In 2023, iFixit celebrates its 20th Anniversary. All year long, we’ll be sharing stories, photos, and milestones to commemorate everything that got us to where we are today.
Bring yourself to the way-back times of 2003. You’ve watched Lord of the Rings: Return of the King four times in theaters, you’re bopping to the Black Eyed Peas (or maybe the White Stripes) on your iPod. Things would be going great—except that your PowerBook is busted and your only resources are nerdy friends on AIM (or maybe Trillian). Enter: iFixit.
While we’re still just as excited to watch Lord of the Rings (extended editions, obviously), a lot has changed in 20 years, from our name and logo, to the repair landscape at large. So let’s take a stroll down memory lane.
Where We Started

Necessity, they say, is the mother of invention—and for college students, the father of invention is probably a shoestring budget. In 2003, Kyle Wiens and Luke Soules found themselves with a broken iBook G3. Replacing the busted power port wasn’t easy, especially with no instructions, but they managed to succeed with minimal broken tabs and lost screws.
And with that, a new skill was born. Sure, it was tough to fix Mac laptops, but it was possible once you knew how, and if you could find parts. Kyle and Luke began harvesting parts from partially broken laptops and selling them online. The mystique of the Mac laptop had been broken for them, but that initial frustrating repair still nagged. It could have been so much easier with a proper repair manual, and if the manufacturers wouldn’t do it, well, we can. The pair began making repair manuals and posting them online. The parts they sold no longer required prior expertise or a gamble to install. The parts came with instructions that anyone could follow. Now that’s what marketers call a “value add.”
It would be years before iFixit had a true office—from shoebox, to dorm closet, to spare room, iFixit has changed in more than just location.
Things That Have Changed
The iFixit Brand Through the Years

iFixit was actually born PB FixIt after the preeminent Mac notebook of the day: PowerBook. Fun fact: PB FixIt was founded just up the road from the city of Pismo, CA—also the name of a PowerBook G3 revision. As PB FixIt grew larger and more successful, it was able to outgrow the rather narrow moniker, and in 2006, it assumed its true name: iFixit.
While the ‘i’ has always been a nod to Apple’s various iDevices, Apple products are only a part of our business these days. Today, the ‘i’ is more of a call to action, a mantra for our customers and community members alike: “I fix it.” We know you can.
That is why in 2010, iFixit was relaunched as the free repair manual that anyone could edit. Not only can you fix it, but you can teach others, too. The community model has served the repair world quite successfully. Just two years later, 50,000 fixers had joined our community and collaborated on thousands of repair guides. Every day, we are grateful to everyone who engages in our not-so-small repair community. Together, you make up more than 2 million members and more than 90,000 guides.
A huge part of that success is due to the iFixit Technical Writing Project. As an engineering student, Kyle knew the importance of writing clearly and accurately—but many mechanically-inclined brains find themselves disengaged without hands-on activities. Instead of writing an instruction manual for an imaginary device, why not make real repair guides for real electronics, and help real people along the way? Since 2009, our stellar education team has helped tens of thousands of students at nearly a hundred separate universities to train the next generation of technical writers—and fixers.

We rang in our first decade with a final refresh: a new look and a new logo, featuring the symbol of accessible repair: a Phillips head screw, the most familiar symbol of standard tools. Our dream is to be as ubiquitous as the Phillips drivers in junk drawers across the world. And in the decade following our new logo, we made some incredible strides.
iFixit, and Teardowns, Go Global

In October 2013, iFixit Europe was born. iFixit was now, officially, an international effort. And as such, we added additional language support to the site: German, French, Spanish, Italian, and Dutch. With Stuttgart in Germany as a central European location, iFixit tools and parts started shipping to 28 European countries. And as the community and company grew, we were able to expand to Japanese and Chinese translation, and support portions of the site in languages like Korean, Portuguese, Russian, and Turkish. A global community indeed.

We did a fair bit of globe trotting, too. Those were the days iPhone launches generated long queues and week-long excitement. Since we sold parts, and were invested in teaching folk how to repair things, it made sense to be the first inside these new devices.
Starting with the original iPhone, we began to publish teardowns (originally called “first looks”) of new gadgets. We then share what we find with the world and offer our commentary about how difficult they’d be to fix. That’s how we ended up in Australia to tear down several iPhones—19 hours ahead of Pacific time, before Apple stores even opened back in the States. For the Xbox One launch, we even ventured to Middle Earth New Zealand!
Teardowns became synonymous with iFixit worldwide, and with teardowns, so did the Repairability Score. This nifty little number represents how much we struggled in the disassembly, and consequently provides our estimation of repair difficulty.
Years later, we were able to thank Australia for their time zone advantage. In 2017, local warehouses in Australia and Canada helped reduce costs so that iFixit was able to bring parts and tools to even more of the world.
The iFixit Tool Journey
As it turns out, teardowns, especially the tough ones far from home, are great inspiration for new tools. While in Japan to get our hands on an early iPhone 4, we discovered that Apple had locked away its insides with the now-famous pentalobe screw. This proprietary, five-pointed shape was so odd, and so small, that a driver simply didn’t exist. But iFixit makes do—so we reverse-engineered the bit so others could open up their iPhone, too.

