What Is Reballing? | PhoneDoctor Singapore

GlossaryBoard & Chip Terms

What Is Reballing?

The process of replacing all solder balls on a BGA chip before reinstalling it on the board.

Definition: Reballing is the microsoldering process of removing all solder balls from the underside of a BGA chip, cleaning the chip’s contact pads, applying a stencil, and reflowing fresh solder balls in their place — ready for reinstallation on the logic board. Required when original solder balls are cracked, corroded, or missing.

When reballing is needed

After water damage: Corrosion destroys BGA solder balls — the chip must be reballed before it can be reinstalled after ultrasonic cleaning.

Cracked joints from impact: Hard drops crack solder balls under chips. Reballing restores solid electrical connections.

Failed chip removal: If a chip is removed and its balls are damaged in the process, reballing allows it to be reused rather than replaced with a new chip.

Reballing vs chip replacement

If the chip itself is functional but the solder balls are damaged, reballing saves the chip. If the chip is internally failed (e.g. a dead NAND storage chip), reballing won’t help — the chip needs replacing. Diagnosing which is the case requires board-level testing with specialised equipment.

Related terms

→ BGA — the chip packaging reballing works on

→ Microsoldering — the broader skill set reballing is part of

→ Corrosion — the main cause of BGA ball damage requiring reballing

→ Logic Board — the board the reballed chip is returned to

Board-level chip fault?

PhoneDoctor performs reballing and chip-level board repair. Free diagnostics — no fix no fee.

Board & Chip Terms · All Glossary Terms