Dropped it and dented the corner?
Trade it in — skip the $800 housing swap.
A corner dent is the most common drop damage on a MacBook — and one of the most expensive to fix through Apple, because the corner is part of the precision-machined unibody housing. Apple's repair is a full housing replacement: $400-$800 out of warranty, even when the Mac works perfectly. We quote from surviving parts value, so a MacBook with a dented corner that still boots and has a clean screen earns real store credit — often close to what a cosmetically clean machine would get.
Repair it or trade it? The math by model
| Device | Apple Repair / Trade-In | BackMarket / SellCell | LuxuriousComputers |
|---|---|---|---|
| MacBook Pro M1/M2/M3 14" or 16" — dented corner from a drop, boots fine | $500–$800 housing repair | $120–$260 | $400–$680 |
| MacBook Air M1/M2 — corner dented or dinged, screen works | $400–$600 repair | $60–$140 | $200–$390 |
| MacBook Pro 2016–2019 — dented corner, trackpad and keyboard still work | $450+ repair | $25–$70 | $90–$210 |
| Any MacBook — corner dent deep enough it pinched the screen bezel, still powers on | $500+ diagnostic + repair | $20–$80 | $80–$300 |
Values shown in store credit toward any purchase. Cash equivalent available where noted.
Cosmetic dent or structural damage? Here's how to tell.
- ✓Cosmetic only — highest quote. The Mac boots, the screen is clean edge-to-edge, the lid closes flush, and the trackpad clicks normally. The dent is ugly but nothing functional changed. This is the most common outcome from a corner drop and earns the best credit.
- !Dent reached the bezel — screen may be affected. If there's a bright pressure spot, dead pixels near the corner, or a hairline crack at the display edge, the dent transferred force to the panel. We price the screen as damaged and quote from the board, battery, and inputs. Still a real quote, just lower.
- !Dent near a port — check charging. A dent near the MagSafe or USB-C port can stress the port housing. If charging is intermittent or the cable wobbles, tell us — we test the port specifically and adjust the quote for port-level damage, which is cheaper to fix than a board swap.
- ✓Don't wait for it to get worse. A corner dent that's cosmetic today can worsen with use — the lid alignment shifts, dust enters the display, or the flex cable gets pinched. Trading while everything still works means a higher quote.
How it works
Tell us about the dent
Use the trade-in calculator, text Rick at (740) 223-5530, or walk in. Slight ding, deep dent, or a corner that cracked the bezel — every dented MacBook still quotes.
Full bench check
A dented corner almost never kills a Mac. We test the logic board, screen, battery, keyboard, and trackpad separately, and we check whether the impact reached anything beyond the housing.
Ship free or walk in
Prepaid label if you're outside Marion — we'll tell you how to pack a dented MacBook so nothing shifts in transit — or walk in to 731 E Center St #200, Tue-Sat 10am-7pm. Free return shipping if the bench quote doesn't match.
Same-day store credit
Credit applies instantly toward any Mac in the shop. Most people trade a dented MacBook toward a clean M1 or M2 and walk out with a machine that looks brand new again.
Why a dented corner doesn't kill your MacBook's value
The corner is housing, not electronics. A dented corner is pure aluminum damage. The logic board sits in the center of the chassis, protected by the frame and keyboard assembly. Unless the Mac took a catastrophic impact, the single most valuable component is usually flawless.
The boot test tells us everything. If it powers on, charges, and the display lights up evenly with no pressure spots near the dented corner, the board, screen, and battery all survived — that's the best-case scenario and earns the highest quote.
Corner dents are the cheapest drop damage. Compared to a cracked screen, a bent frame, or a dead board, a corner dent that didn't reach anything else is the mildest form of drop damage. The Mac still works, the screen is clean, and every component holds its value.
We price on function, not cosmetics. Apple's housing swap covers the entire unibody — a $400-$800 repair to fix a dent that might not affect anything. We skip the cosmetic penalty and price from what the parts are actually worth on the secondary market.
Related sell options
Frequently asked questions
Do you buy MacBooks with a dented corner?
Yes — a dinged, dented, or crushed corner is a routine trade-in. The logic board, battery, keyboard, and screen usually still work, so the machine keeps most of its parts value even when one corner looks rough.
How much is a MacBook with a dented corner worth?
It depends on the model and whether the dent reached anything beyond the housing. An M-series 14" or 16" Pro that boots fine with a dented corner earns $400-$680 in store credit. An M1/M2 Air with a corner ding earns $200-$390. Intel-era Pros (2016-2019) with a dented corner earn $90-$210. Use the calculator above for your exact model.
Why doesn't Apple take dented MacBooks for trade-in?
Apple's trade-in inspection treats any dent, ding, or cosmetic damage as physical damage — their offer typically drops to a small fraction of working value, or to zero on older models, because the housing fails their cosmetic checks. We quote from surviving parts value instead, so the board, screen, keyboard, and battery still count regardless of how the corner looks.
My MacBook only has a small dent on one corner. Is it still worth full value?
Almost. A cosmetic-only corner dent on a machine that boots, charges, and has a clean screen is the best-case drop damage — the most valuable components survived, and your quote reflects a healthy board, screen, and battery. A small corner ding typically takes off less than 10% compared to the same Mac in pristine condition.
The corner is dented and the screen has a bright spot or crack near the edge. What now?
When a corner dent reaches the display — a bright pressure spot, hairline crack at the bezel, or dead pixels near the impact — we quote the screen as damaged and price the logic board, battery, keyboard, and chassis from their surviving value. You still get a real quote; it's just lower than a dent-only machine because the panel is the second most expensive component.
I dropped it on concrete and the corner is dented but everything still works. Should I trade it now or keep using it?
If everything works today, your quote is at its highest today. Corner dents don't heal, and continued use can stress the housing further — a corner dent that's cosmetic now can eventually pinch the display flex cable or let dust into the screen assembly. Trading while everything still works nets you the best credit.
Will a case or skin hide the dent? Should I just cover it up?
A case hides the cosmetics but doesn't fix the underlying problem — if the dent changed the fit of the lid, shifted the hinge alignment, or put pressure on the battery, a case just delays noticing it. If you plan to keep using the Mac for a year or more, a case is fine. If you're thinking about upgrading soon, trading now while everything still works nets a better number than waiting.
Does it matter which corner is dented?
Slightly. A dent near the MagSafe or USB-C charging port can stress the port housing — we check that specifically. A dent near the hinge can affect how the lid closes. A dent on a front corner (near the trackpad) rarely reaches anything critical. But the biggest factor is always whether the Mac boots and the screen is clean — corner location is secondary.
That corner dent doesn't define your Mac's value. Your next Mac is waiting.
Walk in Tue-Sat 10am-7pm at 731 E Center St #200, Marion OH — or use the calculator to get a number right now.