Computer help
Repair or replace? When it's worth fixing an old computer
When a laptop or PC starts playing up, the big question is whether to spend money fixing it or put that money towards a new one. There is no single right answer, but there is a simple way to think about it. Here is the honest version, including the times I would tell you not to bother repairing.
Usually worth repairing
Some problems are cheap to fix and give an old machine years more life. If the computer is otherwise fine, these are almost always worth doing:
- It is just slow. An SSD upgrade and a bit more memory can make a five-year-old laptop feel new, for a fraction of the price of replacing it.
- A virus or a software mess. A clean-out costs far less than a new machine.
- A worn-out battery or a full drive. Cheap, quick fixes.
- One clear faulty part on an otherwise good computer. Often economical to replace.
Often not worth it
Other times, honestly, you are better off putting the money towards a replacement:
- An expensive part on an old machine. A new screen or motherboard for a laptop that is already 7 or 8 years old rarely makes sense.
- The repair costs a big chunk of a new one. A rough rule: if a fix costs more than about half the price of a suitable replacement, think hard.
- It is too old to do what you need. If it struggles even when healthy, fixing it just buys you a slow computer.
- Liquid damage or several faults at once. These add up quickly.
Whatever you decide, save your files first
Before repairing or replacing anything, make sure your photos and documents are safely backed up. If you are moving to a new machine, getting everything across cleanly is often the bit people dread, and it is exactly the sort of thing worth having a hand with.
In Bolton and not sure which way to go? I will take a look and give you a straight answer, even when that answer is "don't spend money on this one". And if it is a new machine, I can set it up and move everything across for you.