What's Draining Your Android Battery?
If you find your Androidbattery is regularly emptied before you manage to Uber that evening ride home,
don’t fret – it’s possible you can squeeze more life out of it by optimizing
some phone settings. While some battery drain may be due to badly designed or
adware-ridden apps that are constantly calling home, everyday phone activities
are often the culprits – apps that frequently get online for updates, apps
waking the phone screen, the high-definition phone screen itself which takes a
lot of power to light up those pretty pixels…
Why batteries drain
“Batteries only have a certain lifespan, measured in charge
cycles. This means they can be fully charged and discharged only so many times.
“Once a phone battery’s charge cycles are spent, metrics such as talk time
begin to degrade and the user begins to notice their phone isn’t lasting as
long as it used to,” says Josh Galindo (Director of Training at uBreakiFix).
(This means that if you’re thinking of buying a refurbished
phone, you should check with the seller that the battery was replaced, says
Galindo. Otherwise, you may find its lifespan start to degrade more quickly
than expected because it’s spent a certain number of charge cycles already.)
Another issue is that while other phone hardware such as screens
and motherboards have developed quickly to be better and more powerful, battery
technology has not seen a similar advancement, so even brand-new phones with larger
charge capacities may not last any longer than their predecessors. “For people
to see a significant improvement in the life of their smartphones, we’ll likely
need to have a major breakthrough in what type of battery technology is in
use,” says Galindo.
And, while we always recommend downloading software updates,
older phones that have been upgraded to the very latest OS version may also
experience battery drain as a result. “In theory, this shouldn’t occur, but
often it does because the software is supporting newer functions that the
hardware might not have been specifically designed for,” Galindo says. “At some
point, software always outpaces the device itself and very often adds
additional strain.”
Happily, newer iterations of the Android OS have introduced
battery saver features that economize how various apps use up juice and should
help you eke a little more use of your phone for now.
What’s
new for Android batteries
The latest version, Android 8.1 Oreo, introduces automatic ‘wise
limits’ that curtail how much background apps get to use battery power for
processes, as well as prevent non-essential apps from requesting your location
(GPS being one of the biggest battery drains, as anyone who has ever used their
phone for navigation will be familiar with). There’s also a beefed-up settings
menu that newly shows how much battery apps used up versus how much they’re in
use, and how long your screen (that battery hog) has been on, as well as the
approximate time left based on current usage.
Android battery saving measures have steadily improved with each
iteration –6.0 Marshmallow introduced the default mode called Doze, which
reduces the amount of battery eaten up in standby mode (i.e., when the phone screen
is off), by stopping most apps getting online or waking the phone with
notifications. Version 7.0 (Nougat) placed even tighter restrictions on which
apps can sync for updates while the phone screen is off (high-priority apps
such as messenger and email apps make the cut – if you want), as well as how
frequently they can wake the phone up.
Over half of
Android users are using Marshmallow or Nougat, with Oreo on the phones of just
1% of Android users. While most Android phones released in the last couple
years should receive an update to Oreo this
year, if you're one of the many on an older version of Android, there's still
plenty you can do to increase battery life – without changing how you use your
phone (too much).
How
to improve your Android phone battery life
(Note: This information covers Android 4.1 phones and newer, so
names of folders may slightly vary – for example, “Battery” settings may be
“Power” settings on some phones.)
1.
Check which apps are draining your battery
In all versions of Android, hit Settings >
Device > Battery or Settings > Power > Battery Use to see a list of
all apps and how much battery power they're using. (In Android 8, it’s
simply Settings > Device > Battery.) If an app you don't use often seems
to take up a disproportionate amount of power, consider uninstalling it.
On Android 7, here you can also see how much “Cell standby” or
“Mobile standby” is eating up – this is the amount of power your phone gobbles
up while not being used. On Android 8, that’s split into “Phone idle” and
“Mobile network standby’, the latter of which refers to how much power is used
by the phone staying connected to a 4G network – and which was a culprit in
battery drain for many users of flagship Android 8.0 phones, one that should
hopefully be ironed out by the 8.1 update.
2.
Uninstall apps
Delete apps you don't use from a single menu by heading to
Settings > Apps > All. Tap on each app and hit Uninstall to remove it as
well as any data it has created.
Or, buy premium version of your favorite apps. Apps with
ads can eat up extra battery thanks to running ads (or if their ads are badly
designed thereby hogging the juice), so if you find a favorite is using a lot
of power, going for its premium ad-free version could help.
3.
Never manually close apps
Despite the popularity of task-killer apps for Android, manually
closing running apps doesn't help battery life, a myth recently debunked by
both Apple and Google. In fact, closing an app can even very slightly damage
battery life according to Android's SVP of Android, Chrome
and Chrome OS, if the phone system requires it to run again (or when you open
it again).
4.
