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Magisk Verified: Imei Repair

You don’t need to be a hacker to lose your IMEI. Common causes include:

When the IMEI is lost, you see Baseband: Unknown in settings. The phone cannot register on a cellular network.


Open Terminal and type:

su
getprop ro.imei

If the result is 0, null, or a generic 123456... it is corrupted. imei repair magisk verified

The phrase "imei repair magisk verified" represents the pinnacle of community-driven Android repair. It means a module has passed peer review, uses systemless hooks, and respects SELinux contexts. It provides a lifeline for enthusiasts who accidentally nuke their modem partition during a late-night flashing session.

However, it is not magic. A verified module cannot fix a fried radio chip. It cannot bypass a carrier block (nor should you try). And it requires absolute precision.

Final Golden Rules:

By following this guide, you can confidently restore your cellular functionality using the safest method available to the rooting community. Remember: With great root comes great responsibility. Keep your IMEI original, keep your backups safe, and keep your Magisk verified.


Have you successfully repaired your IMEI using a Magisk module? Share your experience (and the exact module name) in the XDA forum thread linked below. For support, check the comments section (registration required).


To confirm the repair holds, enable MagiskHide or DenyList for com.android.phone and com.qualcomm.qcrilmsgtunnel. This prevents the system from reverting the fix. You don’t need to be a hacker to lose your IMEI

Finally, re-enable Zygisk. Reboot. Dial *#06#. If the popup shows your correct IMEI, you have achieved Magisk Verified status.


On many Android forums and rooting communities, a "Magisk Verified" IMEI repair tool is advertised as a software solution that runs on a rooted device (via the Magisk framework) to:

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