Apple - Can Apple refuse service under warranty if an iPhone presents only some scratches?

I have had some personal experience with this type of warranty problem. I had an iPhone 3GS which had stress cracks in the white case. I left the phone in my pocket the day before my genius appointment, and hey presto it went in the washing machnie.

It came out dead! I took it in, told the gyt what had happened, he took one look at the cracks, and replaced the unit.

Legaly with warranties - if there was a problem with the product at the time of purchase you are able to take a refund without any quibble.

Going back to your specfic case, a few scratches on the phone will go down to standard wear and tear, and cannot be expected to be the cause of overheatingt. Obviously if the scratches are deep so deep in fact the phone is in bits then they won't refund or replace.


Before seeking a repair, you might want to do some troubleshooting of your own. Sometimes a runaway process can cause an iPhone to overheat. Chris Breen provides some tips in Troubleshooting a battery-sucking iPhone 4S. I solved a problem I had with my own overheating iPhone 4 by wiping the phone and reinstalling the OS. I did a fresh install, I didn't restore the phone from a backup. (This was when iOS 5 was first release, many of these problems have been sorted out now by OS updates.)

If you can't solve the problem yourself the next step is to take the phone to an authorized Apple repair center, in general an Apple Store. Which brings the warranty into play:

From Apple's (US) warranty for the iPhone 4

This warranty does not apply: (a) to consumable parts, such as batteries or protective coatings that are designed to diminish over time, unless failure has occurred due to a defect in materials or workmanship; (b) to cosmetic damage, including but not limited to scratches, dents and broken plastic on ports; (c) to damage caused by use with another product; (d) to damage caused by accident, abuse, misuse, liquid contact, fire, earthquake or other external cause; (e) to damage caused by operating the Apple Product outside

They're not going to cover damage caused by misuse and they're not obligated to replace parts to fix cosmetic damage made by the user, though they will if its is a manufacturing or design fault. Your attitude when dealing with the Genius/Repair Tech may influence the outcome so I advocate being polite, pleasant and not acting like you are entitled to extra service.

If the damage is as you describe, I doubt you'll have any difficulties. In general, it is my experience that Apple tries to err on the side of the consumer. If the damage is worse than you describe and the repair tech feels that it in some way responsible for the overheating, then service may be refused. If that happens and you feel this is unfair, escalate to the store manager and Apple Customer Relations as you feel appropriate. You can reach Customer Relations through just about any Apple support line by asking for that department by name.

In all likelihood, you're making a mountain out of a mole hill. Take the phone in and have an Apple tech have a look. You'll most likely be pleasantly surprised.

See also, Gigaom: Apple Tech Support Tips: 4 Steps to Bend Apple to Your Will


Short and simple, nope.

I had an iPhone 5, dropped caseless multiple times which resulted with huge dents in the corners and buffs and scratches all along the chamfered edges.

Then the phone's data communication antennas died. I took the phone into the apple store and they replaced my phone with a brand new one.

So from experience, they don't deny service if there are scratches (or in my case huge dints in the corners) if your device has encountered a major fault/failure for an issue that is covered by warranty.