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Friend Breaks MacBook, Offers To Pay For It—Now Her Friend Wants An Extra $500 For The Upgrade

by Layla Bui
November 25, 2025
in Social Issues

Accidents happen, but what do you do when a simple mistake turns into a financial nightmare? One man recently found himself in a dilemma when he accidentally broke a friend’s MacBook by sitting on it.

Owning up to his mistake, he offered to pay for the damaged device, agreeing to send her the original price of $2200. But things quickly escalated when she demanded more money, claiming that she was “upgrading” her MacBook and now expects him to pay for the new one.

With threats of a lawsuit in the air, the man is left wondering if he’s being taken advantage of, or if he’s truly responsible for paying for a new laptop.

Can a judge really rule in her favor, or is she just pushing for something unreasonable? Keep reading to see how this situation unfolds and whether he should agree to her demands or stand his ground.

A friend breaks a MacBook and agrees to pay, but now the friend demands more for an upgrade

Friend Breaks MacBook, Offers To Pay For It—Now Her Friend Wants An Extra $500 For The Upgrade
not the actual photo

'Sat down on my friend's MacBook and broke it, offered to pay her the money for it but now she wants more because "she was upgrading anyway" so it's this...

I had some of my friends over at my house and one of my friends invited one of her other friends to come over.

She had her MacBook on my couch when I sat on it and broke it.

Since it was completely my fault I offered to pay her the money for it and she agreed.

She got it 3 years ago and it cost 2200 dollars at the time.

I told her I'd wire you the money in a week to her bank account.

She's now emailed me saying that as per our conversation she's expecting the 2700 that I have agreed for!!!!

I didn't know why she added the extra money

so I got her number from my friend and called her to find her telling me

she's now expecting me to pay for her new upgraded MacBook since she was "upgrading anyway".

She said if I don't agree to do that she'll be suing me in small claims court. Can a judge agree to that?

Should I wire her the $2,200 or should I just tell her go sue me? Location is California.

Update: I went through every single comment from the 200+ ones

and I sincerely thank each and every one of you.

I did some research specifically for repairing the screen for the macbook

and for her particular model it’s around 310 for the screen + the labor cost

so I wrote her back saying that since she didn't accept my initial offer of $2200,

I’m withdrawing that offer, and offering to pay for the repair cost.

She sent me an email calling me a bitch and that she’s going to take me to court.

I got served a few days later and went to court. I told the judge I gave her three options to choose from.

1) either to write her a check for a brand new one which was 2200 dollars.

2) Get her a refurbished one from apple or a third party or even used which would be around 1400 dollars or

3) fix her current MacBook since the screen is the only thing affected here

and it would cost around 300 dollars plus money for labor.

(I printed out the email I sent her and the mail she sent back, refusing,

demanding the 2700 and calling me a bitch and saying we’ll go to court + screenshots

for the price quotes from different websites for a new/refurbished and the screen fix for her particular model)

and gave it to the judge.

I also told him that when I offered at the very beginning to get her a new one from the apple store

she said no I want the money in cash.

When I told her I’d give her 2200 for a new one she said okay

but later came asking for 2700 because she wants to upgrade.

I tried to show him how it's clearly visible that she's trying to take advantage of me.

She gave the judge an attitude almost the whole time which really pissed the judge off and helped my case I guess.

After listening to both of us he ruled that I pay 50% of the repair cost since she negligently left her laptop on the couch.

So I'll only be paying not more than 200-250 dollars for the whole thing.

If it weren’t for you guys I would’ve paid $2,200 dollars instead of around $200

and I honestly loved her look at the end as we walked out.

When someone accidentally damages a friend’s device and offers to pay, the gesture signals responsibility and goodwill.

In this case, the OP sat on a friend’s laptop and broke it, acknowledged the fault, and offered to pay the original purchase price. That admission and offer are commendable, showing the OP’s intention to repair the harm they caused.

But the shift when the friend increased the demand to include an upgrade changes the dynamic. The core emotional layer here is the tension between accountability and fairness.

The OP is owning a mistake. The friend is now asking for more than the loss caused, and that raises questions about what is truly owed.

From a legal standpoint in California, courts focus on actual damages, that is, the real financial loss resulting from someone’s actions, not speculative or self‑chosen upgrades.

The California small claims court rules make this clear: “Only cases for money for actual damages can be filed in Small Claims court.”

A claim must be anchored in what the person actually lost due to the incident, not what they wished for. The OP’s friend is requesting an amount tied not only to the broken MacBook but to a new upgraded model she would have bought, this exceeds what the OP directly caused.

Furthermore, in property‑damage contexts, our legal sources indicate that the correct measure is what it would cost to bring the damaged item back to the condition it was in or what it was worth at the time of damage, not what the claimant might choose to spend to upgrade.

One overview says that in California, the measure is “the fair market value of destroyed/damaged property … and the goal is to put the injured party in the same position it occupied immediately before the accident.”
Cozen O’Connor

So if the laptop was three years old and valued at less now than its original purchase price, the OP’s offer to pay the $2,200 (or the depreciated value) aligns with this principle.

In practice, if your friend tries to sue you in small claims, she’ll need to prove her loss, what the MacBook was worth before you broke it. She also needs to show why an upgrade was required as a result of your action, not simply because she decided to buy a better model.

Without that linkage, a judge is likely to limit an award to the value of the original device or the cost of an equivalent replacement. The “upgrade because I was already doing so” argument is unlikely to hold up legally.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

These users emphasize that the OP only owes the depreciated value of the laptop and not the full price of a new one

Biondina − You don't pay either of those amounts.