Once we started making tools, we realized that we had the power to make electronics repair easier and friendlier for everyone. In 2011, we introduced the basic Pro Tech Toolkit. At that time, it was essentially just a collection of our favorite tools that we iteratively developed, based on our ever-growing experience. But our goal was to create the most versatile toolkit for electronics repair, and we dreamed of tools we’d never seen. In 2012, we established a product team to build and design the quality tools that didn’t exist in the electronics repair space.
Shortly thereafter, we reimagined the Pro Tech in a sleek black tool roll with components we designed ourselves, and two years later we reached our current magnum opus: 64 steel screwdriver bits and a wide variety of opening and prying tools. We’re continually improving our products and creating new ones to make repair easier: most recently, the all-new Anti-Clamp and the repair organizer FixMat. We’re always looking for ways to make your repairs easier—if you’ve been dreaming of a tool you can’t find, feel free to drop us a line.
Getting the right tools in our kits is a key step to making repair possible. But a lack of tools isn’t the only barrier to repair. From that very first PowerBook G3 repair, we’ve been frustrated by how often manufacturers get in the way. They like to claim that repair information is proprietary, refuse to sell parts, and use sneaky software tricks like parts pairing to keep repair locked away in their own authorized shops.
Winning the Right to Repair Battle
When iFixit was founded, the obvious challenges for repair were parts, repair information, and the proper tools. And while that’s still the foundation of any good repair, sometimes things get a bit more existential. Sometimes manufacturers decide that you shouldn’t be able to fix things—either by making unfixable products or by making those fixes illegal—and sometimes they say you don’t own them at all. So naturally, iFixit has been advocating actively for Right to Repair since our inception.
The truths proclaimed by our Repair Manifesto—published more than a decade ago—still hold true: “If you can’t fix it, you don’t own it.” We’ve been calling out bad practices wherever we find them and fight against laws that would restrict access to repair.
In the early 2010s, we were part of a campaign for the “Unlocking Consumer Choice and Wireless Competition Act” that got rid of unlimited carrier locks for smartphones. In 2015, we worked to put pressure on the US Copyright Office, with advocates at the Electronic Frontier Foundation and Public Knowledge. This pressure led the Copyright Office to create an exemption that made it legal to unlock phones, tablets, and wearables. But despite this exemption, manufacturers continue to find ways to hide repair access behind overreaches of copyright law. So we will keep fighting until the legal reality around the world matches what we know: Repair isn’t copyright infringement.
The unlocking fight catapulted us into the world of repair-friendly legislation, and we’ve found a lot of room for improvement. Since 2015, we’ve worked to support Right to Repair laws in nearly every US state, aiming to secure our access to parts, tools, and documentation for everything. That fight quickly went global.

In 2021, the EU made great strides towards sustainable products, rolling out the French Repairability Index—sibling in spirit to iFixit’s Repairability Score. Right to Repair is on the agenda worldwide, with New York State passing the first electronics Right to Repair law and the EU establishing new ecodesign regulations and battery replaceability requirements. Canada, Australia, and India all have Right to Repair legislative developments underway.
We’ve picked up some great allies, including the expert advocates at the Public Interest Research Group, the hundreds of repair industry members of Repair.org, and the security experts at SecuRepairs. Around the world, community repair groups like Repair Cafe International and Fixit Clinic share our mission of teaching the world to fix stuff.
Manufacturers have clearly noticed the turn of the tides. In 2020, the impossible happened: Apple announced a self-service repair program. Others followed suit, either launching their own repair networks, or working with iFixit to provide genuine parts solutions. There are even companies launching repair plans with their new products—Framework, Valve. Companies like iFixit, and long-time sustainable manufacturer Fairphone, have been repeatedly proven correct. The future is repairable.
We’ve come a long way, but we’ve got a lot to accomplish before our Repair Manifesto describes reality.
Things That Have Stayed the Same

For all the change and the challenge, we’ve managed to stay remarkably ourselves. Kyle and Luke still run the place, and can be seen in the office all the time—they’re a little older now, but still just as nerdy. And we still have the best allies in the world: all of you. To celebrate what you do, we’d like to reward the year’s top fixers through our Repair Hero of the Year contest. So get some credit for everything you’re already doing; you deserve it.
Our community is incredible, and too huge to fully enumerate. From longtime forum members, to dedicated translators, crazy cool fixers, and our dearest collaborators—looking at you PIRG, EFF, and The Repair Association—we’re incredibly lucky to know you. Together, we’ve fixed a lot. But we can’t stop yet—the world still needs fixing.
The Next 20 Years of iFixit

