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California officially has the Right to Repair Act on its table

August 22, 2025

Have you ever tried torepair your smartphone? If you haven’t, we’ll give you a little heads-up:it is incredibly complicated. Not only do you need special tools just to get the thing open so you can access the internal hardware, but the layout of the hardware and the way each piece is connected seems to be intentionally designed to make it impossible to repair and put back together. Not only that but in many cases just opening up your smartphone immediatelyvoids the warranty.

The Right to Repair Act hopes to make it illegal for companies to prevent or inhibit people from repairing their devices on their own, and also require those companies to support thethird-party repair industry. 17 states have bills on the table right now related to the right to repair, andnow California officially joins them.

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While it’s terrific that the other 17 states are doing what they can, California joining the fight is especially noteworthy because some of the most significant tech companies in the worldare headquartered there, includingAppleandGoogle. If the Right to Repair Act made it into law in California, it would be a real game-changer for everyone around the world, not just in California.

Currently, if you own an iPhone and it breaks in some way, you have one option:take it to Appleto get it repaired or replaced. you may’t fix it yourself (voids warranty), and you can’t take it to a third-party repair center (also voids warranty). Even if you wanted to fix it yourself, you would need proprietary screwdrivers and other tools just to fix it, not to mention special materials to glue everything back together.

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If the Right to Repair Act passes in California, Apple and other smartphone manufacturers would be forced to support consumers repairing devices on their own. This would mean a combination of redesigning how smartphones are assembled (i.e., the battery couldn’t be glued to tiny working parts for no reason) and making it easy for consumers to obtain tools and detailed instructions on how to fix fundamental problems.

Additionally, the third-party repair companies around the United States would have to get similar support. And the biggest change would be that repairing your smartphone or having someone else fix it wouldn’t automatically void the warranty.

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Large tech companies like Apple,Microsoft, andAT&Thave fought right to repair legislation via lobbying efforts in other states. Now that the fight is on their home turf, we can expect the lobbying to increase exponentially.

Why don’t tech companies want you to repair your devices? As far as smartphones go, it all comes down to sales: if you can’t repair your phone, you have to buy a new one when it fails. Why paya few hundred dollarsto have Apple fix your iPhone’s broken screen when you can just upgrade to a brand new phone for a few hundred dollars more?

If people start repairing their devices,they’ll hold onto them longer, which will significantly hurt the smartphone industry. But it will save consumers money and, probably, more importantly, prevent landfill waste from spiraling even more out of control.

To learn more about right to repair standards and how they benefit consumers,check out this reportfrom Repair.org from August last year.

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