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MacBook won't charge – MagSafe, USB-C port and charging faults

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Quick answer

When a MacBook won't charge, the cause in priority order is: 1) the charger or cable itself (test with a known-good charger), 2) debris in the USB-C port (check with a flashlight), 3) a faulty charging port or controller on the logic board (requires repair at our workshop).

My MacBook won’t charge — quick diagnosis

95% of all “won’t charge” cases have one of three causes:

  1. The charger is dead — test with another, known-good charger
  2. The port is full of lint — shine a light inside, use compressed air
  3. The cable is broken — check for visible damage, especially at the connector

If none of those three resolves it, it’s the charging circuit on the logic board — and that requires a specialist.

How to clean the USB-C port safely

USB-C ports are small and they collect lint from pockets and bags. Symptom: the charger only works at certain angles, or nothing at all.

  1. Power off the MacBook and unplug the charger
  2. Shine a flashlight into the port with an LED torch. You can spot dust as a grey lump at the back
  3. Use compressed air (a short burst, not too close)
  4. If dust is still stuck: use a wooden or plastic toothpick. NEVER metal (it shorts out the pins)
  5. Test the charger again

Which charger should I use?

MacBookRecommended wattage
MacBook Air M1/M2/M330W or higher USB-C
MacBook Pro 13” M1/M267W USB-C
MacBook Pro 14” M1/M2/M3/M470W or 96W USB-C
MacBook Pro 16” M1/M2/M3/M4140W USB-C MagSafe

You can always use a more powerful charger without risk — it only delivers what the MacBook is asking for. A charger that’s too weak will either charge very slowly or fail to keep up under load.

Where can I get it repaired?

We replace every type of charging port — USB-C, MagSafe 1, 2 and 3 — and we can repair burnt charging circuits at the component level via micro-soldering.

Typical turnaround: same day or the next day for in-person drop-off. Mail-in: 2-4 working days including shipping.

How to diagnose charging faults yourself

⏱ PT5M

  1. Test the charger first. Borrow a KNOWN-good Apple charger from another Mac and try it. Or test your charger on another Mac. If the other charger works = it was your charger. If your charger works elsewhere = it's the Mac.
  2. Shine a flashlight into the port. Lint and pocket dust are the most common cause of charging issues. If you can see a grey clump at the back of the USB-C port, that's the culprit. Use compressed air (a short burst) or a wooden/plastic toothpick. NEVER metal — it shorts out the pins.
  3. Test every USB-C port. On MacBooks with multiple USB-C ports: try each one. If only one port charges, the faulty port is a separate replacement (DKK 1,500-2,200) — you don't need to swap the whole logic board.
  4. Check the cable for kinks. Gently wiggle the cable at the charger and at the Mac connector. If charging cuts in and out depending on the angle, it's the cable (typically wear at the connectors). New Apple cable: DKK 200-400.
  5. Check the MagSafe connector for dust. On MagSafe models: check the magnetic contact pads for dust or discolouration. Wipe with a dry, lint-free cloth. Brown/black discolouration can indicate a burnt contact — get in touch with us.
  6. Book a diagnosis if nothing works. If no charger, no port and no cable works, it's the charging circuit (PMIC) on the logic board. That requires micro-soldering with us: DKK 2,500-3,500. Diagnosis is free.

Frequently asked questions

My MacBook won't charge — what do I check first?
1) TEST THE CHARGER. Borrow another Apple charger and try. 2) CHECK THE PORT. Shine a flashlight inside — lint and debris are the most common culprits. Use compressed air or a wooden toothpick (never metal) to clean. 3) TRY EVERY PORT. On MacBooks with multiple USB-C ports: try each one. 4) If none of them work, it's the charging circuit — get in touch with us.
What does it cost to replace a charging port on a MacBook?
Between DKK 1,500 and DKK 3,500 depending on model and fault — DKK 1,500-2,200 for a MagSafe port on older MacBooks, DKK 1,800-2,800 for a USB-C/Thunderbolt port, DKK 2,500-3,500 if the fault is in the charging circuit (PMIC) on the logic board and requires micro-soldering. See the current price for your model at macmo.dk/reparation. With us you get a free diagnosis and a fixed quote before we start.
My USB-C port is loose — can it be repaired?
Yes. A loose USB-C port is typically caused by broken solder joints between the port and the logic board. We can re-solder the port or replace it entirely. Important: stop using the port — loose contacts can short out and burn the charging circuit.
Should I use original Apple chargers?
Originals or MFi-certified are best. Cheap USB-C chargers from unknown brands can deliver uneven voltage and burn out the charging controller on your MacBook. Don't save DKK 200 on a charger if it means a DKK 3,000 repair later.
My MagSafe LED doesn't light up — is the charger dead?
Often yes, but not always. First check whether the cable has snapped at the connector (common wear). Test the charger on another Mac. If the LED doesn't light up there either, it's the charger. If it does light up there, it's the MagSafe port on your MacBook — get in touch with us.