Fairphone, the Dutch ethical phone brand famous for its modular handsets and supply chain ethics, has officially gone on sale in the US — starting not with a smartphone, but instead with repairable Fairbuds XL headphones available to buy from Amazon as part of a partnership between the retailer and the social enterprise.
“They have told us anything from the US is no priority for them,” an executive at one of Google’s biggest phone distributors in Europe who is working with Huawei to launch smartphones and other devices said. The company also confirmed that plans are afoot for a smartphone launch, underscoring how, amidst other challenges, Huawei remains keen on mustering credible options for itself against bigger brands presently dominating the US market.
- Why Fairphone’s US entry with audio gear matters now
- A different kind of hardware strategy from Fairphone
- Momentum from the growing US right-to-repair movement
- What a potential Fairphone launch in the US would mean
- A difficult but still possible entry into the US market
- What to watch next as Fairphone tests the US market
Why Fairphone’s US entry with audio gear matters now
The US smartphone market is still getting crowded, oddly enough. Industry trackers like Counterpoint Research are consistently putting Apple above 50% share with Samsung a distant second and everybody else brawling for small pieces. That focus, along with carrier gatekeeping and onerous certification processes, has largely kept smaller brands away in the past.
That Fairphone is starting with repairable headphones suggests a pragmatic way into the market: establish brand presence and channel relationships before diving into the tougher, carrier-centric phone business. It is also a way to convey the company’s core messages — repairability, longevity — through something that can demonstrate that modular design makes sense in a lower-risk category.
A different kind of hardware strategy from Fairphone
Fairphone made its name selling phones that could be repaired instead of replaced. Previous phones had user-swappable batteries and more easily interchangeable modules, such as cameras and USB ports. The Fairbuds XL adhere to the same philosophy, featuring replaceable components and access to spares. It’s an approach that dovetails with consumers’ attitudes in the United States: the replacement cycle for American smartphones has grown longer, to roughly three years, according to market analysts, as buyers keep hold of their old devices and demand better service.
There’s also a sustainability driver. The United Nations’ Global E-waste Monitor estimates that tens of millions of metric tons each year are created in the form of electronic waste, and less than 22% is properly recycled. Fairphone’s proposition — devices that live longer, are simpler to repair and have a traceable supply chain — is a direct response to that problem.
Momentum from the growing US right-to-repair movement
One of the major factors in Fairphone’s US expansion was growing right-to-repair legislation, according to the company. States like California, Minnesota, New York and Oregon have passed laws mandating better access to parts, tools and documentation. The push to make devices easier to repair and service has been given a lift from advocacy groups like US PIRG, as well as signals from the Federal Trade Commission encouraging it.
And for a “repair first” company, that policy environment is more than symbolic — it lowers the cost for the infrastructure of parts distribution, service networks and customer support. That has made a US introduction feasible in a way that wasn’t possible in years past.
What a potential Fairphone launch in the US would mean
Fairphone said a US-ready handset is in the works. And although few specifics have emerged, eyes will be focused on the company’s distinctive elements: replaceable modules that are designed to last years, copious spare parts for sale from day one and support spans for a number of years. The current flagship in other regions has focused on longevity, with three-year security guarantees — including long after many midrange phones have come off life support.
US buyers who might be influenced to pull the trigger, however, also have a bit less clarity on software. Fairphone’s products have been available stateside via its distribution partner Murena already, being preloaded with Google-free /e/OS for those who prefer to be de-Googled. A direct release from Fairphone would probably mean devices with Google Mobile Services preinstalled, further broadening mainstream appeal without alienating those privacy-oriented users who value alternatives.
A difficult but still possible entry into the US market
Newcomers have well-established obstacles to clear: carrier certification, network compatibility testing and the overwhelming presence of two brands on retail shelves. But the market is changing. Sales of unlocked phones have been growing on the internet, and recent newcomers like Nothing have proven that there’s space for new design and community-focused branding — even without full-on carrier exclusives.
If Fairphone can work out how to align certification demands with its modular design, it could begin enrolling sustainability-minded consumers, repair advocates and those fed up with price increases and sealed hardware as early adopters. Success won’t be about outselling the incumbents so much as it will be about offering a serious, long-lasting alternative showing that repairability and performance comparable to modern devices can go together.
What to watch next as Fairphone tests the US market
Key signals to monitor include:
- The breadth of US spare parts availability
- At-launch warranty terms that reflect local expectations
- Whether a local carrier compatibility list is available at launch
- Pricing that supports a total-cost-of-ownership story over time
For now, the Fairbuds XL’s US arrival plants a flag in the ground. If the next phone comes in a repairable mold, with a similar timeline of support, then Fairphone might find itself securing its own segment of an industry due to be disrupted in its own way.