Everything you need to cover RepairScore
Assets, facts, context, and contact details for journalists and media partners reporting on EU product repairability and the Right to Repair movement.
Key Facts
Quick stats for journalists on deadline.
279
Products indexed
and growing
July 2026
EU R2R Directive
compliance launch
Free + Pro
Subscription model
starting at €3.99/mo
EU-first
Market focus
27 member states
About RepairScore
RepairScore is the EU's first consumer-facing repairability platform. Think Yuka, but for how fixable your appliances and electronics are. Users search any product to get an instant RepairScore: a transparent 0–100 rating that weighs spare parts availability, manufacturer support, community repair activity, and EU regulatory compliance.
The platform targets eco-conscious urban consumers aged 25–45 across the EU who want to make informed repair-or-replace decisions and save money in the process. With the EU Right to Repair Directive coming into force in July 2026, RepairScore sits at the intersection of a new consumer-rights wave and a growing sustainability movement.
RepairScore is free to use, with a Pro subscription (€3.99/month) and pay-as-you-go search credits for users who need detailed reports. The product index currently covers 279+ products across major appliance and electronics categories, with broad category expansion planned ahead of the July 2026 launch.
Built in Portugal, launched EU-wide. We believe the right to repair is also the right to reliable information.
From the Founder
“I got tired of guessing whether it was worth fixing my devices or just buying new ones. That decision, multiplied across hundreds of millions of EU households, is one of the biggest levers we have on e-waste. RepairScore exists to give every consumer the same intelligence a professional repair technician has, in seconds.”
Diogo Guimarães
Founder, RepairScore
Media Assets
All assets available on request. Email us with your publication and deadline and we'll respond within one business day.
Logo (SVG)
Primary logo in vector format, light and dark variants
Logo (PNG)
Rasterised logo at 2× resolution for print and web use
Product Screenshots
High-resolution screenshots of search, product detail, and scoring UI
Brand Guidelines
Colour palette, typography, logo usage rules, and tone of voice
Press Contact
Press FAQ
Quick answers for journalists on deadline.
What is RepairScore?
RepairScore is the EU's first consumer-facing product repairability platform. It assigns a transparent 0–100 score to electronics and appliances, combining EU EPREL data, iFixit teardown scores, spare parts availability, community repair data, and product age. Think Yuka, but for how fixable your devices are.
Who built RepairScore and why?
RepairScore was founded by Diogo Guimarães, a software engineer based in Porto, Portugal. The product was created to help EU consumers make informed repair-or-replace decisions by democratising access to the kind of repairability intelligence that professional technicians have.
How does the EU Right to Repair Directive relate to RepairScore?
The EU Right to Repair Directive (approved April 2024) must be transposed into national law by July 31, 2026. It grants EU consumers the right to repair over replacement, mandates spare parts availability, and prohibits software blocks on independent repair. RepairScore is built to help consumers exercise these rights by making repairability transparent before purchase.
How many products does RepairScore cover?
RepairScore currently indexes 279+ products across 10 categories: smartphones, laptops, tablets, washing machines, dishwashers, refrigerators, vacuum cleaners, televisions, ovens, and cameras, all EU market products. The database is actively expanding ahead of the July 2026 R2R Directive launch.
How can journalists access media assets?
All media assets (logos, product screenshots, brand guidelines) are available on request. Email press@repairscore.eu with your publication name and deadline. We respond within one business day.
RepairScore in the News
Coverage and mentions from journalists and media.