UPDATED 7/17/23: The contest entry rules have been updated. Please scroll down to learn more.
It’s a bird, it’s a plane, it’s Captain Planet—actually it’s the iFixit Repair Hero of the Year!
In 2021, the World Economic Forum estimated that about 63.4 million tons of e-waste will be discarded. That’s a lot of trash and there’s only so much space in our landfills. And to make matters worse, even if you can get your old devices to the junkyard, only 17% ever gets formally recycled. Think about that!

Plus it’s a great thing to do together—as a family, with friends, or with friends to be.
If the massive impact on the planet wasn’t enough to motivate you, choosing repair over replacement can save a family an average of $330 per year. During this economic downturn it can be prudent to be a Scrooge McDuck, every coin counts! So here’s our ask.
With 2022 at its end and 2023 beginning, we think it’s the perfect time to set a challenge for yourself that helps both the planet and your wallet.
Start the year off right by pledging to repair.
With repair, everybody wins
Begin with an attainable goal: for some people that’s only three repairs a year, while for others, it could be 300. There will be a grand prize for making the most repairs, along with prizes for winning any of the other categories we list below.
The truth is, this isn’t about skill level or quantity of devices you can repair. This is really about building confidence in yourself by learning how your stuff works (or in this case, doesn’t work). The prizes are just our good-hearted attempt to get you to experience the world of repair for yourself.

You can use this time to bond with your friends or family, and if you’re feeling really fixy, even consider starting a community event where you get to know new folks who are also interested in repair.
This isn’t just a contest to win a prize. It’s a pledge that opens your world up to the possibility that you can do your part to thwart our environmentally costly consumption habits. And not to feed a fed horse, but, another perk of taking this pledge is that you’re one step closer to reducing your dependency on manufacturers. Right to repair laws are gaining traction, New York State just adopted its first right-to-repair bill, which means it’s only a matter of time before other states do too.
Don’t you want to be ahead of the curve when your favorite device maker starts selling the parts and tools you need to fix your thing? Wouldn’t this be better than having to buy into costly warranty programs that limit how many times you can break your device or even if the way you broke it is covered?
This pledge guarantees all the above and much more.
Take the plunge and take the pledge
So, here it is. Join the thousands of other iFixiters who took our pledge so far:
Whatever the reason, be it your motivation, the planet, your pocketbook, or fighting the big companies who produce our stuff—we won’t judge, we just want you to give it a try. And to encourage you along the way, here’s what and how you can win.
Contest Awards: Read Below
The fixer who fixes the most things in 2023 will win our grand prize of a Pro Tech Toolkit and all of our best swag. The runner up in each of the 13 categories below will get all of our best swag and a gift card to our store.

- Most Creative Repair: think outside the box
- Best Teamwork: longest Answers forum troubleshooting (include the thread in your entry!)
- The Long Haul: many tiny repairs to fix a major thing
- iFixit Feature: best photos or video of the repair using iFixit tools
- Best bloopers: self-explanatory
- The Revive Award: bringing the most “destroyed” device back to life
- Most Savage Repair: fixing something that really wasn’t designed to be opened (we’re looking at you OG Surface)
- Most Non-Electronic Repairs: clothes, doors, dog houses, etc…
- Hard to Reach: most awkward/difficult location for a repair
- It Takes A Village: Most people involved in a repair (show us the group effort!)
- Oldest Tool Used: honestly, we just love old/antique tools and want to see yours
- Best Novice Repairer: show us your new skills using iFixit manuals, tools, or parts
- Best Assistant Helper: a shameless plug for kids and pets (assistants will receive their own prize, too!)
How to enter the contest
EDIT: We had more entries than expected! This is awesome for fixing stuff, but a little daunting for us to total up. So, we’ve come up with a more streamlined way to count your participation.
Please fill out this form to record your entry and save us some time!
Note: While we would love to be able to send prizes to every corner of the planet, shipping restrictions prevent us from delivering to places unsupported by our US and EU warehouses. But don’t be afraid to send your entry our way, we’re more than happy to give you a shout out—bragging rights aren’t a cool toolkit, but they’ll help you promote your fixing super powers and connect you with the global repair community.
Best of luck repairers!
crwdns2944067:036crwdne2944067:0
I've repaired and rebuilt a lot of things over the years from an ancient (think 1960's) under sink hot water dispenser that the only thing wrong with it was a $1.95 ceramic fuse that had blown when it ran empty and over heated in some previous life. I've also rebuilt Macs from the old lamp shade to the latest Macbook Pro. My latest project is rebuilding/repairing the Gaggia Platinum Vision machines. This project might break me but it is a real challenge. They are truly wonderful machines when they work but tough to diagnose and repair when they aren't or they get older. So, it's fun, a learning experience and a big challenge. My theory is that if it's broken, why not take it apart and see what makes it work and if it can be repaired. After all, it's already broken so you can't really loose anything but time and gain everything!
