurance company and learn their deductible is $99 to $149. Then they Google "phone repair near me" and find out your shop will do it for $150. The insurance "savings" just evaporated.

And here's the convenience factor that seals the deal: filing an insurance claim often means 5 to 10 days without a phone if it goes to mail-in. Your shop means 30 minutes and done. Forty-five percent of customers who choose independent repair shops do so specifically because they get to keep their actual device. No refurbished replacement, no data transfer hassle, no risk of getting back a phone that isn't theirs.

"Why pay a monthly premium AND a deductible when we can fix it right now for less?"

This is the deductible paradox, and it's your greatest competitive message.

Not All Insurance Claims Come Back to a Repair Shop

Here's something critical that repair professionals need to understand about the insurance model: when a customer files an insurance claim, there's no guarantee that claim results in work for any repair shop, even when the insurance company owns repair shops.

How Insurance Claims Are Actually Resolved
60% Repaired But mostly through authorized partners & mail-in centers 40% Hot Swapped Replacement device shipped. Zero work for any repair shop. vs. Even Asurion, which owns uBreakiFix (700+ locations), often ships replacements instead of routing to their own shops.
Source: Carrier plan claim resolution data, insurance industry reports

Carrier-backed plans like T-Mobile's Protection 360 (Assurant) and Verizon's plan (Asurion) prioritize low-cost or zero-deductible local screen repairs when possible. But if parts aren't available locally, they default to shipping a reconditioned replacement device the next business day. Even Asurion, which owns uBreakiFix with over 700 locations, often settles claims by shipping a replacement rather than routing the customer to one of their own stores.

The factors driving hot swaps over repairs include severity of damage (only minor issues like cracked screens are typically repaired), geographic availability (if no authorized repair center is nearby, they ship a replacement), and a "repair yield" metric. If the cost to repair exceeds roughly 20 to 30 percent of the device's value, insurers replace the unit instead.

Why This Matters

The insurance ecosystem is not designed to send customers to independent shops. It's designed to resolve claims as cheaply and quickly as possible for the insurer. The majority of your potential customers (the 70% without insurance) are still coming to you. And even many insured customers bypass their coverage entirely because of the deductible paradox.

Insurance for Everything: What Happens After You Sign a Customer Up?

Insurance companies aren't just selling phone coverage anymore. They're integrating protection plans into everything. Buy a $25 mouse online? You'll get offered a protection plan at checkout. A $40 pair of earbuds? Insurance pop-up. A $15 phone case? Yes, they'll try to insure that too.

Extended warranty and protection plans are being embedded into ecommerce platforms at every price point, turning checkout pages into insurance sales funnels. This is the same B2B2C model that Assurant and Asurion perfected with carriers, now spreading across all of online retail.

Now here's the question every repair shop owner needs to ask before selling a protection plan from their counter: if you sign a customer up for a plan, what happens to that customer's inbox?

Traditional insurers like Asurion and Assurant are built on maximum attachment rates. Their carriers aggressively remarket to anyone who declines insurance at the point of sale. If a consumer says "no thanks" at the store, they will often receive emails, SMS alerts, and app notifications for the first 30 days (the "open enrollment" window), all urging them to protect their "unsecured" investment. Their business model is built on selling a separate policy for every single serial number. A family with four phones means four premiums. This leads to massive over-insurance where households pay $50 to $70 a month in total premiums.

Ask Yourself This

If you're selling plans at your shop through a provider, your customer may now be in that remarketing funnel. They may start getting emails and notifications pushing them to add more coverage, upgrade their plan, or insure additional devices. Are they going to appreciate that you signed them up for that? Are they going to associate those spam emails with your shop, the place they trusted with their phone?

This is a real customer experience risk that most repair shop owners don't think about when they hear the commission pitch. The insurance company's number one goal is to sell more plans. That's not a criticism; it's their entire business model and the reason they exist. But your number one goal is customer trust and repeat business. Make sure those two things aren't in conflict before you put an insurance sign-up on your counter.

Should Your Shop Sell Insurance? Proceed With Caution.

