When to Repair vs. Replace Your Laptop
The practical decision
A laptop repair makes sense when the repair cost is low compared with the value and expected remaining life of the machine. Replacement makes sense when the laptop is old, slow, unreliable, or the repair cost is close to the price of a better device.
Use the 50 percent rule
As a rough guide, avoid major repairs when the repair will cost more than half the price of a suitable replacement laptop.
For example, a battery or SSD replacement is often worthwhile. A motherboard replacement on a five-year-old consumer laptop usually is not.
Repairs that are usually worthwhile
- Battery replacement
- SSD upgrade
- RAM upgrade, if the laptop supports it
- Keyboard replacement
- Charger or USB-C charging port repair
- Windows cleanup or reinstall
- Malware removal
- Fan cleaning and thermal paste service
These can add useful life without replacing the whole device.
Repairs that need careful review
- Screen replacement
- Liquid damage repair
- Motherboard repair
- GPU or graphics faults
- Repeated power issues
- Hinge damage that has cracked the chassis
These repairs can be worthwhile on business-grade laptops, but often poor value on low-cost models.
Age matters
| Laptop age | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Under 2 years | Repair is usually worth considering |
| 2 to 4 years | Compare repair cost against performance needs |
| 4 to 6 years | Repair only if the issue is minor |
| Over 6 years | Replacement is usually the better investment |
Business considerations
For a business, downtime matters as much as the repair invoice. If a staff member loses a day of work every few months because of a failing laptop, replacement can be cheaper than repeated support time.
Before replacing
Back up your data, confirm your software licences, and check whether the laptop has BitLocker or device encryption enabled. A planned replacement is much easier than an emergency migration after a total failure.
Bottom line
Repair simple faults on reasonably modern laptops. Replace old laptops with major board, screen, or reliability problems. If you are unsure, get a written repair estimate and compare it against a business-grade replacement, not just the cheapest laptop on sale.