Search on our site

Search on our site

Laptop Screen Replacement in Florida: What's Actually Broken, What It Costs, and How We Fix It (2026)

Cracked display, flickering lines, black screen, or ink blotches? This guide helps you figure out whether you need a screen replacement or a different repair entirely—before you spend money on the wrong fix. Written by technicians who replace laptop screens every day across 9 Florida locations.

Book a Free Screen Diagnostic Find Your Nearest Store

The short version:

  • Cracks, ink spots, or colored lines = the LCD/OLED panel is physically damaged. Replacement is the fix. Repair without swapping the panel is not reliable.
  • Black screen but laptop turns on = could be the screen, a loose cable, or a GPU/board issue. Don't order a screen until you've tested with an external monitor.
  • Laptop screen replacement costs $135–$250 for most Windows laptops (HP, Dell, Lenovo, ASUS, Acer) and $220–$730 for MacBooks at our stores—parts included.
  • Turnaround: Most standard LCD replacements are done same-day when the part is in stock. Touch assemblies and MacBooks typically take 1–2 business days.
  • Warranty: 90-day warranty on all screen replacements (parts and labor).

Step 1 — What's Your Screen Doing? (Diagnose Before You Spend)

Most people who walk into our stores say "my screen is broken"—but the fix depends entirely on what kind of broken. Here's what we see every day and what each symptom actually means for repair.

What you seeWhat's most likely brokenTypical fixEst. cost range
Spiderweb cracks / shattered glassLCD panel (physical impact damage)Full screen replacement$135–$730
Black "ink" spreading, pressure marksLCD panel (internal fluid leak from pressure)Full screen replacement$135–$730
Vertical/horizontal colored linesPanel damage or display cable issueScreen replacement or cable reseat$65–$250
Flickering or dimmingBacklight failure, cable stress, or inverterDiagnostic first → screen or cable$65–$250
Black screen, laptop powers onDead panel, loose cable, GPU, or board issueExternal monitor test → diagnosticVaries
Touch not responding (image is fine)Digitizer layer failureTouch assembly replacement$150–$400
Screen works but is very dimBacklight or inverter board failureScreen replacement (backlight is built in)$135–$250
Why this matters before ordering a screen

About 1 in 5 customers who come in expecting a screen replacement actually have a different issue—a loose display cable, a hinge pulling the cable, or a GPU problem. Replacing the screen in those cases doesn't fix anything. That's why we run a diagnostic before ordering parts.


Step 2 — The External Monitor Test (Do This Before Anything Else)

If your laptop powers on but the screen is black, flickering, or showing garbage, the fastest way to figure out whether the screen is the problem or the system is the problem is to connect an external display.

1

Connect your laptop to a TV or external monitor

Use HDMI, USB-C, DisplayPort, or a Thunderbolt adapter—whatever your laptop has. Most TVs have an HDMI port that works.

2

On Windows: press Windows + P and select "Duplicate" or "Extend"

This forces the laptop to send its display signal to the external screen. If the external monitor shows your desktop normally, the laptop's internal hardware is fine—the problem is isolated to the screen or its cable.

Tip: If you can't see anything at all (even on the external), try pressing the keys blind. The shortcut still works even when your screen is black.
3

On MacBook: connect the external display and check

If you're using a MacBook with a broken screen, you may need to close the lid, connect a keyboard/mouse, and open it while connected to an external display. Apple's clamshell mode requires a power source and external peripherals.

4

Read the result

External works, built-in doesn't → Your screen (or its cable/connector) is the issue. Screen replacement will likely fix it.

External also doesn't work → The problem may be the GPU, motherboard, or a deeper system issue. A screen replacement alone won't help—you need a diagnostic first.

Don't skip this step

We've seen people buy replacement screens online, install them, and still have a black display—because the real issue was a failed GPU or a cable that got pinched in the hinge. The external monitor test takes 2 minutes and can save you $135–$400.


Step 3 — What Laptop Screen Replacement Actually Costs (Real Pricing, Not Guesses)

The cost of a laptop screen replacement is driven primarily by the part, not the labor. Here's what changes the price—and our actual starting prices by brand, updated for 2026.

