With more consumers showing a willingness to repair their own phones, Samsung has decided to open its self-repair program in more regions. The point here is rather simple; you get OEM parts from the company, watch the tutorials that will show you what you need to do, get started with the repairs on your own, and have the device ready with you as soon as you are done. After successfully launching the program in the U.S. and South Korea, the self-repair program is now live in the UK and EU.
Samsung shows its commitment to hardware by making self-repair service available with easy-to-use tools and a wide list of parts
For users in the UK and EU, Samsung's self-repair program is now live. You can go ahead and buy parts for select devices with the inventory expanding and more models being added. Users in the region can go here and get their hands on the parts with ease.
So, what phones and devices are supported? Well, at the time of writing, the Galaxy S20, Galaxy S21, and Galaxy S22. In addition to that, you are also getting parts for Galaxy Book Pro and Galaxy Book Pro 360 laptops. Samsung is offering screens, rear glass, and charging ports for the phones and case front, rear, display, battery, touchpad, power key with fingerprint reader, and rubber feet for the laptops. The best thing is that Samsung has moderately priced repair tools, and they are pretty basic, as well. You can actually just keep the tools after you are done repairing, and in most cases, you might already have them available in your toolkit.
For some reason, the Galaxy S23 devices and all the Galaxy Tablets are still not on the list. However, Samsung has promised that the company will expand the program with more devices and markets in the future, so we will probably get to see those devices, too. However, I don't think the same can be said for foldable phones because, let's be honest, these devices are not easy to repair, so I would highly suggest that you take your foldables to Samsung if you want to get them repaired.