We’re more hopeful than we’ve been in a long time—challenges and opportunities abound. Let’s wrap up our vicennium with our hit list for the next ten years. From our perspective, challenges and opportunities may well be the same thing—goals.
- Fix Parts Pairing: Even when parts are available, repairs are increasingly locked down due to mounting software barriers like parts pairing. Some calibration can be safely done from home—Apple lets you do it (if you buy parts from them alone). Other pairing issues are unnecessary, or plainly meant to protect repair monopolies.
- Enshrine Strong Repair Protections: Beyond electronics and without exclusion, everyone should be able to fix any thing. Laws like New York’s Fair Repair bill and Colorado’s wheelchair repair laws are excellent, but are only pieces of the puzzle.
- Make Repair a Lifestyle: Repair needs to be the default. It’s the most important ‘R’ for sustainability, for jobs, and for your wallet. It needs to be the first line of defense, and the first thought in product design. Whether it’s globally accessible and translatable guides on iFixit, greater shipping coverage, or the next new TikTok trend—we’re looking to make repair bigger than ever.







crwdns2944067:039crwdne2944067:0
Whoo hoo. 20 years! Lets go for 30
Corbanizer - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Well done fellows and a hardy thank you for the leadership! Travers Edwards
Travers Edwards - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
I've been apart of the iFixit community for almost 2 years, and I am so glad to be apart of such an incredible group of people.
Jacob Mehnert - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Happy Birthday with many more iFixit years to come
Richard Sweeting - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Awesome, congratulations on getting to this point and continuing to build on past experience! Just goes to show what can be achieved with hard work and determination.
Andrew - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Congratulations on reaching this milestone of service. The learning never stops at iFixit. Thanks for making me look like a hero to my family.
Tom Pryts - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
WOW!!! :-)), I HAVE JUST BEEN BLESSED TO FIND YOUALL !! I AM KNOWN AS MR. FIXIT ! IF I DON'T KNOW HOW I Research UNTIL I DO! THANKS AGAIN FOR"ADDING ANOTHER TOOL IN MY TOOLBOX !! I WILL CERTAINLY SHARE THIS TEAM!! :-))
laughterforyears - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Thank you so much for helping fix my computers, phones, and watches. I have always loved to fix things. Started at 12 years old (I am 70 now). By 14 I was fixing all of my neighbors tube TVs. Started fixing marine navigation equipment in my mid 20's which led to starting my marine electronics repair business. Retired after fixing: radar, chart plotters, loran, gps, etc., radios, base stations, and repeaters. Working in a small town, I saw the strangest stuff come in for repair. Repaired the control board for a car wash. Repaired the optometrist gadget that uses sound to measure your eyeball (Had the IC in stock. Was used in a cheap depth sounder!!) I always encouraged my customers to repair what they could. Even gave them free advice. I have fixed most every kind of appliance for my extended family. I 100% agree with your insistence that everyone has the right to fix equipment they own. Fixed two electric pianos today for my youngest son's middle school piano class. Keep going!
Jon - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Congratulations to a successful 20 Years! Here is to the next 20.
oldturkey03 - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Through the years, you helped me save several iMacs, laptops and a couple of iPhones. Looking forward to seeing what you find and fix in the insides of future devices.
bailin - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Congratulations and best wishes for 20 more.
I don't 'mem when I joined, but it was when I learned of iFixit.
Been fixing (& designing) stuff 60+ years, Great being in comfortable company.
Kevin Sargent - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
To 20 more years and beyond. Happy Anniversary.
Brandon Blair - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Have been using iFixit for parts for years and love the tool kit I got a few years ago. Keep it up
Matthew Mason - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Happy 20th!!! 🥳
NR26 - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
excellent, you are my inspiration, I learn every day with you, thank you for your effort.
Miller - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Congratulations to the wonderful team at iFixit!
I've always enjoyed working on my own cars and house repairs, but back in 2010 ago you inspired me to take it to the next level - fixing my daughter's and my son's iPhones, and since then I've been fixing everything electronic - other vendor phones, laptops, and electronic toys.
iFixit's mission is vitally important. Keep up the great work!!
Fitz - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Happy birthday to all you people in Ifixit, thank you so much for everything you’ve done for us.
franbene1 - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Yeah, congratulations! Big thanks to Kyle and Luke and to the whole iFixit community!
I trawled back through my records. It looks like my first iFixit order (for TiBook hinge) was in 2006, and I'd been using the Powerbook repair guides for a while before then. So iFixit has been part of my life for most of the twenty years, from the modest beginnings of Powerbook guides and parts, to the global Right To Repair movement. Many more to come!
