You bring dead machines back to life. Your website looks like it needs the repair.
Computer repair customers arrive in a hurry and a little afraid — of the repair bill, of losing their files, and of handing a stranger a device that contains their entire life. They're deciding between you, the big-box counter, and 'maybe I just buy a new one,' usually within an hour of the thing breaking. If your site doesn't answer the three questions in their head — what will it cost, how fast, and is my data safe with you — they default to the option with the national brand. We rebuild repair-shop sites to answer all three before the customer finishes their coffee.
Every computer repair walk-in is doing the same math in the parking lot: what's the fix cost, versus what's a new machine cost, and is my stuff safe either way. A dead laptop is a $0 trade-in or a $150 repair, and the customer genuinely doesn't know which — so the shop that publishes a free or flat diagnostic, real prices for common repairs, and typical turnaround wins the visit from the shop that says 'call for pricing.' The other half of the decision is trust. That machine holds tax returns, photos, passwords, and browser history, and handing it to a stranger feels like handing over a diary. A short, plain data-privacy promise on the site does more for conversions than any coupon.
The bigger money most repair shops leave invisible is the business lane. Every small office within five miles — the dental practice, the law firm, the property manager — has computers, no IT guy, and a breaking point coming. The shop they already trust with a laptop screen is the natural choice for managed IT, backups, and 'just keep our stuff running' contracts at recurring monthly rates, but only if the website says that lane exists. Most repair sites read purely retail — cracked screens and virus removal — so the office manager who needs a real IT partner never realizes the shop around the corner does exactly that, and signs with a national MSP instead.
The four ways repair websites lose money
We've audited hundreds of computer repair shop sites. The same problems show up over and over — and every one of them costs you a customer who was ready to pay.
'Call for pricing' on everything
The customer is deciding between a repair and a new laptop, and they can't do that math without a number. A shop that publishes 'screen replacements from $129, free diagnostic, no fix no fee' gets the walk-in; a shop that hides every price reads like it charges whatever it can get away with.
No turnaround promise anywhere
The machine that broke is the machine they work on, study on, and live on. 'How long will this take' is half the decision, and most repair sites never answer it. 'Most repairs done same or next day' is one sentence, and it beats competitors who make speed a mystery.
Data privacy is never mentioned
Every customer is quietly wondering what happens to their files, photos, and passwords while the machine is in your back room. A plain promise — what you access, what you don't, how data is handled during recovery — turns the most anxious visitors into customers. Silence turns them away.
The business IT lane is invisible
Recurring managed-IT contracts are the best revenue in the building, and most repair-shop sites never mention serving businesses at all. The office manager with 12 aging workstations reads your site, sees cracked-screen retail, and signs a national MSP instead.
The vibe we'd build for a computer repair shop
Repair customers arrive anxious about three things: the bill, the wait, and their data. The vibe: clean workbench blue, warm desk-lamp amber, honest flat-rate numbers in big type — a shop that looks organized enough to trust with your entire digital life.
Built for how a computer repair shop actually wins work
A computer repair website wins by answering cost, speed, and data safety before the customer walks in — and by making the business lane visible to the offices that need it.
Flat-rate pricing, published
Free or flat diagnostic, real prices for the common repairs — screens, batteries, virus removal, tune-ups — and a no-fix-no-fee policy if you have one. Numbers on the page are what separate you from the counter that quotes whatever the day requires.
A turnaround promise in the hero
'Most repairs done same or next day' — stated up top, with honest exceptions for parts orders and data recovery. Speed is half the purchase decision, so it belongs in the first screen, not the FAQ.
A data privacy and security promise
What your techs access, what they never touch, and how customer data is handled during transfers and recovery — in plain English on its own section. It answers the fear every customer has and almost no shop addresses.
A page per repair
Screen replacement, battery, virus and malware removal, data recovery, Mac repair, PC repair, water damage — each its own rankable page with pricing guidance and turnaround. 'MacBook screen repair near me' should land on your MacBook page, not a generic services blurb.
A managed IT / business lane
Backups, security, email, on-call support for small offices at a monthly rate — its own page, speaking to the office manager, with response times and what's included. One signed contract outearns a month of walk-ins.
Hours, map, and reviews doing the local work
Repair is a proximity business. Hours that match reality, an embedded map, parking notes, and your Google reviews pulled onto the page — the boring local signals that decide which shop gets the drive over.
Old site gone, new site live, in 7 days.
Audit & quote
60-minute call. We tell you exactly what's broken and lock a fixed price before you hang up.
Design + copy + SEO
You watch the real site take shape in the browser. We write the copy and wire the schema.
You review, we polish
One round of revisions, applied the same day. No tickets. No project-manager relay.
Launch — you keep the keys
Your domain, your hosting, your code. No platform lock-in, no retainer, no hostage situation.
Computer Repair websites, built market by market
Everything happens over a call and a shared screen — no office visit, no markup for geography. These are the markets we focus on:
Before you call
Every repair is different once we open the machine. How can we publish prices?
Publish the entry point and the common cases, not a promise for every motherboard. 'Free diagnostic, screens from $129, most repairs $79–$199' is honest, matches how customers actually shop, and beats 'call for pricing' every single time — because the customer is comparing your unknown against a known new-laptop price, and an unknown loses. The diagnostic is your protection: the published number gets them in the door, the diagnostic sets the real quote, and no one feels baited.
Half the people who'd use us just buy a new computer instead. Can a website change that?
That's exactly the customer the website is for. They're not choosing between repair shops — they're choosing between repair and replacement, and they assume repair is slow, sketchy, and barely cheaper. A site that shows real prices, same-day turnaround, and a data-safety promise reframes the math: $149 and back by tomorrow with your files intact, versus $800, a weekend of setup, and everything to migrate. You don't win them all, but right now you're losing them without getting to make the argument.
We'd love steady business clients instead of walk-ins. Does the website really matter for that?
It's usually the missing piece. Small offices don't find IT partners through ads — the office manager searches, asks around, and vets whoever's nearby. If your site is all cracked screens, you've told her you're a consumer shop, and the national MSP gets the contract. A dedicated business page — what's covered, response times, monthly pricing structure, a couple of local references — is often the only thing standing between a repair shop and its first five contracts. It's the highest-leverage page we build for this trade.
What does it cost, exactly?
Three fixed packages: $1,500 for a 5-page rebuild with full SEO in 7 days, $3,800 for up to 20 pages with a blog, lead forms and integrations in 14 days, and $8,000 for 100+ page builds with a custom hero video, calculators and lead funnels. The quote we send before you sign is the number on the final invoice — no scope-creep charges, ever.
Ready to bulldoze your computer repair shop's website?
Tell us your domain. We'll send a brutal audit of what's broken, with a fixed quote to fix it. No sales call required.
Got it. Your teardown is on its way to — we reply within 24 hours.