You pay the depreciated value of the MacBook as of the date your b__t sat on it, and not a dime more.

If she wants to upgrade, she can pay for that upgrade, and if she wants to sue, good luck to her.

No judge is going to award her more than the MacBook was currently worth.

Fuego_pants − You're pretty nice to be giving her 2200 anyway.

If she sued, she would likely only be entitled to the value of the computer at the time it was broken,

not how much she paid for it 3 years ago.

She's absolutely not entitled to 2700 just because she wants something nicer.

Lehk − I'm not even sure you are liable, she put a computer in a place for sitting, and it got sat on.

At most you would owe the depreciated value check eBay and Craigslist postings so you have a value to argue.

diphling − Hold up. Is your ass made of molten lava and melted the computer?

Did you do a 360 windmill bodyslam on it and obliterated all working components?

Was there an anti-matter imprint on your pants that annihilated the macbook?

...or did you just crack the screen?

Replacing a cracked screen is significantly cheaper than replacing an entire computer.

You should first figure out what exactly is wrong with it before you start forking out this sort of money.

Also stop associating with this "friend".

This group questions the circumstances surrounding the accident

jw_esq − Based on the hustle she's running on you for the amount of the computer,

I'm really suspicious that you "accidentally" sat on her computer.

More like she put the computer on a place that people normally sit and then waited to take someone for a ride.

r131313 − I would suggest that you probably don't even owe her the cost to replace the laptop,

but rather the cost to repair it. Think of it this way... if you run into someones car and cause some body damage,

the insurance company does not replace the vehicle, but, instead, they pay to repair it.

Only if the car was totaled would it be replaced.

A laptop screen, though expensive, is much cheaper than a new unit.

Your obligation is only to put her back into the position she was in before the incident... no more and no less.

If you know the model of the laptop, talk to Apple and find out the cost to replace the screen.

Offer her that much and no more.

If she wants to take you to court, and you have a quote for the screen,

I can't see a judge forcing you to pay even the adjusted replacement cost for something that could be easily repaired.

Also, I'm not sure if it would be covered, but it couldn't hurt to talk to your homeowners/renters insurance company

to see if your police would cover suck an incident (assuming you have insurance).

Amadmet − Everyone is talking about the amount OP should pay but I have some questions:

Could OP argue that leaving the macbook on the couch was careless and he is not responsible for the (full) damages?

Can we verify that the macbook worked before OP sat on it? can we rule out it was not left on purpose there?

I find it curious that the 'friend' is asking so much money.

Seeing as OP quickly agreed to pay the value of a new MacBook,

the 'friend' might have thought OP was a gullible victim.

WarKittyKat − Word of advice: document, in email or text, your offer to pay for the value of a used MacBook -

in exchange for a document stating that you are paid up.

There's a good chance if it does go to court that she'll try to claim you never offered to pay.

You want to be able to stand in front of a judge and say

"see, I offered to pay for a replacement and she wants me to pay for an upgrade. "

These users suspect the “friend” might be taking advantage of the situation

FFfanLorikal − Frankly, this smells of scam. Was the MacBook even working before she got there?

It's a $2,200 machine, even if 3 years old, either she's very careless or it was planned.

The last place you put a laptop on is a surface where people are expected to sit on and it can be hard to spot...

Even a living room table is iffy if there's drinks going around.

mynamesnotmolly − Her own logic isn't even sound. If she was actually about to upgrade,

it's a huge stroke of luck that somebody broke her current laptop. She already paid the $2200 for it 3 years ago.

The new laptop costs $2700. If nothing happened and she just went ahead and upgraded,

she would be paying the entire $2700. Instead, you break her current one and offer to pay her $2200,

so now she basically gets the upgraded laptop for $500. She's an i__ot for being such a greedy entitled p__ck.

It still benefits her if you give her the value of the depreciated laptop,

but it's satisfying to know that she basically talked herself out of an extra $1000. Let her take you to court.

ColonClenseByFire − I'd you do end up buying her a new laptop make sure you keep her old one.

She doesn't get a laptop that is repairable and a new one.

Bob_Sconce − "Hi so-n-so, Actually, I looked up the value of the computer you lost, and it was only $____.

I've wired that to you. I probably don't even owe you that

because you were negligent in leaving your laptop on the couch.

At most, though, you're only entitled to the value of the laptop you lost, not of a brand new computer.

You're welcome to take me to small claims court if you like (that might actually be sort of fun),

but the judge will tell you the same thing."

This group points out that the OP should pay for repairs or the value of the laptop as it was

grainzzz − How exactly is it broken? If it something like the screen then take it to an Apple Store and get an estimate.

Offer to pay for that and only that. Are you sure that the laptop ever worked before you sat on it?

parkscs − Your friend sounds like a class act. Time to get some new friends.

You owe her the value of the used laptop, not a new one. If she wants to sue you in small claims court,

she can expect to recover... the value of the used laptop.

[Reddit User] − Why on Earth would you wire her the money?

Write a check, if you don't have those, get a money order or cashiers check.

Don't pay the wire fee for such a small amount of money.

What do you think? Should the Redditor have paid for the upgrade, or is the neighbor being unreasonable? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below!

Layla Bui

Layla Bui

Hi, I’m Layla Bui. I’m a lifestyle and culture writer for Daily Highlight. Living in Los Angeles gives me endless energy and stories to share. I believe words have the power to question the world around us. Through my writing, I explore themes of wellness, belonging, and social pressure, the quiet struggles that shape so many of our lives.

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