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Battery life: Guide to everything that affects and drains your phone battery

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You’ve no doubt seen or read many articles online about saving battery life. It’s a popular topic because nobody likes tethering a phone to the wall multiple times a day. However, most battery-saving articles give you ideas about what to try in order to improve your battery life. This time around, we’re instead going to identify all of the various things that cause battery drain in smartphones. Xs Max Original Battery

Battery life: Guide to everything that affects and drains your phone battery

The list is actually surprisingly long and that’s probably a good indicator of why so many people struggle with battery life. It is difficult to keep track of every little thing your phone does. However, we hope that giving you this knowledge will help you troubleshoot battery issues and adjust your usage to maximize your battery life. Here is our definitive guide to everything that affects smartphone battery life.

Literally everything in your phone affects your battery life to some degree, including your CPU, display, OS, apps and games, and even your camera.

We’ll start with the most obvious influence on battery life — the size of the battery itself. Not all smartphones have the same battery size and it’s this size that helps determine how long your phone will go before hitting zero. Smartphone batteries are generally measured in milliamp-hours (mAh). This is mostly simple math. The more mAh a phone has, the longer it should be able to theoretically last. It doesn’t always work that way, but it’s a good place to start.

On the high end, phones like the Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra have massive 5,000mAh cells while some other phones, like the regular Galaxy S23‘s 3,900mAh battery, have smaller cells. Generally speaking, phones with larger batteries tend to have better battery life than ones with smaller batteries.

Of course, there are many other factors to take into account. More powerful processors and larger, high refresh-rate screens will drain your battery faster. More on those factors below. However, if the phones have identical specs, the one with the bigger battery will simply last longer.

There are four different ways a display can affect battery life. The first is the size, as larger screens have more surface area and require more power to light up. Phones with larger displays also usually have larger batteries so there is a bit of a give-and-take there.

The second way a phone’s display affects battery life is the resolution. Admittedly, the differences aren’t huge, but it is objectively measurable. Displays with 1440p resolution have 77% more pixels than a 1080p display and it requires extra processing power (and therefore, more battery) to render those extra pixels. OEMs sometimes include a 1080p mode on a 1440p display to help cut back on the processing power and save battery.

Brightness is another significant power draw. This is also a matter of simple math. The brighter something is, the more power it requires. It’s not as noticeable if you go from 50% to 40% brightness. You’ll almost certainly see a difference when going between 80% to 20%, though.

Finally, the display’s refresh rate matters a lot. The refresh rate represents the number of times a screen refreshes every second and is measured in hertz (Hz). Newer phones have 90Hz and 120Hz displays which refresh 50%-100% more frequently than regular 60Hz displays. That requires a whole bunch of extra processing power and puts further strain on your phone’s battery. Some modern phones have adaptive refresh rates to help combat the battery drain, dropping down to as low as 1Hz when viewing static content.

Displays eat up more battery than any other individual component of a device because it is the main way we interact with a phone. This is why most battery-saving tricks revolve around display tweaks. However, lowering your brightness a few percentage points does virtually nothing and the resolution only matters if you have lots of screen-on time. Finally, using dark themes on AMOLED displays doesn’t work as well as most think it does.

Connections have a massive impact on battery life. The most common connections are your cell phone signal, data, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and location services. Connections drain the battery in a few different ways and the first one is fairly obvious.

If you enable these connections and don’t use them, they draw unnecessary power over the course of the day. Hardware and software optimizations have minimized this drain and it’s barely an inconvenience these days. It still drains the battery, but not nearly as much as it used to.

Additionally, a weak signal can greatly increase battery drain. It’s also a very difficult problem to fix. Your device regularly checks for signal strength. When the reception is bad, the phone checks more frequently, and this constant checking drains the battery. Usually, this only happens in certain types of buildings and in bad reception areas, but if you live (or work) in one of those places, it can be a constant and nearly unsolvable problem.

Finally, actually using these connections drains your battery. If you go online and spend five minutes downloading a file, that’s five whole minutes your phone is actively using its networking hardware. The same is true of voice calls as your phone engages its radio for the entire length of the call.

A lot of people recommend using airplane mode to switch off all connections when not using your phone. To be honest, it doesn’t save that much battery and it ends up being invasive and annoying. We recommend staying connected to Wi-Fi while at home (or work). Additionally, the Google Play Store, Google Photos, Amazon Photos, and others all have settings that will postpone backups or updates until you’re connected to a charger. You should definitely check and see what can be put off until your phone is safely charging.

Aside from that, just be mindful of how your connections are operating and use some common sense. Don’t start downloading a new 5GB game from the Play Store when your phone is at 12% battery and you should be okay.

The chipset matters more than probably anything else here (aside from the display) because it runs the whole phone. There are many ways a chipset can impact the battery. It’s especially true for root users as they have access to CPU tweaking tools. That said, even some non-root phones have performance modes that will drink your battery like water in the desert.

