One of the most common questions we get: “Is it worth fixing, or should I just buy a new one?” The honest answer depends on a few things, and it’s rarely the same answer for everyone.
Here’s the framework we use when a customer brings us a computer that’s acting up. We’ll tell you the same things in person.
The 50% rule
Start here: if the cost to repair is more than 50% of the cost to replace, lean toward replacement. A failing $80 hard drive in a five-year-old laptop is a no-brainer to replace. A $400 motherboard repair on a six-year-old laptop — probably not.
This rule has two big exceptions, both of which favor repair:
- The data on the machine is irreplaceable. Photos, business records, tax documents — recover the data first, then decide on the hardware.
- The computer was high-end when you bought it. A premium laptop from three years ago often outperforms a budget laptop you’d buy new today. Worth fixing.
Things that are usually worth fixing
- Software issues. Slowness, viruses, frozen system, unwanted pop-ups — these are almost always cheaper to fix than to “solve” with a new computer.
- Hard drive replacement / SSD upgrade. Swapping a slow hard drive for an SSD is the single best upgrade for an older computer. $100–$200 turns a 5-year-old laptop into something that feels new.
- RAM upgrade. If your computer slows down with multiple browser tabs open, more RAM may be all it needs.
- Battery replacement on laptops. If everything else works fine, a new battery is cheaper than a new laptop.
- Cracked screens (sometimes). Depends on the laptop. Worth getting a quote first.
Things that usually aren’t worth fixing
- Motherboard failures on older machines. Motherboards are expensive to replace. Combined with an old machine’s other looming issues, replacement is usually smarter.
- Liquid damage. Sometimes recoverable, often not. Even when it works, future reliability is uncertain.
- Anything on a 7+ year old budget computer. Even a cheap repair on an old budget computer often gives you only another 6–12 months before the next thing fails.
When the answer is “buy new” — let us help anyway
If a new computer is the right call, we can still help. We’ll:
- Tell you honestly what specs you actually need (most people overpay)
- Recover and migrate your files from the old machine
- Set up the new computer the way you want it
- Help you securely wipe and dispose of the old hardware
The free diagnostic offer
We don’t charge to look at a computer. Bring us your problem — or have us pick it up free within 5–7 miles of Manalapan — and we’ll tell you what’s going on. If repair makes sense, we quote upfront. If it doesn’t, we’ll say so.
(732) 637-9640.