How to refurbish an Android phone
Android refurbishment has more flexibility than iPhone — third-party parts work cleanly, the platform doesn't pair components by serial — but it also has three OEM-specific traps: Samsung's Knox, Google's FRP, and OnePlus's bootloader unlocking. This is the playbook for refurbishing Samsung Galaxy, Google Pixel, and OnePlus phones.
Step 1 — Run the diagnostic dial code
Each major Android OEM has a service-mode dial code that runs the full hardware diagnostic:
- Samsung: *#0*# — opens a built-in test menu (LCD, touch, sensors, speakers, camera, vibrator).
- Google Pixel: *#*#7378423#*#* (LG-derived) or use the Pixel Diagnostic Tool from the Play Store.
- OnePlus: *#808# opens the engineering mode test menu.
Run every test. Document any failure with a screenshot for the inventory record.
Step 2 — Verify FRP / account lock is off
Factory Reset Protection (FRP) on Android works similarly to Activation Lock on iPhone — wiping the device doesn't remove the previous owner's Google account binding. The legitimate way to clear it is for the previous owner to sign out before transfer (Settings → Accounts → remove Google account, then factory reset).
Samsung adds a second layer: Samsung Reactivation Lock (a separate Samsung account binding). See how to remove Samsung Reactivation Lock for the legitimate paths.
Step 3 — Check battery health
Android doesn't expose battery health as cleanly as iOS. Three approaches:
- AccuBattery (Play Store): estimates capacity from 3–7 charge cycles. Slow but accurate.
- *#*#4636#*#* hidden menu: shows raw battery info on most stock Android. May or may not show capacity.
- Samsung Members app: on Galaxy phones, runs an official battery diagnostic.
Below 80% capacity, replace before resale. Aftermarket batteries on Android don't trigger "Unknown Part" warnings the way they do on iPhone — you have more flexibility on parts source.
Step 4 — Test the screen
OLED panels on Galaxy and Pixel are common failure points. Run the OEM diagnostic's display test (full-color screens, dead-pixel scan). Watch specifically for:
- Burn-in on Always-On Display models (visible as faint clock outline on white screens).
- Green tint on Galaxy S22 / S23 (an early-production issue).
- Touch dead zones on the Pixel 6 / 7 series (Tensor G1/G2 era).
Step 5 — Knox warranty bit (Samsung only)
Settings → About phone → Status. The "Knox warranty void" field shows 0x0 (intact) or 0x1 (tripped). A tripped Knox bit means the device was rooted or had its bootloader unlocked at some point. Knox-tripped devices can't run Samsung Pay, Secure Folder, or Samsung Health, and resale grade drops a tier. The bit is one-way — once tripped, you can't reset it.
Step 6 — OEM-specific quirks
Samsung Galaxy: ultrasonic fingerprint sensors degrade silently — re-enroll a fingerprint and verify it still unlocks reliably. Replacement requires display swap.
Google Pixel: Tensor SoCs (G1, G2, G3) throttle aggressively under load. Run a 5-minute 4K60 video record stress test — if the phone stops or restarts, the SoC has had thermal damage.
OnePlus: the alert slider is a common point of failure. Toggle it between all three positions and verify it's recognized in Settings.
Step 7 — Repair and replace
2026 part cost benchmarks for the most common repairs:
- Battery (Galaxy S23): $25–$45 OEM-equivalent; install requires display heat-up.
- Screen (Pixel 8): $180–$240 OEM; $100–$140 aftermarket.
- Charging port (USB-C, all major Androids): $20–$40 part.
- Rear glass (Galaxy S22+): $40–$80 part; ultrasonic-sensor recalibration may follow.
Step 8 — Final wipe and grade
Settings → System → Reset → Erase all data (factory reset). Verify FRP is cleared by booting the device with no account signed in — should reach the home screen, not a Google sign-in prompt. Then physically grade and photograph for resale.
The Android economic edge
Android refurbishment generally has 5–10% higher gross margin than iPhone for the same device tier — third-party parts work, no OEM-only diagnostics, no parts-pairing penalties. The downside: per-model demand is lower, so unit velocity is slower. iPhone refurbishment trades thinner margins for faster turnover.