For regular users, the first thing that matters for the chipset is its generation. Every year chips get smaller, faster, and more energy-efficient. The Snapdragon 855 was faster and more energy-efficient than the Snapdragon 845, and the latest Qualcomm chipset, the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2, continues the tradition. The same goes for HUAWEI’s Kirin SoCs, Samsung’s Exynos chips, and MediaTek’s silicon. This is a rather complex topic, but the super basic explanation is that newer chipsets can do the same work as older chipsets except faster, with less energy consumption, and with less heat. All of those things affect battery life.

The model of the chipset matters as well. The Pixel 3a XL was one of the big surprises in terms of battery life in 2019. Part of that was due to the Snapdragon 670, a less powerful chip tuned for battery life rather than performance unlike the Snapdragon 855. On the other end of the scale, overclocked chipsets like the Snapdragon 855 Plus uses more power than their standard counterparts.

Chipset updates get frequently overlooked when talking about new smartphones because a lot of people only look at raw performance. However, the efficiency, size, and heat improvements are arguably more important than raw performance boosts these days.

The camera is one of the most important pieces of hardware on a phone. However, it also has the capacity to drain the battery quite a bit. The first and most obvious reason is that it is a separate piece of hardware. It needs power to function, especially if it has moving parts like Samsung’s multi-aperture cameras or the motorized front camera of some OnePlus phones.

However, the vast majority of camera battery drain comes from display and processor usage. Your display is needed as a viewfinder and some OEMs even bump up the brightness of the display when in camera mode. Additionally, every modern smartphone has at least some post-processing, and that also requires extra processing power. This is further amplified by unique camera features like LG’s triple shot on the LG V40 or Night Sight on Pixel devices.

Video is more battery intensive. The processor has to take anywhere between 30 and 60 photos per second depending on the frame rate of the video and it also has to eventually stitch all of them together. Of course, resolution matters here as well. For obvious reasons, 4K video requires more power to process than 720p video.

Shutterbugs drain their batteries a lot more quickly than people who don’t use their cameras very often. Additionally, apps with a heavy reliance on the camera, like Snapchat, may lead to greater battery drain with prolonged use because of their excessive use of the camera.

Basically, any piece of hardware on a phone drains the battery to some extent while in use. There are a ton of examples. The Pixel Visual Core is a chip to help with post-processing on Pixel phone cameras. The Pixel 4 series phones had the Soli chip that was always on and watching for movement. Many other OEMs have (or had) phones with other little extra pieces of hardware that require power to function as well.

Other factors affect every phone, too. You wouldn’t think a vibration motor would cause that much battery drain. However, if you’re one of those people who gets hundreds of notifications per day, that is hundreds of times that vibration motor runs.

The same goes for speakers. Every time you watch a video, listen to music, leave your notification tones on, or use the phone for a phone call. You can save some battery by keeping everything on mute, but where’s the fun in that? Sometimes the effect on the battery isn’t much, but as with all things, the more you use it, the more power it uses.

Generally speaking, the amount of actual drain is directly correlated with how often those things see use. The Pixel 4 XL’s Soli chip can’t drain the battery if it’s not on. Additionally, sometimes the power drain is so minimal that it’ll never matter anyway. For instance, Samsung estimates that a full S Pen charge requires 0.5mAh, or about 1/9,000th of the Note 10 Plus battery.

Smartphone battery life is heavily affected by both temperature and age. Batteries work best when they are brand new and operating at room temperature. However, because phones heat up during use and time marches on for all eternity, both of these things affect your battery life eventually. In fact, age is the primary reason your battery life gets shorter as your phone gets older.

You shave a second or two off of your phone’s maximum battery capacity every time you charge it. Batteries use chemical reactions to store and process energy and no chemical reaction is infinite. The method has been optimized heavily, though, and that’s why batteries last as long as they do to begin with. Additionally, batteries lose capacity even if you don’t use them. Popular Mechanics has an excellent article on the matter here.

Temperature is a bit more tricky. Cold batteries have lower capacities (remember, we’re dealing with chemicals here) while warmer batteries offer better performance. However, too much time spent at extreme temperatures can cause permanent degradation of the battery over time. Battery University states that modern lithium batteries perform most optimally at about 68F. However, most people can’t temperature control their entire life so this problem is more or less unavoidable. The good news, though, is that OEMs have optimized charging and fast charging to an extent where users have few opportunities to really mess things up.

You can use some charging tricks to help prevent excess battery degradation from heat and age. However, even with best practices, the general rule of thumb is that you lose roughly 20% of your battery’s capacity after about 1,000 charges. You can avoid excess degradation by not using your phone while it charges, charging it less often (select phones with super long battery life rather than super-fast charging), and don’t play heavy games that heat up your phone for excessively long periods of time.

