Buying a Used Laptop? Checks That Matter Before You Pay
A used laptop can be a sensible purchase for study, home office or light business use, but condition matters more than the listing description. A clean-looking laptop can still have a weak battery, failing SSD, damaged hinge, locked firmware or a screen issue that only appears after warm-up.
Before paying, check that the laptop starts from cold, charges reliably, and runs long enough to test. Look for case gaps, swollen battery signs, hinge cracking, missing screws and screen pressure marks. Test the keyboard, trackpad, webcam, speakers, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and USB ports.
Storage and accounts are important
Ask whether the storage has been wiped properly and whether Windows activates. Make sure there is no previous owner account, BIOS password, management lock or BitLocker prompt. If a laptop cannot be reset cleanly, it may not be ready for normal use.
Storage health is also worth checking. A used laptop with an ageing drive may feel fine for a short demo but fail later when updates or file transfers begin.
Think about future repairability
Some thin laptops have soldered memory or storage, making upgrades limited. Others are easier to service and can be more practical long term. The right choice depends on what you need the laptop to do.
AEPC / AKL East PC can assess laptops, upgrades and repair options in Auckland. If you already bought a used device and want it checked, contact us with the model and symptoms or visit 9/28 Torrens Road, Burswood.