By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

IT Support & Computer Repair Intake Forms: What MSPs and Repair Shops Need to Capture

A client walks into your repair shop, sets a laptop on the counter, and says "it's slow." That is not a diagnosis. It is not even a starting point. "Slow" could mean a failing hard drive, 47 browser toolbars, a malware infection, 4 GB of RAM trying to run Windows 11, a dying battery throttling the CPU, or a perfectly healthy machine whose owner has unrealistic expectations. Without structured intake, your technician is going to spend the first thirty minutes of billable time figuring out what the client should have told you before the device ever left their hands.

Most IT shops and managed service providers collect a name, phone number, and a one-line description of the problem. That is a repair tag, not an intake. A real IT support intake form captures the device profile, the problem history, the data situation, the authorization scope, and the client's environment — everything your technician needs to diagnose accurately, protect client data, and avoid the liability issues that come with touching someone else's machine. Here is what that form should include.

Device information: know what you are working on before you open it

Every repair starts with the device. Your intake should build a complete profile before a technician touches anything:

Problem description: symptoms, timeline, and what changed

The difference between a ten-minute fix and a four-hour diagnostic rabbit hole is almost always in the problem history. Your intake form needs to extract the story behind the symptom:

This structured diagnostic intake follows the same logic that auto repair shops use — symptoms, timeline, recent changes, and reproducibility. The difference is the machine on the bench, not the diagnostic methodology.

Data backup status: the highest-stakes question on the form

No other field on your intake form carries more liability than data. A hard drive failure during a motherboard repair. A technician who reformats the wrong partition. A ransomware removal that wipes encrypted files the client assumed you would recover. These are not hypothetical scenarios — they are Tuesday at a busy repair shop.

Your intake must establish the data situation before any work begins:

Login credentials and access: the security minefield

Your technician needs to log into the device to diagnose it. That means handling client credentials, which is a security and liability issue that most repair shops handle poorly — sticky notes on the keyboard, passwords written on the intake tag in plain text, or technicians asking clients to shout their password across the counter.

Your intake form needs a structured approach:

Service authorization: scope, limits, and consent

IT repair creates unique authorization issues because the scope of work often changes mid-repair. You open a laptop for a fan replacement and discover the thermal paste has never been replaced and the heat sink is caked with dust. Do you fix what you found? You need authorization before you expand scope.

Business vs. residential: two different intake tracks

A home user with a slow laptop and a business with 50 endpoints, a file server, and a compliance requirement are fundamentally different clients. Your intake needs to branch based on the client type:

Residential clients. The intake focuses on the individual device, the problem, and the authorization. Turnaround expectations are flexible — "a few days" is usually acceptable. The client relationship is transactional unless you convert them to a maintenance plan.

Business and MSP clients. The intake expands dramatically:

Network environment: the MSP intake layer

For managed service providers taking on a new business client, the device-level intake is just the first layer. You need a complete picture of the client's IT environment:

When the engagement goes beyond break-fix support into strategic technology planning — cloud migration, compliance audits, disaster recovery design, or a full infrastructure overhaul — a dedicated IT consulting intake form captures the compliance frameworks, technology roadmap, and business-continuity requirements that an MSP break-fix intake is not designed to surface.

Software licensing and installed applications

Software licensing is a compliance issue that most repair shops ignore and most MSPs handle reactively. Your intake should establish the baseline:

Previous repair history and insurance claims

Repair history tells you what has already been tried, what has already failed, and whether the device has a pattern of problems that suggests a deeper issue:

Building trust through thoroughness

IT support is a trust business. Clients are handing you a device that contains their email, their photos, their financial records, their browsing history, and their passwords. A one-page intake form with a name and a phone number does not communicate that you take that responsibility seriously. A structured intake that asks about encryption status, data backup, credentials handling, and repair authorization tells the client that you understand the stakes — and that you have a process for protecting what matters to them.

If you are building documentation across multiple service trades, the Trade Services Bundle includes IT support alongside 51 other service categories, each with trade-specific intake fields.

IT support & computer repair intake forms — $12.99 complete set

Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Device details, problem description, data backup, credentials handling, service authorization, network environment, and software licensing. Built for MSPs, repair shops, and IT service providers.

View IT Support Forms