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In Trump's Tariff Era, the Right To Repair Will Be More Important Than Ever

In Trump's Tariff Era, the Right To Repair Will Be More Important Than Ever

WIRED09-04-2025

The tech we buy is about to get more expensive. It's time to keep the stuff you already have running longer. Photo-Illustration: Wired Staff;If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. Learn more.
Hang onto your stuff. That's the advice right-to-repair advocates are giving anyone worried about how the tariffs will hit their wallets—and collections of electronic gadgets.
Trade tariffs touch nearly every product out there, especially when they're as widespread and sky-high as the ones president Trump announced on April 3. But electronics are especially dependent on worldwide trade. Components used to assemble devices are usually built in manufacturing plants in countries like China, Vietnam, Taiwan, and Cambodia, which are now being hit with tariffs of 30 to 50 percent.
While the price increases as a result of this have not yet gone into effect—and are difficult to fully predict—these economic proclamations have already had broad repercussions. The stock market tanked in the days after Trump's announcement due to 'extreme fear' in the market, according to CNN, and there have already been delays while companies assess the tariff impact, like the pre-order for the recently announced Nintendo Switch 2.
The economic turmoil and uncertainty makes the prospect of buying a new device, especially an already pricey smartphone, laptop, or gaming console, seem like it's going to become a lot more expensive. And if buying something new becomes harder and harder, it makes more sense to keep what you already have going strong.
'Right to repair could not have come sooner,' Kyle Wiens, CEO of the repairability company iFixit, says.
Right to repair efforts—actions by consumer advocates intended to raise public awareness and force companies to make devices more repairable—have been in the works for decades. In recent years, the push has made great strides. In 2024, the European Union instituted a ruling that requires companies to make devices more repairable. RtR has also garnered widespread bipartisan support in the US, even while in the throes of a chaotic federal administration that seems intent on dismantling many of the systems that keep the country running.
Wiens compares the moment to the early days of the Covid pandemic, a time when the future of how people would be able to get the new stuff they wanted looked similarly bleak. In 2020, Wiens wrote for WIRED that the right to repair would help foster resilience in times of uncertainty. As tariffs kick in and a global trade war ignites, the parallels start to feel very similar.
'We don't know what's going to happen,' Wiens says. 'So what do we do? Well, repair is just the default.'
Wiens suggests that people should prepare for new device prices to increase by 50 percent or more. If you apply that same logic to the stuff you already have, it means that hanging onto your smartphone or laptop another couple years may be a much better investment then trading it in for something new.
"Just expect to keep anything that you have that's durable in any way,' Wiens says. 'So durable goods—microwaves, toasters, cell phones, Nintendo Switches, whatever it is, they're worth 50 percent more now than you thought they were.'
The tariff era will require a shift in how products are produced and reduced. Wiens says he has also been talking to workers at electronics recycling facilities and telling them not to harvest discarded products if they're still working.
'Hey, whatever you are going to shred, stop shredding it,' Wiens says. 'Whatever materials you're going to export, stop exporting it. That product's going to have more value than you thought.'
Despite the doom and gloom that watching the stock market plummet might invoke in our collective psyche, RtR advocates hope this moment helps make the case for keeping devices in working order.
'I don't feel like the sky is falling,' Nathan Proctor, who helms the campaign for right to repair at the consumer advocacy group PIRG, says. 'First of all, Wall Street people are the 13-year-old girls of social commentary. Everything is total drama all the time. Let's not go overboard. Let's see how this plays out.'
Like Wiens, Proctor believes that repair makes society more resilient and will help people get through this where it can.
'It's going to be very disruptive in the short term,' Proctor says. 'I'm not sure how long that's going to last or what the impact's going to be. But I do know that a more resilient society is better.'
Leo Gebbie, a principal analyst at the research firm CCS Insights says that another segment of the market that could benefit from higher tariffs are secondhand markets that sell used devices, like Backmarket. They've been doing quite well even before the tariffs were announced, with secondhand devices frequently bought and sold within the US. Now, that popularity is likely to increase.
'They are more cost effective,' Gebbie says. 'There is a strong supply of secondhand iPhones within the US, so for US consumers, there shouldn't be a need to import those devices from elsewhere and have them subject to tariffs.'
Backmarket in particular seems to be well aware of its place in this trend, as right now it is cheekily offering a 'Recession Special' where customers can use a code (ELON) to save 10 percent off their purchase. However, if demand for secondhand devices goes up, there could be a knock-on effect where more phones being sold in the US could lead to prices being raised across the board—including in European markets that have tended to have stronger demand for used devices than the US.
'Really we will [only] know more once we see prices change,' Gebbie says. 'Obviously consumers are then in a position where they have something to react to.'
Rethinking how we repair and replace our devices already has an analogue for how to guide that behavior . The automotive industry (which is bound to feel its own impacts from the tariffs) offers an example of how to care for products long term.
'Do people buy new cars? Sure,' Wiens says. 'Do they keep cars for 20 years? Absolutely. Yeah. Does anyone throw away a car because the windshield's broken? No.'
Sadly, even the repair side of things is bound to feel the effects of tariff inflation. Spare parts and tools needed to fix things depend on global manufactures as much as finished products do. Wiens, who runs a business that sells tools meant for repairing devices, says he will also directly feel the effects of the tariffs and be forced to pass the increased cost onto customers. Even then, he hopes that a silver lining in the tariff chaos will be consumers changing their buying habits.
'Let's stop buying cheap crap. Let's have fewer, nicer things, and let's use them for a long time,' Wiens says. 'And so then you say, well, if we're going to stop buying new things, what do we do with the stuff? How do we take care of the things that we have? Well, that's where the right to repair world comes in.

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