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iPhone Repairs for Blackpool carried out by Apple certified technicians.

There are so many reasons to choose SimplyFixIt for your iPhone Repairs. Our technicians are certified by Apple. We use the highest quality screens available, including genuine Apple screens, and we pay our staff the Real Living Wage.

For over 25 years we have carried out computer and other IT repairs for people who came into our shops, and now we can give the people of Blackpool the same quality of repairs for their iPhones.

Mail-In iPhone Screen Repairs for Blackpool, by SimplyFixIt

People from Blackpool choose SimplyFixIt as their iPhone repair company because we offer the highest standards of repairs, including using genuine Apple screens, which typically can't be matched by a local independent computer store. They post us their iPhone, which is professionally repaired, and returned by a secure overnight courier. In most cases, they receive their iPhone back 2 days after they post it to us.

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At SimplyFixIt, we believe that doing things right is better than doing things quickly, so there may be some cases where we need just a bit longer to get your iPhone ready. Don't worry though, as soon as the iPhone repair is completed, we'll be in touch to let you know. We can then arrange a secure, express delivery back to Blackpool.

SimplyFixIt customers near Blackpool

We Fix iPhones for people from all over the country, including near Blackpool. Chances are that you live close to one of our customers already. Here is a map of the people1, who live near Blackpool, that have had their iPhone fixed by SimplyFixIt recently. They have posted their iPhone to us, and then we repaired it and sent it back using an insured, overnight courier service.

1For security & data protection reasons, we are not showing the exact location of our customers. We apply slight randomness to the location markers, so they don't show the exact address. The markers fall in a slightly different location each time, but the general area is correct.

picture of Blackpool.

Send your iPhone to us via Royal Mail Special Delivery, which should provide you with adequate insurance. We will fix it and return it to you without any fuss.


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More about Blackpool

Blackpool (listen) is a town and seaside resort on the Lancashire coast in North West England. The town is on the Irish Sea, between the Ribble and Wyre estuaries, 15 miles (24km) northwest of Preston, 27 miles (43km) north of Liverpool, 28 miles (45km) northwest of Bolton and 40 miles (64km) northwest of Manchester. It had an estimated population of 139,720 at the 2011 Census, making it the most populous town in Lancashire.

Throughout the Medieval and Early Modern period, Blackpool was a coastal hamlet in Lancashire's Hundred of Amounderness, and remained such until the mid-18th century when it became fashionable in England to travel to the coast in the summer to improve well-being. In 1781, visitors attracted to Blackpool's 7-mile (11km) sandy beach were able to use a new private road, built by Thomas Clifton and Sir Henry Hoghton. Stagecoaches began running to Blackpool from Manchester in the same year, and from Halifax in 1782. In the early 19th century, Henry Banks and his son-in-law John Cocker erected new buildings in Blackpool such that its population grew from less than 500 in 1801 to over 2,500 in 1851. St John's Church in Blackpool was consecrated in 1821.

Blackpool rose to prominence as a major centre of tourism in England when a railway was built in the 1840s connecting it to the industrialised regions of Northern England. The railway made it much easier and cheaper for visitors to reach Blackpool, triggering an influx of settlers, such that in 1876 Blackpool was incorporated as a borough, governed by its own town council and aldermen. In 1881, Blackpool was a booming resort with a population of 14,000 and a promenade complete with piers, fortune-tellers, public houses, trams, donkey rides, fish-and-chip shops and theatres. By 1901 the population of Blackpool was 47,000, by which time its place was cemented as "the archetypal British seaside resort". By 1951 it had grown to 147,000 people.

Shifts in tastes, combined with opportunities for Britons to travel overseas, affected Blackpool's status as a leading resort in the late 20th century. Nevertheless, Blackpool's urban fabric and economy remains relatively undiversified, and firmly rooted in the tourism sector, and the borough's seafront continues to attract millions of visitors every year. Blackpool's major attractions and landmarks include Blackpool Tower, Blackpool Illuminations, the Pleasure Beach, Blackpool Zoo, Sandcastle Water Park, the Winter Gardens, and the UK's only surviving first-generation tramway.


Nearby Areas

Rhyl | Heswall | Gronant | Prestatyn | Runcorn | Daresbury | Bromborough | Bebington | New Ferry | Widnes | Prenton | Stockton Heath | Greasby | West Kirby | Hoylake | Great Sankey | Warrington | Birkenhead | Liverpool | Huyton | Merseyside | Wallasey | Prescot | Burtonwood | St Helens

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