Physical & ownership inspection
Do this before the laptop is even switched on. Most expensive surprises — liquid damage, hidden repairs, stolen units, or a locked BIOS — can be caught here in a few minutes with just your eyes, your nose, and a couple of questions.
Confirm ownership & serial number Critical
A laptop that's reported stolen, or still tied to someone else's account, can be remotely locked or seized — leaving you with a paperweight. Verify the basics first.
- Ask for the box, receipt or invoice. The serial number on the receipt should match the sticker on the laptop's underside.
- Find the serial / service tag on the bottom panel. On Dell it's the "Service Tag", on HP/Lenovo the "Serial Number".
- Check warranty & original specs by typing the serial into the maker's support site — it confirms the model, age, and that the serial is real: Dell · HP · Lenovo · Asus · Acer
- Meet in a safe, public place and prefer a seller who'll let you test fully. Refusal to let you run checks is itself a red flag.
Do 2 minutes of homework first: search the exact model + "common problems" or "reddit" before you go (e.g. known hinge cracks, thermal throttling, coil whine, or whether the RAM is soldered). Knowing a model's weak points tells you exactly what to scrutinise.
Walk away if: the serial sticker is removed or tampered with, the seller won't show ID/receipt, the warranty lookup says the serial is invalid, or the price is suspiciously low for the model.
Check for a BIOS / firmware password Critical
A supervisor/BIOS password (common on ex-corporate machines) can block booting, changing settings, or reinstalling Windows — and it's often impossible to remove. Test it:
- Power on and immediately tap the BIOS key repeatedly: usually
F2,Del,F10, orEsc(varies by brand). - You should reach the BIOS/UEFI setup screen without being asked for a password.
- Check it's not an ex-corporate locked unit: no "Computrace"/"Absolute" set to Activated, no asset/ownership tag lock, and Secure Boot can be toggled. A Computrace-activated machine can be remotely bricked even after a fresh Windows install. (You'll also confirm company-management in Stage 7.)
Look (and smell) for liquid & impact damage Critical
Liquid damage often works for weeks, then kills the board. Corrosion is hard to fix and a deal-breaker at most prices.
- Smell the keyboard and vents — a sweet/sour or "electrical" smell hints at spilled liquid or burnt components.
- Tilt the screen in good light and look for sticky residue, discoloration, or corrosion around the keys and ports.
- Inspect ports closely (USB, charging) for green/white corrosion or bent pins.
- Check corners and the lid for cracks or dents that suggest a drop.
Many laptops have internal liquid-damage indicator stickers that turn red/pink when wet. If the seller is open to it, a quick look under the bottom panel can be revealing — but never force this.
Spot signs of prior repairs Important
Repairs aren't automatically a problem, but mismatched parts or sloppy work can mean trouble (and weaker resale).
- Stripped or mismatched screws on the bottom panel = it's been opened.
- Gaps or uneven seams in the chassis suggest a panel wasn't reseated properly.
- A non-original screen may have different bezels, slightly off colors, or a different coating (glossy vs matte).
- Ask directly: "Has anything been replaced or repaired?" — and watch the reaction.
Test the chassis, hinge & lid Important
- Open and close the lid slowly. It should move smoothly and stay put at any angle — no wobble, grinding, or the screen flopping back.
- Gently flex the chassis. Excessive creaking or a "soft" deck can mean a cracked internal frame.
- Press around the keyboard and palm rest — it shouldn't bend or click.
- Check rubber feet and the bottom panel are present and seated.
A slightly stiff hinge or minor scuffs are normal wear (P3 — cosmetic). A hinge that's cracking the chassis or lifting the bottom panel is a real problem.
First power-on & boot Critical
Now switch it on. You're checking it boots cleanly to a working Windows desktop you can control.
- It should power on, show the maker's logo, and reach the Windows desktop or a fresh setup screen.
- Ideally Windows is already set up to the desktop (not stuck on someone's locked account). If it's stuck on a password or a Microsoft account you can't access, you can't test it — and may not be able to use it.
- Listen for unusual fan noise, clicking, or beeps at boot.
- Note the time to desktop — very slow boots can hint at a failing drive (you'll confirm in Stage 5).
- The charger: use the laptop's own charger and check it's genuine and the right wattage for the model, the brick/cable aren't discoloured or smelling of burnt plastic, and it plugs in firmly without wiggling. A wrong/weak charger can stop it charging or limit performance.
Deal-breaker: the laptop is locked to an account/password the seller can't unlock, won't boot, or shows disk/boot errors. Don't pay to "fix it later".
Best case: ask the seller to do a factory reset / clean Windows reinstall beforehand (Settings → System → Recovery → Reset this PC, "Remove everything"). This wipes their accounts and confirms Windows installs cleanly. Just do your hardware tests before the reset if you can, since a reset takes time.