Windows laptop screen replacement pricing

HP

From $135

Non-touch LCD, 15.6"

Dell

From $135

Non-touch LCD, standard

Lenovo

From $135

ThinkPad / IdeaPad

ASUS

From $135

VivoBook / ZenBook

Acer

From $135

Aspire / Nitro

Samsung

From $135

Galaxy Book series

MSI / Razer

From $200

Gaming / high-refresh

Alienware

From $250

Gaming laptops

MacBook screen replacement pricing

MacBook Air 11"

From $240

A1465

MacBook Air 13"

From $220

A1466 – A2681

MacBook Pro 13"

From $260

A1706 – A2338

MacBook Pro 16"

From $650

A2141 / A2485

What pushes the price higher

  • Touchscreen assemblies — the digitizer and panel are fused, so the entire assembly gets replaced.
  • 4K / OLED / high-refresh panels — premium parts cost more than standard FHD LCDs.
  • MacBook Retina displays — Apple uses proprietary assemblies that include the lid, glass, and panel as one unit.
  • Hinge or cable damage — if the same impact that cracked the screen also damaged the hinge or flex cable, that's additional repair.
Fastest way to get an exact quote

Bring the model number (printed on the bottom label of your laptop) and tell us: touch or non-touch, screen size, and what happened. Those three things get you a quote in minutes, not days.


Step 4 — How We Replace a Laptop Screen (Our 6-Step Process)

We don't guess-and-swap. We confirm the failure point first, match the exact part, then replace. Here's what happens when you bring in a laptop with a damaged screen.

1

Visual inspection and intake

We check impact points, hinge stress areas, cable pinch zones, and the overall condition of the chassis. If there's hinge damage or frame warping, we flag it before touching the screen.

2

External monitor test

We connect to an external display to confirm the system board, GPU, and video output are working normally. If the external also fails, we stop and diagnose deeper—no point replacing a screen if the board is the issue.

3

Part matching by model + panel spec

Two laptops can look identical but use different connectors (30-pin vs 40-pin eDP), different resolutions, or different mounting brackets. We match by exact model number and panel ID to avoid compatibility problems.

4

Disassembly and screen swap

We remove the bezel (or back cover on frameless designs), disconnect the old panel's flex cable, remove mounting brackets, and install the new panel with the correct cable routing.

5

Calibration and stability check

We test brightness across all levels, check for dead pixels, verify backlight uniformity, and confirm the display responds normally when the lid moves (catches cable issues).

6

Quality check and handoff

Final lid-movement test, touch response verification (if applicable), and a full boot to confirm Windows/macOS recognizes the display correctly. We show you the results before you leave.

Warranty: Every screen replacement includes a 90-day warranty covering both parts and labor.

Step 5 — Should You Replace the Screen Yourself?

Honest answer: it depends on the laptop. Some screen replacements are genuinely simple. Others will cost you more time and money if you get it wrong.

FactorDIY-friendlyBetter left to a tech
Laptop typeOlder business laptops (ThinkPad, Latitude) with screw-mounted bezelsUltrabooks, MacBooks, 2-in-1s with glued assemblies
Screen typeStandard non-touch LCD with clear bezel screwsTouch/digitizer assemblies, OLED, 4K panels
Risk levelLow—if you've built a PC or replaced phone partsHigh—if you've never disassembled electronics
Common mistakeOrdering wrong connector type (30 vs 40 pin)Cracking the bezel, tearing the flex cable, bending pins
Cost if it goes wrong$50–$100 for a second screen$200+ if you damage the cable, board, or hinges
The most expensive DIY mistake we see

Ordering a screen with the wrong connector. Two 15.6" FHD panels can look identical but one uses a 30-pin and the other a 40-pin eDP connector. If it doesn't plug in, you can't return an opened screen. Always check the part number on the back of your existing panel before ordering.


Step 6 — Know Your Screen Type (It Affects Price and Availability)

LCD / LED (most laptops)

The most common and affordable type. Available in TN (cheaper, weaker viewing angles) and IPS (better color, wider angles). HD (1366Ɨ768) panels are cheaper than FHD (1920Ɨ1080). Most replacements for standard 15.6" FHD IPS panels are in stock or available within 1–2 days.

OLED and high-refresh (gaming/premium laptops)

More expensive parts, often model-specific. Common in MSI, Razer, Alienware, and some Dell XPS and Lenovo Yoga models. Expect higher cost and potentially longer wait for the exact panel.

Touchscreen assemblies

On most touch-enabled laptops, the digitizer (touch layer) and the LCD panel are fused together as one assembly. You can't replace just the glass or just the LCD—the entire unit gets swapped. This makes touch replacements more expensive but also more reliable than partial fixes.

MacBook Retina displays

Apple bonds the glass, LCD, and backlight into a single assembly that's part of the lid. Replacing a MacBook screen means replacing this entire display unit. It's more labor-intensive and the parts are model-specific down to the year and configuration.


Step 7 — How to Protect Your New Screen

  • Don't close the lid on objects. Pens, earbuds, and USB drives left on the keyboard cause most pressure cracks we see.
  • Use a padded sleeve or backpack compartment. Pressure on the lid in a bag is the #2 cause of screen damage.
  • Open from the center. Opening from one corner twists the hinge and stresses the display cable over time.
  • Clean with a dry microfiber cloth. No paper towels, no Windex, no rubbing alcohol on the panel surface.
  • Watch for stiff hinges. A hinge that's getting harder to open is putting tension on the display cable—get it checked before the cable breaks.

