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The truth about battery degradation and how to keep your range high as your ev gets older

The truth about battery degradation and how to keep your range high as your ev gets older

The truth about battery degradation and how to keep your range high as your ev gets older

If you spend any time on EV forums, you’ll eventually find the same anxiety-laced thread: “My battery is already down to 90% – is my car done in five years?” Battery degradation is the big fear lurking behind every range figure in a brochure. And like most big fears, it’s part reality, part myth.

After more than a decade of testing EVs in the UK and Europe – from early Nissan Leafs to the latest long-range crossovers – I’ve seen packs that have aged badly, and plenty that are still in rude health after 150,000 miles. The pattern isn’t random. How you charge, where you park and how the manufacturer designed the pack matter more than the odometer alone.

Let’s unpack what really happens to your battery over time, how much range you can realistically expect to lose, and the habits that keep your real-world range high as your EV gets older.

What battery degradation actually is (and what it isn’t)

EV battery “degradation” simply means your battery can store less energy than when it was new. If your car had a usable 60 kWh on day one and ten years later it only has 51 kWh, you’ve lost roughly 15% capacity.

What it is not:

Two main mechanisms are at play:

Think of your battery like a set of lungs. You’re born with a certain capacity. Time and heavy use reduce it slowly. Sprinting when you’re already out of breath (fast charging when the pack is hot and full) isn’t ideal.

How fast do EV batteries really degrade in the real world?

The honest answer: slower than most people fear – but with important exceptions.

Independent data sets, fleet operators and real-world owners give us a good picture:

Most modern, liquid-cooled packs from mainstream brands in a temperate climate like the UK track around:

Put simply, after eight to ten years you’re often looking at 85–90% of the original range if the car and charging habits are decent. On a car that did 250 miles WLTP when new, 10% loss still leaves you with ~225 miles official, maybe a 15–20 mile hit in real winter motorway range. Noticeable? Yes. Catastrophic? No.

What really kills EV batteries (and what’s mostly harmless)

Batteries don’t like extremes. Most of the damage comes from a handful of repeat offences.

High heat is enemy number one

Heat accelerates the chemical reactions that age the cells. The worst combo is:

This is where early air-cooled EVs suffered: no proper thermal management, parked fully charged outside in summer. In the UK, you’re rarely in Phoenix, Arizona territory – but a battery that’s constantly rapid-charged on the motorway and left full can still run hot enough to age faster.

Living at 100% (or near 0%) day after day

Charging to 100% occasionally for a long trip is fine. Living there is not. The cells are under more stress at the top and bottom of their charge window. That’s why many EVs ship with “daily” charging limits of 70–80% and reserve 100% for trips.

Frequent rapid DC charging as your default

Using public rapid chargers a few times a week is okay on most modern EVs with good cooling. But making 150 kW DC “your fuel station” three times a day, seven days a week, will raise pack temperatures and generally accelerate wear.

On the flip side, some things people worry about are much less harmful than they think:

Myths vs reality: separating battery fact from forum fiction

Let’s clear up a few persistent myths that scare off would-be EV drivers.

Simple habits that keep your range high over the years

You don’t need a chemistry degree or a PhD in charging curves to look after your pack. Five habits get you 90% of the benefit.

Smart charging strategies: home, work and on the road

How you integrate charging into your routine has a big impact on both degradation and running costs.

At home

At work

On long trips

Software, BMS and why the car “knows” less than you think

Your EV constantly monitors its pack via a Battery Management System (BMS). It estimates state of charge, health and remaining range based on voltage, current, temperature and usage history.

Two important points:

Software updates also matter. Manufacturers increasingly tweak charging profiles, thermal management and even displayed SoH via over-the-air updates. A pack that seemed to “lose” 3% after an update may simply be reporting more accurately, not actually degraded overnight.

Buying a used EV: how to judge a battery that’s already lived a little

If you’re shopping used, the battery is the single most expensive component. The good news: it’s also more durable than most buyers expect, and you can assess it with some basic checks.

What to look for:

If the car shows moderate degradation – say, 15% – think about your actual use. If your daily round trip is 40 miles and the car still does 140–150 miles in mixed driving, that’s perfectly workable, especially if the price reflects the degradation.

When degradation really matters – and how to adapt

At some point, every battery gets to the stage where you have to adjust. That point is much later than the horror stories suggest, but it is real.

You’ll start to notice degradation when:

There are three broad strategies when that day comes:

In practice, most UK drivers will change cars for reasons other than battery health: changing needs, newer tech, or simply fancying a different shape. Treat the pack like you’d treat an engine: maintain it sensibly, don’t abuse it, and it will almost always outlast your actual ownership.

The bottom line: EV batteries are less fragile than their reputation, but not invincible. If you keep them cool, avoid living at 100%, favour AC when it’s convenient and use rapid charging intelligently, your range will stay impressively close to “as new” for far longer than the scare stories suggest. That’s the real truth behind degradation – and it’s a lot more reassuring than the myths.

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