Marc - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
We all have the right to repair, I have repaired everything in my life. From autos to computers and everything in between. Thank you for the awesome tools that ifixit provides, and the guides too.I used them yesterday. This from a 58 year old man.
Russell Warthen - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Repairing is my passion (and my right)! I love to fix things. Generally when I think something is a total loss, I will pick it apart and play around. More often than nor, I can fix it!
brianna kirby - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
I’m in. I also pledge to reach out and help others with their repairs if it is my area of skill. Sometimes that is all that stands in the way.
Anne Graham - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
As many here have posted, I began as a child to fix my own toys and my family items. The most impressive repair I did was my Dad's Big Ben alarm clock. He needed it to wake at 3:00 AM to get to work at the USPS at 4:00 AM. One morning in 1966 he left me the clock and a note asking me to check it because he dropped it. I remembered a Time-Life book about time and clocks, so I searched it and found how clocks worked. I carefully opened the clock and found that one of the gears was out of its position. I managed to loosen the frame screws a bit to push the gear back into position, closed up the clock and wind it. It was working. When he returned from work, he gave me $5!
Now I fix things for free at my home and for my family and friends. The secret to fix anything is to learn how it works. Thanks to the World Wide Web and the free Internet , we can find about almost anything. BTW, I am 72 and I still love to read service manuals.
rayramirez - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Thank you for sharing your beautiful story. I too, love to discover how things work and fix if needed. I had a hard project in a vehicle for the last year and a half and the effects on my life - in just about every area - left me homeless and very discouraged. Your story brought a smile to my face and a familiar fixit excitement back inward that has not been there since receiving my eviction notice. Reading your story here helps me remember that all things come at a price, but none have a higher pay out! I will continue to learn and fix! And be a fixit blessing where ever possible! Thank you again.
Michelle Manchester -
Since 1990 my business, O.D.D. Parts Fabrication has repaired classic, exotic, and award winning automobile parts using traditional, AND clever counterintuitive materials and work arounds. I have thousands of photos of our work. REMEMBER that Automobiles are an extrapolation of every human need, and have in them as robotic extensions of our bodies utilizing nearly every material and manufacturing technique known to mankind. We work in EVERY media, material, and technique. Thus, local plumbers, fabrication shops, electricians, Solar, HVAC services, bicyclists, Smog facilities, artists, and prototype inventors come to us for partial or complete engineering needs. This is not a place to advertise, because we need no more work, and are quite overwhelmed with projects always. Yet, our sort of involvement is a model for new businesses that go against the grain of " Stack 'em high- and watch 'em buy" , and planned obsolesce by design or material failure that dominates corporate manufacturing. One piece at a time!
James Simpson - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
I’m in. I was so glad to find this website a few years ago when I decided to repair my iPhone6 instead of replace it. 2 of those and then an iPhone8 and several ifixit tool kits, and now I always try to fix things first. Thanks!
John Highet - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
often times it is less expensive to replace rather than repair. yet i find myself repairing, ignoring the cost. there is a lot of self satisfaction in doing a repair yourself.
Daniel Laser - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
I am in. My daughter really encouraged me with " is there a way I can use this old MacBook Pro?" We had been doing weird prop-up things to get the MagSafe to charge until I came across your repair guide for the DC in port. I've repaired quite a few things, but it was her first working with me. She really enjoyed it commenting "this is really like a more complicated Lego set." Now it charges properly, Cmd-Option-R refreshed the OS from Apple to latest like factory - like a new machine!
Sanjay Aiyagari - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
I’ll try to fix anything and with 50+ years of trying I’m much better than I used to be.
Alan Spears - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
I'm a novice repairer, but I recently got a soldering kit and plan to do some more advanced stuff this year! I filled out the pledge and I want to give repairing a more serious shot in 2023.
John Atti - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
I started with my 3DS, which had dodgy shoulder buttons. From there, it's gone to fixing the SD card reader, dealing with an Xbox 360, a PS2 and other stuff - largely gaming electronics. It's fun, and it began on iFixit, which is why it's helped me fix so much stuff - my siblings and my cousins have been eternally grateful. After my exams this year, I'm planning to buy and fx as may broken devices as possible - it's why I bought the PS2.
Either way, it's fun to learn the innards of everything and just get on with it, and doing it has helped me get things to a working state I'd never have thought was possible.
FarmYard Gaming - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
@krisrodriguez Outstanding! I love the blog and love your links to the insane amount of e-waste created. WE need to stop this insanity. We need to get back to fixing and keeping our devices/appliances/whatevers for much longer. Do we really need all the latest gadgets? Let's make a distinction between Needs and Wants and focus on the needs. Times are tough enough as is. Let us keep our hard-earned money in our pockets instead of further feeding the Profit-before-People (Planet) machinery.
Pledge is signed and I am all in.
Repair is War on Entropy!!!!!!
oldturkey03 - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Here is my blog about setting up & running a repair cafe (4 parts). Hopefully this has helped people - I've certainly been contacted via this and shared other ideas with people trying to start up a new Repair Cafe. It is probably due for another entry post-Covid
https://www.risch.co.uk/blog/boothstown-...
