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I looked at the numbers for this for my personal devices:

- My iPhone is currently covered by apple care with the upgrade program but it does not have loss or theft, which would be an additional $4.16 a month (normally $10 a month)

- My Mac: $3.49 a month (doesnt include loss or theft)

- My iPad: $4.99

- Apple Watch: $2.99

- 2 different airpods, $15 a year each. $30 a year total. Roughly $2.50 a month

This is not including any homepods or apple tv's since I just don't see the point.

Even ignoring the difference in price with the upgrade program the best I can get for 3 devices would be iPhone + iPad + Mac coming to $18.

The $5.99 for adding more devices is more than every device except for an iPhone outside of the upgrade program.

The only people I really see benefiting are those with Apple Vision Pro since that is $25 a month. What am I missing about their calculation for this saving money?

I got all of these numbers from this page: https://www.apple.com/applecare/



Higher tier devices have higher AppleCare+ costs, so a Macbook Pro + iPad Pro + iPhone Pro = just short of $300 a year, if I did the math right. Also if you're someone who travels a lot or loses things this seems slightly better.

I've personally never had AppleCare on anything (even phones).


Financially speaking, you shouldn't insure what you can afford to repair or replace, unless you're well above average risk for some reason. Of course, peace of mind is an emotional calculation that may come out differently.


> Financially speaking, you shouldn't insure what you can afford to repair or replace, unless you're well above average risk for some reason.

I know that my MacBook and phone batteries wear out (<80%) pretty quick, and a single free replacement with AppleCare would pretty much let me break even on cost.


Weird. Must be unusual, otherwise AppleCare would cost more.


Right, although repair with Apple devices is a tricky/impossible cost calculation to make. I also remember the "good old days" when you could bring an iPhone with issues into the store and likely get a replacement just by asking nicely.


They still do that. I just replaced my 15 Pro which had a speaker problem. They gave me a brand new one and migrated everything there in the store for me. 100% battery health again. No money paid. Nearly 2 years old.


I turned screws in an Apple Store in that era, circa iPhone 3G/4.

Internally that policy was called “getting to yes” and it was a huge pain in the ass.

The idea: customer comes in with a broken screen. You surprise and delight them by getting a manager’s override on the cost. You say you can make an exception because it’s the first time, but the next screen will cost x.

The reality: customer comes in expecting free repairs. Any charge is an argument. Their cousin dropped like 5 phones in the toilet and they were all replaced for free, etc. It sucked.


> Internally that policy was called “getting to yes” and it was a huge pain in the ass.

I don't remember a "getting to yes" era, especially when I brought in my old MagSafe 2 charger whose cable insulation had worn out because of the type of plastic Apple used, spilling blue stuff all over my space.

All the Genius Bars I went to (in multiple countries) gaslit and blamed it on me storing my MagSafe charger wrongly, even though this was obviously Apple's fault. I wish I could have been surprised and delighted instead.

I still have it in a plastic bag somewhere, rotting away.


The era before they became waterproof and the screens got some decent durability were, I'm sure, a nightmare. The 3G in particular was a huge ergonomic and quality downgrade from the original iPhone, I had one of those break while just sitting in my pants pocket.


That’s not how risk management works.


For an individual it kind of is. To calculate the financial value of an insurance plan you would multiply the average cost of a claim by the probability of it occurring, and divide that by the average expected number of months until claim. For all insurance, the monthly fee is more expensive than the calculation above. This is obvious, because the insurance company needs to make a profit. This implies that no one should ever have insurance. *However,* some events are quite financially catastrophic, and the potential size of the financial burden warrants paying the premium. Examples include houses and cars. Most people can't afford to pay out of pocket if a house burns down.

In the realm of consumer electronics, why would you pay the premium if you can afford to replace the device? Unless, of course, you know you're prone to losing or breaking things.


Many insurance policies also have deductibles as an added cost if you actually need to use it making it even less valuable for things you can afford to fix/replace.


What wat points out is that if you have the finances to replace a device yourself at any point in time due to an _unlikely_ event, it's just a waste to pay a third party for the insurance if _you can handle the risk yourself_.

Applecare+ for an iPhone seems to run at about 80% of the device cost over 5 years, however if you were likely to buy a new device after 5 years anyhow then short of fully losing your new devices every 2.7 years (or replacing the screen every 8 months or so) you're at a financial loss to go with the insurance compared to just buying new devices when the need arises.


That's how I think about it as well. How should I be thinking about it?


Care to elaborate? There's some wiggle room with "afford" which should make it exactly how risk management works.


The liquid protection is nice. I never had it either because the only thing I was worried about was liquid and I'm quite careful with that, but last year someone spilled apple juice all over my stuff and it was an expensive bill, so I started to get applecare. The other thing is I got my wifes screen replaced in the mall last year and they said they replaced it with OEM apple but no way they did, it was junk, and no way for me to prove they used something that wasn't apple.


The repair market is a pretty horrible disaster zone of stories like that. I popped a 15" MBP screen a few years back and the (£500 paid) replacement lid+screen from a third party had the ghosting problem that was a problem on those. I tried to return it but the seller disappeared. Same with batteries - never last as well as the OEM ones.


If apple put some type of hard enough to copy engraving or watermarking on their stuff, that might help a bit, or a QR code that called back to an apple server that verified it's authenticity, then I could ask the person in the mall to show me it before putting it in. Welcome to HN btw, I like your username a lot.


They do that with hardware pairing but everyone moans at them. I'd rather get genuine parts than worry about my inability to put crap parts in!

Thank you. The name was shaming me into ironing a shirt for a formal event :)


... but that's because Apple won't sell original parts to 3rd party repair shops ...


They can buy them from selfservicerepair.com which is literally the Apple official parts distribution system.


That's the one that includes 200 kg worth of tools that you have to send back?

More malicious compliance.


You don't have to use the tools. I've used it to replace a duff USB-C port on my daughter's M2 air with my own tools (which happen to be exactly the same Wera ones that they send out if you want them to)

So that's two wrong points in a row? Not sure where you're getting your information from.


Good for you. I'd prefer to pay a 3rd party repair shop of my choice to do that, and have them handle ordering the part.

I'd also like to pay just for the part, not for receiving the tools and sending them back...


I typically get AppleCare on my phone and then get a new screen and battery right before the window is up. AppleCare is cheaper than the cost of those repairs plus I have the added peace of mind that if something bad does happen I have AppleCare. I don’t renew it as part of the monthly plan though.

I also don’t use a case or screen protector on my phone fwiw


Did you say liquids ? Our senior Siamese tips over anything full of water, and that zapped the wifey's Mac.


i regret not getting it on my iphone bc the screen cracked and coming from android i had no idea apple would charge nearly half the price of the phone to repair it


The pricing on that page is From pricing; more expensive models have more expensive premiums - see e.g. https://www.apple.com/legal/sales-support/applecare/applecar... says iPhone AppleCare+ costs between $7.99 and $13.99 on a monthly plan.


It also doesn't look like it would cover spouse/kid devices in Family.

Can I add my family’s devices to my AppleCare One plan?

AppleCare One plans can cover devices that are on the same Apple Account as the subscriber.


Adding AppleCare to older devices with degraded battery life (as I understand, you will be able to replace them for free if they fall below 80%) is a phenomenal deal, in my opinion. This also includes accidental spill coverage. You can always stop coverage when you're not using them.


> What am I missing about their calculation for this saving money?

It’s a psychological thing I think. People will balk at paying $400 upfront to cover their Macbook for three years but $20 per month? No problem!


That's why cable TV doesn't let you pay a lump sum up front for long-term access, I guess.




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