
Not every damaged iPhone 15 Pro screen looks cracked. These are the ways the fault usually shows:
Swapping the screen is the quick part. Which display goes in is what actually matters. We fit an Original-grade panel, the best made for the Pro, never a low-cost one that looks right on the shelf but quietly loses the 120Hz refresh rate. Your Face ID and sensors carry across. We reseal it with a fresh gasket, then calibrate it, so ProMotion, the always-on display and True Tone all behave as before.
Before it's sealed, we test the new display properly: touch right across the panel, Face ID, the sensors, brightness and colour. We confirm the Pro features came back too, the 120Hz smoothness and the always-on screen. It's cleaned up and handed over only after every check is good.
It’s a little bit like visiting a doctor. Don’t you like it when your doctor has an understanding ear, and explains the ailment to you?
All things considered, the quality of service is only as good as the expertise of the repairman. Workmanship matters!
All Apple devices, all repairs, we are your one-stop shop. We’re probably the only one in town who do L4 chip-level repair on Logic boards, arguably :)
We inspect thoroughly and share a detailed diagnosis report. You'll know exactly what's wrong before you commit to anything.
Clear pricing before any work begins. Parts, labor, and timeline upfront. You decide whether to go ahead.
1 to 3 days for common repairs. Chip-level logic board work may take up to 2 weeks. We keep you posted throughout.
90-day minimum on every repair. 3 months on chip-level logic board work. 1 year on display replacements.
We don't publish a fixed price on the website. It's dynamic, and it depends on whether you've got the 15 Pro or the larger 15 Pro Max and the panel option you choose. A figure we post today can be wrong by next month. Send your model over WhatsApp and we'll share the current price straight away.
Yes, with the right panel. This is the catch on the Pro: a cheap display can quietly lock the phone to 60Hz and drop the always-on screen, even when everything else looks fine. The Original-grade panel we fit keeps full 120Hz ProMotion, the always-on display and True Tone, and we confirm all three are working before the phone goes back to you.
Yes. We fit what the market calls an "Original" display. Strictly it isn't an Apple part, since Apple doesn't sell its displays openly, so nobody can offer a true "Apple Original". But in terms of quality and performance, it's on par with the original, and it comes with an 18-month warranty.
Yes, True Tone and auto-brightness work fine post display replacement.
Regarding the "unverified part" message: In MOST cases it goes away after completing the calibration, finally showing up as "Genuine" or "Used" part. That calibration step can be temperamental though, and Apple changes it with every iOS update, so we can't promise exactly how the note will finally read on your phone. What we do guarantee is a display that works perfectly, which is what our warranty covers.
Yes, normally it's unaffected. Face ID lives in a separate TrueDepth sensor unit, not in the display panel, so when we move it across to the new screen it carries on working. The one exception is if those sensors were damaged in the same accident, which is rare with a cracked screen. If we spot that, you'll hear it from us before any work starts.
No, the old part stays with us. Retaining the replaced part is standard practice across premium Apple repair providers, Apple included, and it is part of how the pricing and warranty on a replacement work. We have explained the reasoning in more detail in this article.
The warranty covers manufacturing defects in the display itself: dead spots, touch playing up, or display going blank on its own. It doesn't cover fresh physical or liquid damage, since those are new accidents rather than a fault in the part.
We fit a fresh sealing gasket to help restore water resistance. Even so, there's no reliable way to test the seal afterwards, and even Apple won't commit to water resistance once a phone has been opened. If the phone is already dented or bent, resistance is reduced and can't be fully restored. We'd recommend keeping it away from liquid, and we can't take liability for liquid damage after the repair.