Skip to main content

Samsung’s new ‘Repair Mode’ is like a valet when your phone’s being repaired

Samsung is introducing a new feature for its phones that acts as a security valet when it is handed over to a repair outlet, ensuring that no personal data can be accessed by any unauthorized person. Dubbed Repair Mode, it can be enabled from the Battery and Device Care section in the Settings menu.

Once Repair Mode is enabled, the phone reboots and presents a UI that only allows the default apps to stay functional. All the apps you’ve installed on your phone, which contain valuable information, are locked. In repair mode, the phone also blocks access to photos, messages, and accounts signed up for different services.

As an added measure of security, Repair Mode can only be disabled after entering the phone password set by the owner. And in case you’re wondering, yes, you can choose to disable the security feature with a scan of your fingerprint — which is a more secure alternative to an alphanumeric password or PIN.

Repair mode feature for Samsung phones

Repair Mode will first make its way to Samsung Galaxy S21 series phones via a software update and will subsequently arrive on other Samsung smartphones. However, the company is yet to share an official list of devices that are compatible with Repair Mode.

A step in the right direction

Samsung’s Repair Mode offers some much-needed relief to people worried about the safety of their personal information when their phone is lying at a repair outlet. The concerns are legitimate, and there is no dearth of incidents where private data stolen from a phone was leaked from such repair shops.

In June last year, Apple agreed to pay millions of dollars to a 21-year-old student whose private images and videos were leaked after she sent her iPhone to an Apple repair store. According to a report from The Telegraph, the incident happened in 2016 at a repair facility in California.

Repairing a Samsung phone
Samsung

IndiaToday also reported on a similar case of a woman living in India’s national capital, who handed her phone over for fixing a broken screen. Soon, she started receiving calls from bad actors trying to extort her by threatening to leak personal media. In a span of just six months, the city’s police received over 300 reports of private data being stolen from women’s phones.

In another case, a woman started getting calls for ransom after she submitted her phone to a repair shop for a software update. Cybercrime investigators told the media that there is a nexus involving people working at shady repair outlets and bad actors trying to make easy money by blackmailing smartphone users.

Some safety steps you need to follow

Before sending your phone to a repair outlet, the best way to avoid data theft is to wipe it clean. But before that, make sure you have created a backup of all the data stored on your phone. You can either create a local backup on your PC or storage device, or save all the information on the cloud using services like iCloud or Google Drive.

Purple Samsung Galaxy S22 phone.
Andrew Martonik / Digital Trends

Once your phone returns from the repair, you can restore all that data with ease. If your phone has a microSD card in the slot, make sure to take it out. For eSIM devices, ensure that all cellular connectivity features are disabled, or you temporarily move that line to another phone before handing over your broken phone.

While your phone is in repair and you get a call asking for sensitive information like Apple ID, Google account credentials, or any OTP sent to your number with even a whiff of banking-related data, reach out to your device support channel. And, if needed, law enforcement authorities as well. Samsung’s Repair Mode doesn’t remove the need for these precautions, but it’s a great extra layer to ensure the repair process goes as smoothly as possible.

Editors' Recommendations

Nadeem Sarwar
Nadeem is a tech journalist who started reading about cool smartphone tech out of curiosity and soon started writing…
I’m glad the Samsung Galaxy Note died when it did
samsung galaxy note 20 ultra review rear

The Samsung Galaxy Note changed the mobile industry when it arrived, and it became a firm favorite with a lot of people. Its committed, passionate fanbase is perhaps only rivaled by those who love the iPhone.

But all that was a long time ago, and now in mid-2023, I’m very glad Samsung killed the Note when it did.
The Samsung Galaxy Note needed to die
Galaxy Note 10 Plus (left) and Galaxy Note 20 Ultra (right) Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

Read more
There’s a problem with Samsung’s folding phones, and it’s ugly
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 4 and Galaxy Z Flip 4.

Samsung is just a few weeks away from putting its fifth-generation foldable phones on the shelves. Of course, faster silicon, better cameras, and larger batteries are some of the iterative upgrades we’re all expecting. But more than anything, I hope Samsung has made the upcoming Galaxy Z Fold 5 and Galaxy Z Flip 5 a tad more durable.

It’s an obvious request, but a quick look at the real buyer experience with Samsung’s foldable phones adds a bit of urgency. Earlier this month, a Digital Trends reader wrote to us about a Galaxy Z Flip 4 that was used sporadically for merely two months before the pre-applied screen protector started peeling off, bubbles forming along the hinge crease, and the hinge making "a loud crackling sound."

Read more
I tried to replace my GoPro with this new phone and its clever camera
The Asus Zenfone 10, along with the Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra, Apple iPhone 14 Pro, and the GoPro Hero 11 Black.

The Asus Zenfone 10's camera is attached to a gimbal, and with it comes the promise of shooting steady, shake-free video even when you’re moving around.

Does this mean it can take on the mighty GoPro, and perhaps mean you only need to carry around one device instead of two? To find out, we put the Zenfone 10 against the latest GoPro camera and two of its smartphone peers.
Understanding the Zenfone 10’s gimbal
The gimbal can be seen working in the viewfinder Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

Read more