As well as fixing broken things, there's also the matter of upgrading devices to extend their useful lifetime -- I'm thinking mainly of RAM and SSD upgrades for laptops (and in the case of the mighty Pismo Powerbook, even CPU upgrades, because the CPU and RAM were on a separate daughterboard).
And we shouldn't forget, complementing hardware repair is software repair and upgrading, particularly with Free and Open Source Software. In my family, we have a bunch of old Macbooks and an iMac in daily use running up-to-date Linux, when Apple dropped support for them years ago.
Les Kitchen - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Well done guys lets hope tat Australia gets up to scratch soon.
Rick Hayllar - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Congratulations on 20 yrs of service/servicing devices!
Ben Capehart - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Currently in the battle with a company over the value of a resistor. I purchased a presonus audio interface almost unused off eBay nonworking thinking I could fix it, well I can I just don't know what value to replace it with. You don't want to support the device that's fine give me the information to support myself. And you know the company doesn't give schematics OK then what's the component?
imark7777777 - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Thank you and keep up the excellent work
Laurie Ralphs - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Keep going guys,
I've been using your helping teardowns & guides, particularly after I retired but wasn't allowed to stop helping fix friends & neighbours Apple, PC, Ovens......etc
Thanks for your help.
Currently repairing a MacPro 3,1 (dud PSU), I also have a MP 1,1(flashed 2,1)
coopernewlyn - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
20 years of making the world a better place!!!!!
Congratulations!!!!!
🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
HelloMacOS - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
2007. I was probably one of a handful of people with a Mac in the entire city, Cartagena, Colombia. Working on my band's debut album on my brand new white MacBook. Laptop in one side, a tower of DVD RWs on the other. Went out, came back, found my 2 year old baby with the DVD tower in his lap, sanding the floors with DVDs in each hand, a bunch of them scattered all over the room. Mad, but not too much. He still left me discs untouched. Time to burn the next set of files, went to insert a new DVD, I can feel there is one already in... press the eject button... nothing comes out. Press again, nothing comes out. Took a look on the side, I can see a disc edge. (That's not normal I think). MacBooks don't have disc trays, so I begin to panic... suddenly connect the dots... 2 year old baby, discs on the floor... turn to him, and ask him point blank "how many discs did you stuck in the computer?"... he signals with his little fingers... three... I cried for a bit... until I found iFixit... been a fan since.
Eliecer - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Parabéns! Seu trabalho é espetacular, e os acompanho desde o início. Também passei toda uma vida (dos 15 anos até o momento, com 54 anos) reparando coisas, muitas coisas, dos mais variados tipos. Me vejo muito em vocês, e gostaria muito de ter tido a oportunidade de estar no time de vocês. Abraço a todos, e feliz aniversário.
elciodouglas - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Congratulations on your 20th Anniversary and many more years to come.
NOS 4R2 - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Amazing!!!! Happy Birthday!!!
Victor Crespo - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Congratulations on 20 Years! Here's to many more.
spearson - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Happy 20 years Ifixit!
(trust me i have used 100s of guides from this site! great job!!)
Finley Henry - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
I can't imagine life without a trusted resource such as ifixit.com for consumers world wide. Everyone would agree that words cannot express our greatest gratitude for your outstanding service, innovation, solutions and resources world wide that help us (consumer) resolve our repair issue (s) ourselves. Your the greatest! Ida from Silicon Valley Bay Area Region California
Ida Berania - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Congratulations. I love ifixit. You guys are awesome.
Darryl Ferrucci - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Congratulations. It is always gratifying to see people and institutions do the right thing, and even better to see them flourish by doing the right thing.
David Ballard - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Building PCs since the Intel 286 days and repairing laptops, phones and other electronic devices for nearly as long, I've accumulated LOTS of different tools. However, my all-time favourite is an iFixit kit I bought about 8 years ago. So well thought out and quality second to none.
I was just thinking today while building a new PC how this kit has made my life easier.
Thank you iFixit! Keep up the great work!!!
mikesf - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Están muy buenos aportes A los que más los necesitan soy cubano y no termos muchos medios para reparar nuestros equipos que Dios los bendiga siempre abrazos para todos
enrique baez - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Please tell me where can I send a teddy ruxpin for repairs
Debra Alexander - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Please can you tell me where I can get a teddy ruxpin repaired
Debra Alexander - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Can we earn by doing detailed video tutorial here in Ifixit?
mikmikss - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0
Thanks to the two men who toiled to bring iFixit and let the motivated enthusiasts to become expert repairers, an unending skills. Good Luck.
jerome agbojackey - crwdns2934203:0crwdne2934203:0