New companies, most notably AKKO, but others as well, are actively recruiting repair shops to sell device protection plans. The pitch is compelling: earn a commission on every plan you sell, and when the customer's device breaks, the repair work gets routed back to your shop. Commission plus repair revenue. Sounds like a win-win.

But before you sign up, here's what the data actually says, and what it doesn't.

AKKO's partner material explicitly pitches two revenue streams: commission on plan sales and repair work from covered claims. They state that "repairs are seamlessly referred back to your business" when you're an approved repair partner. They lean heavily on "customer loyalty" language, positioning plans as a way to keep customers coming back.

Here's the problem: there are no public case studies with concrete numbers showing what percentage of AKKO plan holders actually return to the originating shop for repairs. There are no published statistics on claim frequency per plan, average claim value, or the percentage of claims handled by the shop that sold the plan versus elsewhere. The loyalty and repeat-business claims are marketing language, not independently verified performance data.

The Cost to Get In

To become an authorized AKKO repair provider, you typically need to join the Repairs First Association (RFA), which acts as AKKO's exclusive vetting and quality assurance partner for their North American repair shop network. Membership costs $69 per month ($828 per year). RFA offers additional benefits (training, parts discounts, mastermind calls), so the membership isn't exclusively about AKKO access. But the AKKO relationship is a centerpiece of the pitch.

So here's the question RFA and AKKO should be able to answer but don't publicly: What is the actual ROI for a repair shop that pays $69 per month for RFA membership and sells AKKO plans? How many AKKO insurance jobs does the average member shop receive per month? What's the average reimbursement per claim? What percentage of claims filed by customers who bought a plan at Shop A actually get routed back to Shop A for repair?

These are straightforward numbers that would validate the investment, and the fact that they aren't published should give every shop owner pause.

AKKO itself is a relatively small player, estimated at somewhere between $10 million and $26 million in annual revenue depending on the source. Compare that to Asurion's $10.6 billion or Assurant's $12.35 billion. The company is privately held and does not publish audited financials.

AKKO's model is different from the traditional carriers in one important way: instead of selling a separate policy per device, they offer an "everything" plan that covers multiple devices under one policy. That sounds consumer-friendly, and in some ways it is. But it comes with its own form of aggressive engagement. To get the full coverage, customers have to upload photos and serial numbers of all their gear into AKKO's app. Once someone has spent 20 minutes cataloging their laptop, tablet, headphones, and phone in that system, the switching cost becomes very high. They're not just canceling a phone plan; they're abandoning their entire digital inventory. That's a retention strategy, and it's by design.

And remember: the number one goal of any insurance company, including AKKO, is to sell more plans. That's not cynicism. That's how the business model works. The commissions, the partnerships, the remarketing, the data collection, all of it exists to drive plan sales. The question for you is whether their goal aligns with yours.

How to Evaluate Any Insurance Partnership

Run a Pilot

Offer the plan for 3 to 6 months and track: plans sold per month, claims filed, claims routed to your shop vs. elsewhere, and your average margin per claim after costs.

Watch for the Real Loyalty Signal

Track whether plan customers return for non-covered work (accessories, out-of-scope repairs, upgrades). That's a better measure of loyalty than claim work alone.

Set Minimum Economics First

Decide in advance: "We'll keep this program if we earn at least $X per plan sold plus $Y profit per claim, and at least Z% of claims come back to our store." If thresholds aren't met, walk away.

Ask Hard Questions

Request your exact commission per plan type, reimbursement schedule (labor rates, parts markups, coverage limits), and historical claim frequency for similar shops. If they won't share, that tells you something.

Watch Your Margins

If the insurer's allowed rates are lower than what you normally charge, claim work can be a loss leader. Operational overhead (photos, diagnostics, back-and-forth) eats into effective margin.

Monitor the Customer Experience

After signing up a few customers, ask them: have you received any additional marketing from the insurance company? If your customers are getting spammed, that's your reputation on the line.

The bottom line on selling insurance from your counter: protection plans can be a legitimate profit and loyalty tool for repair shops, but the specific promises from any provider should be verified with your own numbers, not taken on faith. Don't just take what someone says as the gospel truth. Ask for real data and real information on how this will benefit your business. If they can't provide it, proceed with extreme caution.

