Apple is quietly turning a pretty big corner on repairability, and this latest move makes that clear. The company has started selling genuine parts and tools for seven of its newest devices through the Self Service Repair program, just weeks after those products hit shelves. For anyone who cares about keeping devices longer, doing DIY fixes, or just having more options than the Genius Bar, this is a meaningful shift rather than a small footnote in a press release.
If you missed the launch, Apple’s Self Service Repair program first rolled out in 2022 as a way for “experienced” users to access the same manuals, parts, and specialized tools Apple Stores and authorized providers use for out‑of‑warranty repairs. Over time, it has expanded from a narrow iPhone‑only effort into something much broader, covering select iPhones, iPads, Macs, Studio Displays and even Beats Pill speakers across dozens of countries, including the U.S., Canada and much of Europe. The idea is simple on paper: instead of sending your device away or booking a service, you order what you need, follow Apple’s step‑by‑step manuals online, and do the repair yourself.
The latest expansion is all about Apple’s newest hardware generation. Parts are now available for the iPhone 17e, the new iPad Air with the M4 chip, the MacBook Neo, the latest MacBook Air with the M5 chip, the new MacBook Pro models with M5 Pro and M5 Max chips, the refreshed 2026 Studio Display, and the new Studio Display XDR. That means things like displays, batteries, speakers, ports and other common failure points can be replaced with official components rather than relying on third‑party parts of uncertain quality. You order through the Self Service Repair store, grab the relevant repair manual for your exact model, and Apple walks you through the whole process with detailed diagrams and torque specs.
The standout story in this batch is the MacBook Neo. Historically, MacBook keyboards have been a pain point: if something went seriously wrong, you were usually looking at replacing the entire “Top Case” assembly – the whole metal upper shell containing the keyboard (and sometimes the battery) – which routinely cost in the $400 to $600 range for recent MacBook Air and MacBook Pro models. With the Neo, Apple has quietly broken that pattern. The parts catalog splits things into separate Keyboard, Keyboard with Touch ID, and Top Case items, and Apple’s own manuals show how to swap just the keyboard on its own. It’s not a quick job – there are still more than 40 screws involved – but it is dramatically less invasive than tearing down half the machine just to fix sticky keys.
The pricing is where this starts to matter in the real world. In the U.S., the standalone MacBook Neo keyboard through Self Service Repair starts at around $140, compared to roughly $400 to $600 for a full Top Case with keyboard on comparable MacBook Air and MacBook Pro models. That gap turns a “might as well buy something new” repair into something far easier to justify, especially once the machine is a couple of years old and out of AppleCare coverage. For students, freelancers, and small businesses that live on laptops like this, cheaper and more targeted repairs are the difference between squeezing another two years out of a machine or treating it as disposable.
Zooming out, Apple’s repair strategy has been evolving under a lot of pressure. The company originally announced Self Service Repair back in late 2021, positioning it as a way for customers to be “comfortable” with repairs to fix their own iPhone 12 and iPhone 13 devices, with Macs to follow. Since then, Apple has steadily added more product lines and regions, and by 2025, it was supporting around 65 different Apple products through the program, including newer iPhones, MacBook Air, Mac Studio, and now iPad models, with Canada and other markets joining more recently. At the same time, Apple has been expanding access to genuine parts through authorized and independent repair providers, not just its own stores, giving more local shops the ability to use official components.
Of course, not everyone is convinced this is the full “right to repair” dream. Advocacy groups in Europe and elsewhere have pointed out that Apple’s program comes with strings attached: limited product coverage compared to how long devices remain on sale, complicated procedures, and a heavy reliance on part pairing, where new components must be matched to a device’s serial number and then software‑authorised by Apple. Critics argue that this restricts how parts can be reused or salvaged and leaves independent repairers with less flexibility than EU‑style rules are pushing for, which often call for years of guaranteed spare‑parts availability and open access to repair information. Apple, for its part, frames those controls as necessary for safety, security, and maintaining a clear service history, and has even testified against some U.S. state‑level proposals that would severely limit part pairing.
Still, moves like making the MacBook Neo’s keyboard individually replaceable show that Apple can design new hardware with repair in mind when it chooses to. For a decade, the trend in laptops has been towards thinner, more integrated designs that are difficult and expensive to fix, often leading to expensive assembly replacements for relatively small failures. The Neo doesn’t suddenly turn into a modular, screwdriver‑friendly PC laptop, but the fact that such a mainstream, aggressively priced MacBook gets a cheaper, component‑level fix for one of the most failure‑prone parts is significant. Paired with same‑month availability of parts for all of Apple’s latest iPhone, iPad, Mac and display hardware, it signals a company that is at least trying to meet regulators, advocates and customers somewhere in the middle.
For users, this boils down to a few practical advantages. If you are comfortable following detailed instructions and have the patience to work through a multi‑step repair, you now have an officially sanctioned route to fix many issues at home or via a trusted local technician using genuine parts. It can save money compared to full assembly swaps, keep your devices in service longer, and reduce the number of otherwise‑good machines heading for recycling or, worse, landfill. And even if you never plan to pick up a screwdriver, the existence of Self Service Repair and more modular parts like the Neo keyboard can put indirect pressure on Apple’s own service pricing and policies, making professional repairs more competitive over time.
The reality is that Apple’s repair story is still a work in progress: part consumer‑friendly, part regulator‑driven, and part tightly controlled ecosystem management. But if you own one of these seven new devices, you now have more say in how and where it gets fixed than you did just a couple of years ago – and that is genuinely new territory for the Apple ecosystem.
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