VA TechTrade: a buy-back and refurbishment model for consumer tech

Making reuse of electronics viable. VA TechTrade logo, with a photo of a laptop
Type of organisation or company
Country
Ireland
City
Tullamore
Language for original content
Key Area
Project elaborated in partnership
No
Scope
Ongoing
Yes
Type of funding
Description

Electronic waste is one of the fastest-growing waste streams in the EU, yet many devices are discarded while still functional or economically repairable. VA TechTrade tackles this with a closed-loop model for consumer electronics. It buys back used laptops, tablets, phones and computers, refurbishes and quality-tests them to a verified working standard, and resells them with a warranty to customers across the EU.

The practice keeps devices in use for longer and displaces demand for newly manufactured hardware. By pairing buy-back with resale, it closes the loop at both ends of the product lifecycle: owners gain a responsible route to offload working devices, while buyers get an affordable, lower-carbon alternative to new.

A key barrier to reuse is consumer trust. VA TechTrade addresses this through standardised quality testing, clear grading and warranties, making refurbished technology a dependable mainstream choice rather than a compromise. Affordability also broadens access amid cost-of-living pressures, helping make circular consumption the default for everyday buyers.

The model shows how a commercial retailer can make reuse economically viable and scalable, turning end-of-first-life electronics back into desirable products and reducing premature e-waste.

Identified challenge (s)
Main results
  • Extends the lifespan of laptops, tablets, phones and computers through refurbishment instead of disposal. 
  • Diverts functional electronics from the waste stream, prioritising reuse over recycling. 
  • Builds consumer trust in refurbished tech through quality testing, grading and warranties. 
  • Makes lower-carbon, affordable devices accessible to buyers across the EU. 
  • Demonstrates a commercially viable, scalable model for mainstreaming reuse.