The Self-Insurance Argument: What Your Customers Should Hear

Here's the math that the insurance industry really doesn't want consumers to see, and it's a conversation you should be having with every customer who walks into your shop.

Instead of paying $15 per month for insurance, a consumer puts that money in a savings account. Over two years, they've saved $360. They buy a quality phone case and screen protector for $50. If they crack their screen (which statistically happens zero to one times over two years for most people) they pay $150 to $180 at your shop.

The Self-Insurance Math: 2-Year Comparison
WITH INSURANCE (2 YEARS) Premiums ($15/mo x 24): $360 Deductible (1 claim): $99 TOTAL COST: $459 Wait: 5–10 days · May get refurbished phone 65–70% chance you never use it at all SELF-INSURED (2 YEARS) Case + screen protector: $50 Repair at local shop (1x): $150–$180 TOTAL COST: $200–$230 Wait: 30 minutes · Keep your actual phone $130–$160 left over in savings SAVINGS: $229–$259 by skipping insurance
Source: TCA analysis of carrier plan pricing, independent shop pricing surveys, insurance claim data

Now layer in the usage spectrum data: 65 to 70 percent of insurance policyholders never file a single claim. They would have saved every penny of that $360 to $600 in premiums. The self-insurance math isn't even close for the majority of consumers.

Self-insurance isn't a theory. It's basic math. And it's a message you can put on your website, in your shop signage, and in every conversation with a customer who says "I think my insurance covers this." Help them do the math. They'll thank you for it, and they'll come back.

When Insurance Does Make Sense

We're giving you the data, not a sales pitch. For some consumers, insurance genuinely makes sense. If someone loses or has their phone stolen regularly, insurance with theft and loss coverage provides real value; your shop can't help them find a phone that's gone. If they own a foldable phone with a $500-plus screen replacement cost, the calculus shifts. If they damage their device two or more times per year, putting them in that 5 to 8 percent "heavy user" category, the break-even math can work. And parents insuring kids' phones, where the 71 percent adoption rate speaks for itself, often find the peace of mind worth the premium.

But for the average consumer who cracks a screen once every couple of years? Insurance is almost always more expensive than just paying for the repair at a local shop. The right to repair movement is making sure independent shops have access to the parts, tools, and documentation needed to deliver OEM-quality repairs at a fraction of the insurance cost.

What This All Means for Your Repair Business

Your Playbook Based on the Data

Don't Panic About Insurance Eating Your Market

Seventy percent of smartphone owners have no insurance. That percentage has not changed dramatically. The people telling you the market has shifted are often the same people trying to sell you something. Demand the data.

Educate Your Customers

Put the math on your website. Create a simple comparison: "Insurance cost vs. repair cost." When customers see the numbers side by side, the decision makes itself. When 65–70% of policyholders never file a claim, the math speaks for itself.

Use the Deductible Paradox in Your Marketing

"Your deductible is $99. Our screen repair is $149. Skip the monthly premium and come straight to us." That message resonates because it's true.

Be Cautious About Selling Insurance From Your Counter

It can work, but the promises are unverified for most newer programs. Run a pilot, track your numbers, monitor the customer experience, and set minimum thresholds before committing.

Emphasize What Insurance Can't Offer

Speed (30 minutes vs. 5–10 days). Keeping your original device. No paperwork. No claim denials (5–15% of claims face denial, and even successful appeals only win 44% of the time).

Target the 70 Percent

200 million devices in the US have zero coverage. Those people need you. Make sure they can find you. List your shop on WhereToRepair.org and keep your Google Business Profile up to date.

Tech repair is critical business in the US because everything is becoming tech. The insurance industry knows this; that's why they're collecting $13.3 billion a year in premiums. But the data shows that most of that money would be better spent at your shop. Help your customers see it, and you'll never worry about where your next repair is coming from.

Help Shape the Future of This Industry

The data in this report comes from TCA's ongoing market research. The more repair professionals who participate, the stronger our data becomes. Take the survey. Read the research. Come back for more.