There are also, of course, phones with replaceable batteries, but the list gets smaller and smaller every year. For most people, this shouldn’t be a major sticking point when buying a smartphone.

Believe it or not, phone software can screw up your battery life in a lot of different ways. The most obvious way is during active use. Some apps simply use way more battery life than others and using those apps has a huge impact on your battery life over the course of an average day.

GPS apps, camera apps, and apps that require large amounts of data transfer use more battery than something like a launcher app or a calculator. Snapchat, for instance, uses GPS, your camera, and large amounts of data, which will impact battery life far more than a file browser app, for example.

Mobile games also use more battery than most apps. All of them require the CPU and graphics processor to render graphics, control the game’s AI, and play the game itself. Plus, today’s mobile games often require a data connection and, of course, your phone’s display. Fun fact, Pokémon Go was the first mobile game capable of using your GPS, Bluetooth, camera, display, and data all at once. Its very existence predictably doubled battery pack sales.

The more battery-intensive apps and games you use, the worse your battery life is. This produces a bit of a problem for end-users. You can use your phone however you want, but you kind of lose the ability to complain about it if you play Call of Duty: Mobile for two hours a day. That said, these issues are being mitigated over time as processors get faster and more energy-efficient. The only way to save battery here is to monitor and limit the use of high-power apps or games that drain your battery quickly.

Of course, all of the above applies only to apps you actively use. A wholly separate problem is all of the apps and services that run passively. The kinds of apps we’re talking about are podcast players, music apps, and many more. These apps run even while the phone display is off and have the potential to run for hours at a time.

It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to understand why these drain batteries. Your phone is active even if it’s in your pocket. Plus, since most people stream music and podcasts, those apps are usually using data as well. Thankfully, these apps are heavily optimized so the battery drain is minimal in short bursts. However, some people listen to music for hours at a time and some podcasts can run for an hour or more. The battery usage adds up over time.

Some other examples include torrent apps, weather apps if they’re set to update constantly, fitness tracker apps, and basically, any app that you actively use without a screen on. They usually don’t make a huge dent in isolation. That said, it’s not uncommon to be listening to music, tracking your fitness, backing up your photos, and downloading Google Play updates all at once. It adds up.

Finally, we get to arguably the most important piece of software for battery life — the operating system itself. The OS can suck (or save) your battery life in a variety of ways since it controls everything on your device. Generally speaking, there is no one specific way the OS drains the battery since everything it does affects the battery to some extent. However, we’ve seen operating systems spiral out of control before, use way too much CPU, and burn power like no other, so it’s possible.

Operating systems and battery life work the same way as CPU chipsets. Newer versions are generally more optimized, get work done quicker, and use less battery while doing it. Additionally, most operating systems introduce new features to control battery drain, control app usage, and optimize other things to draw less battery. The list of all of the various optimizations in Android is impossible to list here because of the sheer number of them.

The operating system is also built on countless essential background tasks. Background tasks used to be a much greater battery hog until modern versions of Android optimized the process.

Background tasks drain batteries in two main ways. The first is waking up your device in order to ping whatever the processes need to ping and the second is data usage. Your weather app updating in the background will ping its servers and wake up your phone, thus using the battery. No single process uses a ton of battery most of the time. It’s the fact that your phone probably has dozens of these background processes running at once that causes problems.

These are functionally impossible to deal with unless you have root access. Even then, root users can only do so much. The reason is that background tasks are the backbone of Android’s ability to multitask. Most apps have the capacity to operate in the background even while not in use. You can’t change how the OS works. The only thing you can do is uninstall temperamental apps if they’re giving you a ton of problems.

Android itself deals with background tasks better than anything you can do anyway. Doze mode clusters background tasks to certain times and shuts them down otherwise. Additionally, Adaptive Battery shuts down background tasks of apps you don’t use very often. OEMs also add in additional battery-saving modes so intense that it sometimes affects how apps even work. Android and OEMs leave this more or less out of your hands.

There are so many things that control or drain your battery that optimizing for them is nearly impossible. As a result, there are a lot of old wives’ tales and urban legends about battery drain, what causes it, and what prevents it.

Some might tell you the best way to save battery is to not use the phone. However, as we said earlier, lithium batteries lose charge and capacity over time anyway. It doesn’t matter what you do. The only thing you have control over is how fast the battery drains.

Battery life: Guide to everything that affects and drains your phone battery

Mobile Phone Screen The best way to save battery isn’t to adhere to an ancient list of outdated tricks that don’t work well enough if they even work at all. It’s also a bad idea to take advice that completely changes how you enjoy using your phone. The best way to save battery is to understand where your drain comes from so you can adjust your daily use accordingly. Hopefully, with the help of this guide, you can do just that.