Running hot, fans roaring, or shutting down?
Skip the $500 repair — trade it in.
An overheating MacBook is rarely a dead one — it's usually dried thermal paste, a clogged fan, or a swelling battery. But Apple's diagnosis often lands on a $475–$700 logic-board repair, and on older machines they decline it entirely. Meanwhile the screen, board, and keyboard usually still work perfectly. We quote from surviving parts value, so even a Mac that throttles or shuts down under load earns real store credit.
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" — runs hot, fans maxed under load | $300–$700 logic-board repair | $150–$320 | $420–$700 |
| MacBook Air M1/M2 (fanless) — throttles, hot to the touch, shuts down | $300+ diagnostic + repair | $70–$160 | $210–$420 |
| MacBook Pro 2016–2019 (Intel) — constant fan roar, thermal shutdowns | $300+ (often declined as too old) | $25–$80 | $80–$240 |
| Any MacBook — overheats then powers off, won't stay on under load | $475+ board-level repair | $30–$110 | $90–$380 |
Values shown in store credit toward any purchase. Cash equivalent available where noted.
Own a 2016–2019 MacBook Pro? Overheating was practically built in.
- ✕These Intel Pros ran hot from day one. Owners report constant fan roar, a chassis too hot to keep on a lap, and thermal throttling that tanks performance the moment you open more than a browser. Age and dried paste only make it worse — if yours sounds like a jet engine, you have a lot of company.
- ✕Apple's fix often blames the board. Once a machine is out of warranty and several years old, a thermal complaint frequently turns into a $475+ logic-board quote — or a flat refusal to repair. That math almost never pencils out on a 7–10 year old Mac.
- ✓The rest of the machine still counts. Overheating doesn't touch the Retina panel or the keyboard top case — and if the board survives our bench check, it still carries real value. A hot-running 2018 Pro is worth real credit.
- ✓M-series Macs run cool and quiet. The M1/M2/M3 chips sip power — a MacBook Air M1 or M2 has no fan at all. Trade up and the heat, the roar, and the throttling are simply gone.
How it works
Tell us how it overheats
Use the trade-in calculator, text Rick at (740) 223-5530, or walk in. Whether the fans never stop, the chassis burns your lap, or it shuts down mid-task — every overheating failure mode still quotes.
Full thermal bench check
Overheating is rarely terminal. We test the logic board, screen, battery, keyboard, and trackpad separately, and we check whether it's dried thermal paste, a clogged fan, a swollen battery, or a true board fault.
Ship free or walk in
Prepaid label if you're outside Marion, 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 an overheating MacBook toward a cool-running M1 or M2 and feel the difference the same day.
Why an overheating MacBook keeps most of its value
Heat is usually maintenance, not death. Dried thermal paste, a dust-clogged fan, or a swelling battery cause the vast majority of overheating — none of which destroys the logic board, the most valuable component. A thermal shutdown is the Mac protecting itself, not the board failing.
The headphone test for thermals. If it runs fine at idle and only overheats under load, the chip and board are healthy and the failure is in the cooling system — that's the best-case scenario and earns the highest quote.
Screens and keyboards hold value independently. A clean Retina panel runs $250–$450 as a part, and a working keyboard top case adds real money — neither cares how hot your machine gets.
A swollen battery is a safety reason to act now. One of the most common overheating causes is a swelling battery pressing on the heat pipe — that's a genuine hazard. Trade it in and we retire it safely while you still get full parts credit.
Related sell options
Frequently asked questions
Do you buy MacBooks that overheat?
Yes — a MacBook that runs hot, roars its fans, throttles, or shuts itself down is a routine trade-in. The screen, battery, keyboard, and chassis are almost always fine, so the machine keeps most of its parts value even when the thermals are a mess.
How much is an overheating MacBook worth?
It depends on the model and the cause. An M-series 14" or 16" Pro that runs hot under load earns $420–$700 in store credit. A throttling M1/M2 Air earns $210–$420. Intel-era Pros (2016–2019) with constant fan roar earn $80–$240 depending on screen and board condition. Use the calculator above for your exact model.
Why do MacBooks overheat as they get older?
Thermal paste between the chip and heatsink dries out and loses conductivity over years of heat cycles, fans pack with dust, and a swelling battery can push against the heat pipe. Intel-era Pros (2016–2019) ran hot from the factory and only got worse with age. Newer M-series Macs run far cooler, which is why an upgrade is such a noticeable difference.
My MacBook overheats and then shuts off. Is the logic board dead?
Usually not. A thermal shutdown is the Mac protecting itself — it means the chip got too hot, not that the board failed. The most common culprits are dried paste, a clogged or seized fan, or a swollen battery, all of which leave the logic board itself fully valuable. That's the best-case scenario for your quote.
How much does Apple charge to fix an overheating MacBook?
It depends what they blame. A fan or heatsink service runs a few hundred dollars; if they decide the logic board is the cause, you're looking at $475–$700+. On a machine more than a few years old, Apple often declines the repair entirely or quotes more than the Mac is worth.
Could it just be dust or thermal paste instead of a real problem?
Often, yes — and our free bench check sorts it out. A clogged fan or dried paste is a maintenance issue, not a dead Mac, and it doesn't touch the logic board or screen. If it turns out to be a simple thermal fix, your quote goes up, because the most valuable parts were never at risk.
Will Apple trade in a MacBook that overheats?
Apple's trade-in inspection slashes the quote for any functional defect — a Mac that throttles or shuts down under load typically drops their offer to a fraction of working value, or to zero on older models. We quote from surviving parts value instead, so the screen, board, battery, and keyboard still count.
Is it dangerous to keep using an overheating MacBook?
Sustained heat shortens the life of the battery and the logic board, and a swollen battery — a common cause of overheating — is a genuine safety risk that should be retired promptly. Trading it in while the screen, board, and chassis are still healthy gets you the most credit and gets a swelling battery out of your bag.
Don't put $500 into cooling. Put it toward a Mac that runs cold.
Walk in Tue–Sat 10am–7pm at 731 E Center St #200, Marion OH — or use the calculator to get a number right now.