Take the 2026 TCA Survey Read More TCA Industry Insights

This article is part of TCA's State of Tech Repair 2026 series, delivering original market intelligence to the professional tech repair community. Haven't read the first post? Start with "The Tech Repair Industry Is 8x Bigger Than Anyone Thinks." Coming up next in the series: the right to repair laws that just changed everything for your shop, and what you need to do right now to take advantage.

The Tech Care Association is the #1 source for independent tech repair professionals, all year long.

About the Author

Rob Link is the Founder and CEO of the Tech Care Association. Rob previously worked for UPSIE, one of the first startups to successfully challenge the giant phone insurance companies by offering transparent, affordable device protection direct to consumers. Though UPSIE is no longer in operation, the experience gave Rob a firsthand understanding of the insurance industry's economics, sales tactics, and the real value (or lack thereof) that these plans deliver to consumers. That perspective informs this analysis.

The #1 source for independent tech repair professionals, all year long.

techcareassociation.org · info@techcareassociation.org

© 2026 Tech Care Association. All rights reserved.

Essential Guide for Local Tech Repair Businesses

Are the 2025 Tariffs a financial crisis or an opportunity for tech repair people

Important decisions need to be made now!

  Important Note: Regardless of your political views, the new tariffs are a market reality that demands immediate business planning and strategic decisions. This isn’t about politics – it’s about protecting and growing your tech repair business in a changing market. The Current Situation (April 8, 2025)
  • New tariffs range from 10% baseline to 54% (updated: Just announced 104%) on Chinese imports  • Vietnam (46%), India (26%), and South Korea (25%) tariffs • Additional increases have been proposed • Tariff policies could shift based on diplomatic negotiations or elections • Apple projects a $33 billion impact (they have a plan, do you?)
Immediate Market Response
  1. Panic Buying Wave • Apple stores seeing holiday-season-level traffic • Consumers rushing to buy before price increasesApple has stockpiled inventory to temporarily maintain prices • This creates a challenge and a unique opportunity for tech repair businesses
  2. In the short-term expect a brief lull in repairs as panic buyers opt for new devices • Prepare for increased repair demand once stockpiles deplete and prices rise • Use this time to upgrade skills and inventory for newer model repairs
  3. The Refurbishment Opportunity Based on insights from Tony Baker at GSMWarehouse and other industry experts: • Refurb prices are lower now because of recent inventory shifts to the US market • Prices expected to rise in 1-2 weeks • Buyback market for second-hand devices is surging • Current panic buyers will need to sell their old devices • Shops should actively buy devices from customers upgrading now • Consider offering competitive buyback programs to build inventory
Strategic Business Opportunities
  1. Device Acquisition Strategy • Target customers who just purchased new phones due to panic buying • Offer competitive buyback rates for used devices • Create trade-in programs with store credit incentives • Build relationships with local retailers for referral programs
  2. Cost Management Through Parts Harvesting • Begin systematic harvesting of parts from older devices • Create inventory of commonly needed components • Reduce Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) through parts recovery • Focus on high-demand components likely to be affected by tariffs
  3. Refurbishment Business Development • Expand refurbishment services • Create tiered pricing for different quality grades • Build relationships with wholesale buyers • Develop quality testing and certification processes
Inventory Management
  1. New Parts Strategy • Strategic stockpiling before price increases • Multiple supplier relationships • Focus on high-demand components • Monitor tariff changes and adjust purchasing accordingly
  2. Used Device Strategy • Increase used device purchasing now • Create grading systems for bought devices • Establish testing protocols • Build repair/refurb inventory • Find strategic partners to buy handsets
Market Positioning
  1. Customer Communication • Educate about value of repair vs. replacement • Highlight quality of refurbished options • Transparent pricing communication • Emphasize environmental benefits
  2. Service Diversification • Repair services • Device sales (refurbished) • Trade-in programs • Parts recovery and recycling
Risk Management
  1. Tariff Considerations • Monitor proposed tariff changes • Plan for potential increases • Maintain flexible pricing strategies • Keep cash reserves for market shifts
  2. Supply Chain Adaptation • Develop domestic supply relationships • Build inventory buffers • Create alternative sourcing strategies • Consider vertical integration opportunities
Action Items for Next 30 Days
  1. Immediate Actions • Launch buyback program for used devices • Set up parts harvesting system • Review and adjust pricing strategy • Begin strategic parts stockpiling
  2. Business Development • Create customer education materials • Train staff on refurbishment • Develop quality control processes • Establish grading standards
  3. Marketing Focus • Promote trade-in programs • Highlight refurbished device quality • Emphasize repair cost savings • Build environmental messaging
Looking Ahead The market is entering a period of significant change. Shops that adapt quickly and position themselves correctly could see substantial growth. Focus on: • Building inventory before price increases • Developing multiple revenue streams • Creating efficient parts recovery systems • Maintaining pricing flexibility Remember: These aren’t just market changes – they’re business opportunities. The short-term could be tough and the shops that make smart, strategic decisions now will be better positioned when prices stabilize at higher levels.  

