Glass Repair vs Full Screen Assembly — What’s the Difference? (Singapore Guide)

Glass repair and full screen assembly replacement are two very different repairs. Glass-only repair replaces just the outer protective layer. Full assembly replaces the entire screen module including display, digitiser, and glass. Knowing the difference saves you from being overcharged or getting a worse result than you paid for.

Why this distinction matters

Many customers come in saying “I just cracked the glass” expecting a cheap glass-only repair — and are surprised when the technician recommends a full assembly. Understanding why helps you trust the diagnosis and compare quotes accurately.

Glass-only repair

What’s replaced: The outer Gorilla Glass or equivalent protective layer only

Cost: Lower — typically $30–$80 less than a full assembly

Time: Longer — the glass must be carefully separated from the display using heat and suction tools

When it’s appropriate: Only when the glass is cracked but the display underneath still shows perfectly — no dead pixels, no touch issues, no discolouration, no backlight bleed

Glass-only repair involves using a heated separation tool to lift the cracked outer glass from the display panel beneath, then bonding a new piece of glass to the same display. The risk: if the display is damaged during separation (a real possibility, especially on curved screens or if the crack is deep), you’ve now created a more expensive problem. At Certified Phone Repair, we assess the damage before recommending glass-only repair and will always tell you upfront if the risk is too high for your specific device.

⚠️ Important: Glass-only repair is not available on all phones. Curved screens (Samsung S-series, some iPhone models) are significantly harder to separate safely. Some technicians will attempt glass-only on curved screens and damage the display in the process. Always confirm your screen type before agreeing.

Full assembly replacement

What’s replaced: The entire screen module — glass, digitiser (touch layer), and display panel as a single unit

Cost: Higher — but includes a fully new display, not just the glass

Time: 30–60 minutes for most models

When it’s required: When the display is damaged (lines, dark patches, discolouration, touch not working, black screen) — or when glass separation risk is too high for the device

Full assembly replacement swaps the complete screen unit as one piece. This is the standard repair for cracked screens where any display damage is present, and the correct approach for all OLED phones where glass separation carries significant risk. The result is effectively a brand-new screen experience.

How to assess your own damage

What you see Likely repair needed
Cracked glass, display shows perfectly, touch works Glass repair may be possible — technician must assess
Cracked glass with dark patch or bleed spreading from crack Full assembly — display is damaged
Lines or dead pixels on screen Full assembly — display panel is damaged
Touch not responding in areas Full assembly — digitiser is damaged
Completely black screen after drop Full assembly (or connector issue — technician must check)
Glass cracked on curved Samsung S-series Usually full assembly — curved glass separation risk is high

What the digitiser is

The digitiser is the touch-sensitive layer that sits between the outer glass and the display panel. It translates your finger touches into commands the phone can understand. In almost all modern smartphones, the digitiser is laminated directly to the display panel — which is why “touch not working” usually means full assembly replacement, not a simple digitiser-only repair.

Related terms

  • OLED vs LCD — screen type affects which repair is viable
  • Grade A Parts — what quality of replacement assembly to expect
Not sure what repair your screen actually needs?
Walk in to Westgate or AMK Hub. We assess your screen for free and tell you exactly what’s damaged before we quote anything.

📱 WhatsApp +65 9678 0203

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