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Pre-Owned to Premium: How High-Spec Refurbished PCs Changed Tech Retail in Q1 2026


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Pre-Owned to Premium: How High-Spec Refurbished PCs Changed Tech Retail in Q1 2026


Refurbished products are now becoming long-term primary devices for consumers, according to our latest market intelligence data. Across top European markets, especially the UK and France, pricing and product mixes are changing. The new rules under the 2026 Right to Repair legislation bring profitable opportunities for the European retailers, alongside urgent supply chain warnings.

"The refurbished market is steadily moving upmarket," noted Jacky Chan, CONTEXT ESG Global Research Lead. "Demand is no longer being driven purely by affordability. Customers are prioritising performance, longevity, and quality, and that is reshaping both pricing and product mix across Europe."

Our key market highlights reveal exactly how these changes affect the retail sector.

Revenue is Outpacing Volume

Interestingly, while overall unit sales remained flat in Q1 2026, market revenue grew by 10% compared to last year. Refurbished notebooks led this upward trend with a 12% increase. Customers are spending more per purchase, driving higher profit margins for retailers even without a corresponding bump in total sales volume.

The UK Leads European Adoption

Regionally, the UK market is outperforming the rest of Europe and anchoring the wider growth. Sales volumes doubled between Q4 2024 and Q4 2025, allowing the UK to officially overtake Germany in total market share. British shoppers are highly receptive to refurbished technology right now, proving that the old stigma of buying used electronics has faded, replaced by a modern focus on smart spending and sustainability.

Premium Specs are Taking Over

On the other side of the growing acceptance for refurbished devices is a clear desire for power.  Buyers are actively choosing better, faster devices rather than settling for outdated tech. Consequently, the premium €500–€600 price bracket jumped from a mere 5% to a 19% market share in Q1 2026. High specs are the new standard: laptops with 16GB of RAM now make up nearly 70% of sales, signalling that retailers need to adjust their inventory towards these high-performance machines.

Additional Key Market Highlights

This push towards premium devices has created several ripple effects across the broader market:

  • Lower-spec demand is shrinking: Sales of lower-priced refurbished systems (€200–€300) declined by 6% year-on-year in Q1. Basic 8GB systems are experiencing a sharp drop in market share, becoming notably less attractive to buyers even when heavily discounted.
  • Growing demand for complete solutions: Rather than buying standalone hardware, shoppers are increasingly looking for complete setups to help them get the most out of their premium technology. This opens a major opportunity for retailers to build basket sizes with set-up services, ongoing care plans, and relevant accessories.
  • B2B expansion: Beyond individual consumers, the B2B sector, particularly small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), is driving significant demand as businesses seek out high-spec refurbished devices to cost-effectively upgrade their professional fleets.

Preparing for the Future

To capitalise on these trends, retailers must implement strict stock quality controls in early 2026 to prevent customer dissatisfaction and prepare for the Right to Repair directive. By mandating greater availability of spare parts and improving repairability, this legislation will further legitimise the sector. Ultimately, this new landscape will reward retailers who proactively embrace this growing circular economy.

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