A new report by The Wall Street Journal this week has taken a look into entrepreneurial teenagers and the lucrative business of summertime iPhone repairs. One 16-year-old in Nantucket, Massachusetts interviewed for the article, Grayson Shaw, cited a nearly $24,000 income for iPhone repairs made in the summer of 2016, when he fixed as many as nine iPhones every day.

Shaw has been repairing iPhones since he was 12, and this summer plans to set up his small business at a table outside of a local ice cream parlor. His repairs include fixing broken screens, microphones, and various other parts of both iPhones and iPads. Shaw's rates include a $189.99 repair cost to fix a broken screen on an iPhone 7 Plus.

iphone screen repair teens

Image of Joseph Kokenge taken by Sarah Desforges via WSJ

On Nantucket, Mr. Shaw is the “go-to guy,” says Peter Bordes, executive chairman of a software company, oneQube, who got his phone fixed by Mr. Shaw last summer after a tip from a friend’s teenage daughter.

“She said go to this place, and you’ll find him in this store,” Mr. Bordes says. “It’s like a mafia; they know who to go to.” The repair, he says, was “flawless.”

In Lafayette, Louisiana 18-year-old Joseph Kokenge quit his job at a local bowling alley, which his father manages, after discovering how much money he could make fixing broken iPhones. He began learning how to repair Apple's smartphones watching his father repair a cracked iPhone 3GS, and then browsed YouTube how-to videos for more information.

On average, Kokenge has charged $50 to fix the screens of iPhone 5 devices, and $200 for an iPhone 7 Plus, and he works on his repairs at a local coffee shop.

When a friend asked if his father could fix an iPhone 5, the teen watched YouTube how-to videos and repaired it himself. He soon earned a reputation at school, he says: “If a phone was broken, they knew to go to me.”

Word spread and parents, too, approached him. By senior year, he had quit his job at the bowling alley his father manages. “I told him that my time was worth more than $7.50 an hour,” he says. “He was proud that I was making more money on my own.”

Although AppleCare+ significantly reduces the cost of repairs, out-of-warranty repairs for screen damage made directly from Apple currently cost between $129 (iPhone 5 family) and $149 (iPhone 7 Plus). If any other damage is made to the device, the price jumps to between $269 and $349 for the same devices.

Related Forum: iPhone

Top Rated Comments

hipnetic Avatar
93 months ago
Other than one short summer job she has coming up, my 18-year-old daughter is content to just sit around and watch Netflix. I think she's holding out for a management position.
Score: 15 Votes (Like | Disagree)
grobik Avatar
93 months ago
So $50 more than apple for a non-apple display and a voided warranty. Not to mention the calibration and testing mesures Apple goes through on each repair.
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
underkuerbis Avatar
93 months ago
One 16-year-old in Nantucket, Massachusetts interviewed for the article cited a nearly $24,000 income for iPhone repairs made in the summer of 2016, off of fixes he performed for devices like the iPhone 7 Plus at $189.99 per cracked screen.
So he already repaired iPhone 7 Plus devices in the summer of 2016? Yeah, right...
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
mike7311 Avatar
93 months ago
The margins are too low to make it into a real business. He would be better off cutting lawns. When your margins stick around 20 percent, you are better off finding something else, especially when the tax man comes for his share in California.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Weaselboy Avatar
93 months ago
Now I feel kind of like a chump having made seven cents per TV Guide I hand delivered. :(
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
DEMinSoCAL Avatar
93 months ago
These upstanding teenagers surely file a tax return for 2016 and claimed all those proceeds, not to mention got a business license, right? Their state franchise tax board will be interested in collecting sales tax on his sales, too. We're not talking a lemonade stand here...
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)

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