Phone Screen Repair: What to Expect & What to Buy
OEM vs. aftermarket screens, what tools you need, and how to pick the right part for your model.
Read guide →Answer a few questions and we'll tell you: can you fix it yourself (with links to the exact parts), or is it worth shipping to us. No guessing, no upsells.
Tell us your device and what's wrong. We ask a few follow-up questions to understand the damage and your comfort level.
We tell you if the repair is DIY-friendly. If yes, we link you to the exact parts from trusted suppliers. If not, we recommend mail-in.
Order the part and follow a guide—or ship your device to us and we'll handle the repair and send it back.
Click any repair to see parts links and difficulty rating, or use the advisor to get personalized guidance.
Cracked glass, dead display, touch not responding
Dies fast, swollen, won't hold charge overnight
Loose plug, won't charge, cable won't click in
Cracked, flickering, lines on display, hinge damage
Short runtime, swollen, won't charge past a percent
Water or liquid spill, won't turn on, shorting out
Our affiliate links go to iFixit, Amazon, and other trusted suppliers — the same places we source parts from ourselves. You pay the same price either way. We earn a small commission that keeps this site running.
Not sure which part fits your model?
We'll identify the exact part number for your device.
Some repairs aren't worth the hassle—liquid damage, logic board issues, or anything that requires a heat gun. Ship your device to us and we'll handle everything and ship it back.
Step-by-step guides with parts recommendations for the most common repairs.
OEM vs. aftermarket screens, what tools you need, and how to pick the right part for your model.
Read guide →Signs it's time, which replacement batteries are worth buying, and how to swap it yourself.
Read guide →Exactly what to do right now—and an honest take on whether a DIY fix is realistic.
Read guide →