Apple's latest products can now be fixed via the Self Service Repair Program, with parts for the iPhone 17e, MacBook Neo, Apple Studio Display XDR, and more.
On Wednesday, Apple updated its Self Service Repair Store with replacement parts for the various products the company announced in March 2026.
This includes the iPhone 17e, MacBook Neo, M5 MacBook Air, M5 Pro and M5 Max MacBook Pro, M4 iPad Air, updated Apple Studio Display, and the Apple Studio Display XDR.
The repair program has been available since April 2022 to customers in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and various countries in the European Union.
As of April 8, it's possible to order a variety of replacement parts for Apple's March 2026 products. Replacement batteries, displays, keyboards, speakers, trackpads, and more can be acquired via Apple's Self Service Repair Store. Repair manuals are also available via the same website.
The newly added repair manuals are available on the following pages:
- iPhone 17e
- iPad Air 11-inch (M4)
- iPad Air 13-inch (M4)
- MacBook Neo
- MacBook Air (13-inch, M5)
- MacBook Air (15-inch, M5)
- MacBook Pro (14-inch, M5 Pro or M5 Max)
- MacBook Pro (16-inch, M5 Pro or M5 Max)
- Apple Studio Display (2026)
- Apple Studio Display XDR
Apple's Self Service repair program debuted following repeated complaints from right-to-repair advocates, who criticized the company's insistence on authorized technicians.
Initially, right-to-repair activists were unhappy with the program. This isn't much of a surprise, given that the Self Service Repair Program was largely meant to ward off antitrust complaints.
Over the years, though, Apple has made repair-friendly adjustments, such as eliminating the part-pairing requirement for select components in June 2023. The program was also expanded to support various iPad models, as it previously only offered iPhone parts and manuals.
Apple's repair-focused efforts extend well beyond the Self Service program, with products like the MacBook Neo serving as the perfect example of the company's changing attitude.
While the current MacBook Air and MacBook Pro feature keyboards that can't be removed and batteries held in place with glue, both of these components are held by screws in the MacBook Neo.
This makes the budget-oriented laptop one of the most repairable Apple products since 2012. Still, even that isn't enough to save Apple from anti-repairability claims.