Chris Blood - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
This is AWESOME!!!!!
This is a great way of encouraging people to fix rather that throw out
Iv got my tools at the ready for anything that I can find needing repaired!!!
Lets make this year one to remember!!!
REPAIR IS WAR ON ENTROPY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
HelloMacOS - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
I've always been a fan of fixing stuff, I started as young as 5 helping my family, doing the easy part of handing tools to them or trying to fix my toys. Now I can repair things by myself, and I'm very thankful for the knowledge my family has passed to me. When I'm repairing things I feel happy, because I'm saving the world, my wallet and I just have this weird satisfaction feel.
I love repairing, and it's my right to do so!
Rissol de Carne - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Pledging to repair! Be the best of the best 2nd to no one but 1st of all the rest!
Sang - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
I haven't fixed anything yet, but I am fascinated by taking things apart and seeing how they work. I have an iFixit screwdriver set, and if something breaks, I will be prepared to fix it.
Timothy Bradford - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Looking forward to a year full of repairs!
Kevin Liberty - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
I pledge to repair.
I’m currently taking it to the next level. After I discovered you can’t buy nozzles for my iRobot Braava 240, I set about modelling the defective part. I used the ifixit guide to get at it then replicated it in cad. It’ll be released on printables.com tomorrow so everyone can benefit from the repair for free.
It isn’t right for manufacturers to expect a 300$ cleaner to head to landfill just because a 2c part reaches end-of-life. Or, tbh, wasn’t designed to last.
The Virtual Traveller - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
what is the link?
Meow Purr -
I pledge to be a #iFixitRepairHero 🤓
Codey Rose - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
There is nothing more empowering than getting something to work with your own hands and brain. You have to become a Handy man, engineer, troubleshooter, electrician, mechanic and a student to delve into saving something. I think most of us are born with that , "I can Fix it", attitude. It's rewarding.
Iron-Gamers TV - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Hi ilove fixing things i love to help how can i join iwant to share the gift that given by our God.
Dexter - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Today I use an original se which I’ve kept alive and running well. Fixing stuff has been my “indole” for the past seventy years, give or take a year. Have always been curious how things work, taking them apart and/or fixing them. Sometimes it seems to me that things around me get broken on purpose 🤫 to keep me busy. Whether it’s my home or motorcycle I do it all…Today I use an original se which I’ve kept alive and running well. Fixing stuff has been my “indole” for the past seventy years, give or take a year. Have always been curious how things work, taking them apart and/or fixing them. Sometimes it seems to me that things around me get broken on purpose 🤫 to keep me busy. Whether it’s my home or motorcycle I do it all…
Mike - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
carpe diem !!!!!!
STAR1035 - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
So far this year, I’ve repaired:
1. ship smith power station motor (Bad wiring job)
2. Power strip and surge protector (switch needed cleaning with IPA
3. Xbox series s controller (right analog stick drift). Needed serious cleaning)
4. Xbox series x controller (another right analog stick drift)
5. thermal extruder for creality ender 3 printer (serious clog due to overnight lift from heat plate)
6. Thermistor for creality ender 3 (different one). We have 4
7. Casio sk-1 battery compartment needed a resoldering.
headninja - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
We all know what this means, but many times you dont have a way to tell till you buy it. Especially if it is something that was recently released, there is not enough info/posts/guides on the web. Also voiding your warranty will stop you from checking repairability for a few years :(
George - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
iFixit teardowns to the rescue!
Meow Purr -
I was exceptionally good in watch repairs, but trying to transfer that experience to phone repair has been quite difficult for me. This is because I do in teardown and assembling, but the major difficulties I have are in the area of diagnosis and fault finding, especially when comes to reading current with multimeter and power supply. I need help
Mbachu Henchard - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Being a single mom and not having a lots of cash I learned how to fix things on my own. I also like to take old throw aways like mirrors or furniture and turn them into usable items again. When I found iFixit web site ii thought what a perfect match for me a new way to find help or even post about my repairs.
kelly.ellison - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
I work in a maintenance department and am the group leader for the midnight crew so I'm always helping people and fixing things from industrial machinery controls to paper towel dispensers. I started my journey when I was around 6 years old filling the gas tank on my dad's garden tiller with dirt, but I've always had a curiosity about things and how they work which led me to Tec school and then getting a journeyman's card for industrial electronics, so I've been doing this now for around 40 years. The last thing I fixed for someone at home was an I-pod for a fellow at work. The battery had swelled up so bad it had pushed the case apart. I bought a battery kit from I-Fix-it and was able to get it installed. I was having doubts about it working and charging correctly when I gave it back to him, but he told me later that he was very pleased with it, and it was working great.
Dan Dearman - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
I'm in! Can I retroactively add the stuff I've already repaired this year?
Donovan Hefner RAC - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Yes, definitely!!
Amber Taus -
My organisation
Manop Kampeang - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0