This article is © 2025 by the TCA: Tech Care Association. All rights reserved. Please do not copy or reproduce any part of this content without permission. Sharing with attribution is always appreciated.

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Liquid Damage Season is in Full Swing

Ahh… summertime! The hot weather sets in, school lets out, and summer vacations begin. Funny how most summer trips revolve around water. Maybe a lake, river, ocean or the manmade type at an amusement park. Or perhaps just a trip to the local pool to cool off for a bit.

When I operated my repair shops we geared up for liquid damage season every year before Memorial day. And sure enough, it never disappointed us when it came to working on liquid damaged devices. I wrote it about it in my repair blog here.

If you do it right, summertime should be a profitable time of year for your tech repair business. Here are five simple tips to help you prepare:

TIP #1: Learn How to Repair Liquid Damaged Devices

I talk to tech repair shops all the time who don’t even do simple liquid damage repair work. In 2024 this amazes me. You don’t have to be able to do advanced board work or microsoldering to work on liquid damaged devices.

I can’t teach you how to do it in a newsletter, but there are lots of resources available online. Find them and learn how to do the work. You can find classes too. It’s all online, just like everything else you’ve ever learned.

Don’t let anyone tell you that liquid damaged devices cannot be repaired. They can! My shops had a VERY high success rate (over 80%) and we made more than 50% of our summer revenue on liquid damage work.

TIP #2: Advertise it to the World

Most people don’t know that liquid damage can be repaired. So you need to tell the world that you can help.

  • Get some posters and counter signs up in your shop.
  • Put up a roadside sign & other outside signs.
  • Social posts on all your platforms.
  • Drop off flyers at the local pools.
  • Push it at carrier stores when you drop off doughnuts & pizza.
  • Verbally alert every customer who comes into your shop during the season.

TIP #3: Write a Solid Blog Post

My number one blog post ever on my personal repair blog is about liquid damage. Getting repair customers is all about educating them about your services. A blog connected to your website is the best way to do it.

Just write an interesting success story about interacting with a customer. Or have someone write it for you. Either way blog posts are great ways to increase SEO and get more business.

TIP #4: Email Your Current Customers and…

Write a fun email to your customer base welcoming them to “Liquid Damage Season”. Give them some tips on how to protect their devices (zip lock bags are great & cheap).  Then let them know to run, don’t walk, to your shop should they get any of their tech wet. Tell them what you can do for them.

PRO TIP: Work with local groups that have newsletters. Think outdoors clubs, bike clubs, adventure groups, vacation co’s, etc. that might have a newsletter. Ask them to publish an article for their members about your liquid damage service. You might be able to get a local newspaper or TV station to help you too.

TIP #5: Offer a Warranty for Every Job You Complete

This is tough, but if you want to generate more business then you have to stand behind your work. And if you’re doing it right you will be fine. This should be a premium service with a premium price. Build your price around knowing that sometimes you will lose money on supporting a warranty.

Work on advancing your skills! Be the best of the best! Until then find an advanced shop that can cover you when things go bad or you need advanced work.