Buying 2nd hand iPhone?

Author
Discussion

The Gauge

Original Poster:

1,910 posts

14 months

Thursday 8th February
quotequote all
Other than a private sale, where's best to buy a 2nd hand iPhone?

I want to replace my damaged iPhone 12 128GB with the same again. Apple store refurbished are expensive. Music Magpie have then around £329. Anywhere else I should be looking?

x5tuu

11,941 posts

188 months

Friday 9th February
quotequote all
I used Reboxed to pick up 2 iPhone 12s for my parents last year.

They were immaculate and with very good battery health too.

That was after ordering from MusicMagpie and being sent 2 phones that were heavily damaged way beyond their grading, one battery was on 70% and needed immediate replacement and the other handset was still in their diagnostic mode. It was my first bad experience of MM but it was very very poor (they did refund quickly though).

JQ

5,752 posts

180 months

Friday 9th February
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I’ve bought several iPhones from MusicMagpie without issue. They all arrived in immaculate condition and worked fine.

jimmytheone

1,377 posts

219 months

Friday 9th February
quotequote all
JQ said:
I’ve bought several iPhones from MusicMagpie without issue. They all arrived in immaculate condition and worked fine.
+1 Musicmagpie
3 phones so far, all good

Jamescrs

4,485 posts

66 months

Friday 9th February
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I’ve bought used phones from CEX, they aren’t always the cheapest but give a 24 month warranty

Road2Ruin

5,236 posts

217 months

Friday 9th February
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I have bought several phones, including iPhone, from backmarket. I had an issue with one, the power button stopped working, they had it back, fixed it, even fitted a new battery at the same time. You can tell a lot about a company when things go wrong and how they deal with it. With 2nd hand stuff, things will, at some point, go wrong.

Sslink

101 posts

42 months

Friday 9th February
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I bought 2 iPhone 13 ProMax one 512gb and 1TB "as new" from GiffGaff. If they'd been in the original box, you'd swear they were new. No issues with either phone in over a year, battery health was 100% on both phones. They also offered a 30-day no quibble exchange with free returns so you've got nothing to lose really.

Rushjob

1,854 posts

259 months

Friday 9th February
quotequote all
Another here for Backmarket.

Been using them for years, in the UK, France and now Spain - prices of their refurbished and guaranteed stuff is often the same price as or cheaper than second hand.

PF62

3,649 posts

174 months

Friday 9th February
quotequote all
Mozillion - they actually check that the components on Apple phones are genuine so you won't get one with a dodgy aftermarket battery or screen, and the grading has a guarantee of minimum battery health - excellent >85% as new >99%.

rdjohn

6,186 posts

196 months

Friday 9th February
quotequote all
I have had two poor experiences recently.

The first was via Amazon, who I had used previously. Their guarantee is that the battery must show above 80% life. However they are only the market place, the actual supplier sent one with a battery in the high 70s. It was returned without issue, but if the retailer cant actually read the battery life indicator, it does raise a question about the quality of their refurbishment. The speaker was also very crackly.

Disappointed, I then tried to buy one from CertDeal in Spain. They actually operate out of France and so delivery and return was slow. Thinking I had learned a valuable lesson, I asked for a compatible replacement battery to be fitted. When the phone arrived the battery has similar power, but is not compatible with iOS and showed a permanent warning. It also got very hot during the first charge cycle.

I made the generous offer to have the local Apple store replace their battery with a genuinely compatible one at my cost. All I asked was that they reimbursed my for what I had paid for their battery. They declined, and so again that made me very sceptical about the quality of their refurbisher, if they do not want Apple to look inside to investigate. So, that also has been returned.

I look forward to reading the recommendations here. However, all the online stuff only seems to be a portal for 3rd party restorers, and therein lies the fundamental problem.

The Gauge

Original Poster:

1,910 posts

14 months

Friday 9th February
quotequote all
Thanks for the suggestions.

I was attracted to Music Magpie as I can also sell them my current iPhone, offsetting the cost of any replacement (I don't want to advertise it privately)

Anyone used anywhere else to sell their phones?

MrBen.911

512 posts

119 months

Friday 9th February
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I've used MusicMagpie both to buy and sell - has worked perfectly for me.

rdjohn

6,186 posts

196 months

Friday 9th February
quotequote all
I can see that MusicMagic is the actual refurbisher rather than just a portal, so you can at least be certain who you are dealing with.

They are based in Stockport, but no phone number, or email address if you need to contact them.

They are looking favourite for me, at this moment.

PistonBroker

2,419 posts

227 months

Friday 9th February
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I stumbled upon an iPhone repair chap here in Taunton who had some refurbished XRs for sale back in '22. That was youngest's Christmas present sorted.

I expect there's people like him all over. I'll get in touch with him when I need to replace any of our phones in case he's managed to get another batch.

He recently cleaned my own XR's charging port out for me for a tenner. Which saved me upgrading. Sadly!

Ham_and_Jam

2,226 posts

98 months

Friday 9th February
quotequote all
PistonBroker said:
He recently cleaned my own XR's charging port out for me for a tenner. Which saved me upgrading. Sadly!
Easily DIY’d by poking a soft plastic tooth pick in the port and scraping the fluff / debris out.

The Gauge

Original Poster:

1,910 posts

14 months

Friday 9th February
quotequote all
PistonBroker said:
He recently cleaned my own XR's charging port out for me for a tenner. Which saved me upgrading. Sadly!
Ham_and_Jam said:
Easily DIY’d by poking a soft plastic tooth pick in the port and scraping the fluff / debris out.
That's one of the issues I have with my iPhone 12, despite having cleaned it as much as I can the lightening port doesn't work correctly, when connecting the cable I have to apply pressure to one side for it to connect properly, maybe I should search for a repair shop near me (Sheffield).

I also had a cracked camera lens, but I ordered a replacement from eBay and replaced that myself yesterday.

TheLurker

1,371 posts

197 months

Friday 9th February
quotequote all
Unfortunately, this thread reminds me of why I prefer to buy new phones. It just seems too hit and miss on the secondhand market for what is an expensive purchase.

The Gauge

Original Poster:

1,910 posts

14 months

Friday 9th February
quotequote all
Did a search and found a local repair shop, dropped my iPhone 12 off and they did a deep clean by dipping it into one of those ultrasonic jewellery cleaner baths, picked it up 45 mins later and the lightning port now works perfectly. Id tried numerous times myself with a cocktail stick but without success. he said it must have been dirty as the chemical turned a dirty colour.

Now to decide whether to keep it or sell to Music Magpie and upgrade with them to the Pro Max version, which will work out about £150. Always fancied the Pro Max but have never wanted to buy one new in case I found it too big, but trying one out the 2nd hand way might be worth a go.

QJumper

2,709 posts

27 months

Friday 9th February
quotequote all
I have always bought and sold used iPhones on ebay.

Maybe I'm lucky, but I've never had a problem.

mikey_b

1,821 posts

46 months

Saturday 10th February
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I've used backmarket several times, for iPhones for the family and more recently an Apple watch. Never had a problem with any of them - in fact my iPhone 13 was not just unmarked and with the battery health at 100%, but even still had a few weeks to run of it's original Apple warranty.

It can be hit and miss I'm sure, but stick to items graded as 'Excellent' and you are almost guaranteed to get something almost indistinguishable from new, but at a substantial discount. If you're not happy, just send it back.