Brand-Specific Screen Replacement Notes

HP laptop screen replacement

HP Pavilion, Envy, and ProBook models typically use standard 15.6" or 14" FHD panels with 30-pin eDP connectors. Parts are widely available and most replacements start at $135. HP Spectre and Envy x360 models with touch require full assembly replacements at higher cost.

Dell laptop screen replacement

Dell Inspiron and Latitude lines are among the easiest screens to replace—clear bezel access and standard connectors. Dell XPS models use edge-to-edge displays with tighter tolerances. Dell also supports a built-in LCD self-test (hold D key while powering on) that shows color bars if the panel can display—useful for confirming whether the issue is the screen or the system.

Lenovo laptop screen replacement

ThinkPad screens are generally the most DIY-friendly—well-documented hardware maintenance manuals, standard screw-mounted bezels, and widely available parts. IdeaPad and Yoga lines vary more; Yoga 2-in-1 models with touch require full assembly replacement.

MacBook screen replacement

All modern MacBooks (Pro and Air with Retina) use a sealed display assembly. Replacement requires the entire lid unit, making it the most expensive category. Our MacBook screen replacement starts at $220 for older Air models and goes up to $730 for 16" Pro models. We match parts by Apple's A-number model identifier.

ASUS laptop screen replacement

ASUS VivoBook and ZenBook screens are generally straightforward with 30 or 40-pin eDP. ROG gaming laptops often use high-refresh (144Hz+) panels that are model-specific—these cost more and may take longer to source. Standard replacements start at $135.


Laptop Screen Replacement FAQ

Can you fix a cracked laptop screen without replacing it?

If the LCD panel itself is cracked (visible lines, ink spots, dead areas), replacement is the only reliable fix. Surface scratches on the outer glass of a touchscreen can sometimes be addressed with a screen protector, but a cracked LCD cannot be repaired—only replaced.

How much does it cost to replace a laptop screen?

At Phone Repair & More, standard laptop screen replacement starts at $135 for most Windows laptops (HP, Dell, Lenovo, ASUS, Acer) and from $220 for MacBooks. Touchscreen assemblies, OLED panels, and gaming laptop screens cost more due to the parts. We provide a free diagnostic before quoting.

How long does laptop screen replacement take?

Most standard LCD replacements are completed same-day when the part is in stock—typically 1–3 hours. Touch assemblies and MacBook displays may take 1–2 business days if we need to order the specific panel for your model.

Will replacing my laptop screen erase my data?

No. Screen replacement does not touch the storage drive, RAM, or any internal data. Your files, programs, and settings stay exactly as they are. We still recommend keeping a backup as a general best practice.

Can I upgrade my laptop screen to a better one?

Sometimes, if the connector type, pin count, mounting brackets, and power requirements match. Some business laptops shipped with both HD and FHD panel options in the same chassis, making an upgrade realistic. We check compatibility before ordering any "upgrade" panel.

How do I know if it's the screen or the motherboard?

Connect to an external monitor. If the external display works normally, the problem is your screen or its cable. If the external also fails, the issue is likely the GPU or motherboard. We run this test as the first step in every screen diagnostic.

Is it worth replacing the screen on an older laptop?

If the laptop still performs well for your needs and the screen replacement costs less than 30–40% of a comparable new laptop, it's usually worth it. A $135 screen replacement on a 3-year-old laptop that works fine is much better value than a $600+ replacement device.

Do you replace MacBook screens?

Yes. We replace screens on MacBook Air and MacBook Pro models, including Retina displays. MacBook screen replacement starts at $220 for Air models and from $260 for Pro 13" models. We match parts by Apple's model number (the A-number on the bottom of the device).

What should I bring for the fastest repair?

Bring the laptop and its charger. If possible, have the model number ready (printed on the bottom label) and tell us whether the screen is touch or non-touch. This information lets us check part availability immediately and give you an accurate quote on the spot.


Get Your Laptop Screen Replaced at a Store Near You

Walk in for a free diagnostic or book ahead. Every location offers same-day laptop screen replacement when parts are in stock.

Cracked screen? Let's fix it.

Book a free diagnostic or walk into any of our 9 Florida locations. We'll confirm whether you need a screen replacement, a cable repair, or something else—so you don't pay for the wrong fix.

Book Free Diagnostic Find a Store All Laptop Repair Services

Phone Repair & MoreĀ® is an independent, third-party repair provider. We are not affiliated with Apple, HP, Dell, Lenovo, ASUS, or any laptop manufacturer. All product names are trademarks of their respective owners.