Practical repair-or-replace guides.
Short, honest reads. No SEO padding. Each guide is written to help you make the actual decision in front of you.

The old shortcut says: if the repair costs more than half of a new one, replace it. It's a useful starting point, but it's not the full picture. Age, expected remaining lifespan and energy efficiency change the answer in both directions.
A repair quote that surprises you isn't always wrong — labour, callout fees and parts have all gone up. But a quote can also be inflated, padded with unrelated work, or quoted on the wrong fault. Before you accept or reject, run a few quick checks.
Two identical washing machines, both with a €250 pump fault. One is 2 years old. One is 11 years old. Same cost, completely different decision. The reason is that repair doesn't reset the lifespan — and the older the unit, the closer the next failure.
If you compare a €300 repair against a €250 unknown-brand replacement, replacement always "wins" — but you're comparing against a unit that may not last 3 years. The honest benchmark is a like-for-like replacement: same capacity, same class, comparable expected lifespan.
Most repair-or-replace tools ignore refurbished. That's a mistake — a certified refurbished unit at 50–70% of new price, with a real warranty, can be the cheapest correct answer. Here's how to compare it honestly against repairing what you already have.