Remove unnecessary widgets from the home screen
Many Android apps, including social networks, weather apps and
news apps, come with widgets that sit handily on the home screen for real-time
updates. However, widgets are battery drainers due to their constant syncing
with the mothership or power-sucking animations. If you don't need a permanent
window into Twitter, or regular updates on the weather, remove the superfluous
widget by pressing and holding it, then dragging it to the trash can icon.
5.
Turn on Airplane Mode in low-signal areas
Smartphones use more power when trying to connect in low-signal
areas. If you can't get a signal, turn on Airplane Mode by swiping down and
tapping the Settings wheel. If your low-signal area is, say, an office or someone's
home, you can turn on Wi-Fi (with Airplane Mode enabled) instead to stay
connected. Then restart your cellular connection when you're in an area with
better coverage.
On the flip side, disabling Wi-Fi may not always save battery
life. Your phone uses less energy to connect to wireless than cellular
networks, while Wi-Fi also helps phones determine location – handy for paring
back the need for power-hungry GPS.
6. Go Airplane Mode at bedtime
If you’re caught charger-less overnight, killing all connectivity
– Bluetooth, cellular, Wi-Fi, GPS - will help your battery last till morning.
Plus, it helps avoid that insomnia-causing blue light (unless
of course, your newfound battery power means you stay up all night playing The
Room.
7. Download
Doze (Android 5 and older only)
Though Doze, which prevents your phone from sending and
receiving data, is a default feature on Android Marshmallow, Nougat and Oreo,
users of Android 4.1 (and newer) phones can download a separate, more powerful
app called Doze (free in Google Play). Once downloaded, the app needs
to activated, then it works in the background (without affecting Doze mode, if
it's downloaded onto a Marshmallow or newer phone).
8. Turn off notifications
Getting real-time updates of what's going on in your apps ishandy for things like email or social networks, but many apps automatically
demand permission to send notifications as well for reasons that are much less
useful. Turn off notifications by heading to Settings > Apps, then visiting
less necessary apps and unchecking “Show notifications.”
Android 7.0 makes it very easy to fine-tune further: Head
to Settings > Device > Notifications to manually adjust notification
levels for each app – you can choose to never show notifications or its
battery-friendly compromise: show silently without waking the screen,
vibrating, or pinging.
On Android 8, there are even more granular options. Head to
Settings > Apps & Notifications, then click on particular apps. You’ll
be able to control what type of events the apps can send push notifications for
(for example, on WhatsApp, the failure of a message to send), as well as how
they can send these alerts (silently, vibrating, or with sound).
9. Don’t let apps wake your screen
On the other hand, if notifications are necessary, prevent apps
from waking the screen when they do send them through. Head to Settings >
Display and select to turn off Ambient Display (which means no app
notifications will cause the screen to wake). In Android 8, you can choose
to leave Ambient Display ‘on’ but toggle off the sub-permission for
notifications to wake the screen, so that you can still double-tap the screen
or lift the phone to check for alerts.
10.
Turn off GPS when not in use
GPS is one of the heaviest drains on the battery – as you've
probably noticed after using Google Maps to navigate your last road trip. When you're not
actively using navigation, swipe down to access Quick Settings, and toggle it
off. You'll be prompted to re-enable it when you use Maps.
Alternately, if you're using apps that require your location,
you can head to Settings > Location > Mode and select “Battery saving”
(where Wi-Fi and mobile networks are used to determine your location) over
“High accuracy” (where GPS is also used).
11.
Check app location tracking
Some apps track your location and therefore use more batterypower than strictly necessary by accessing your GPS. At Settings > Location
you can see which apps recently requested your location, as well as how much
(low/high) battery it took. In theory, Android 8 should be paring back
how much these apps are using the phone’s location services – but for apps that
seem to be demanding more than necessary, head into the apps and manually
adjust the permissions individually.
12.
Enable Power Saver Mode
For Android 5.0 and newer, this feature helps maximize battery
life as well as stretch out those last several minutes. For example, animations
are pared back, most background syncing is halted and location services turned
off (so no navigation on Google Maps). You enable it manually in Settings >
Power, where you can also fine-tune specifics such as whether or not to
conserve CPU power, screen brightness or vibration feedback and choose whether
or not to turn off data connection when the phone is asleep.
On Android 7 and 8, you can additionally set Battery Saver Mode
to kick in automatically at 5% or 15% battery left.
Some phones such as the HTC One M8 (and newer) and Samsung Galaxy S6 (and newer) also have
an “extreme power-saving mode” in which data connections turn off when the
screen is off, notifications, GPS, Auto Sync and Bluetooth are off, and only
essential apps such as text messaging, email and the clock are allowed to
run.
13.
Dim the screen – intelligently
If you're using Android 5.0 or newer, head to Settings >
Display and enable “automatic brightness” (or “adaptive brightness” in Android
7 and 8), which allows the phone to adapt the display based on the lighting
where you are, ensuring the screen is never brighter than necessary.
But if your battery is in dire straits, manually dimming the
screen is a good temporary fix until you can get to a charger. Pull down the
notifications menu and drag the brightness slider to the very dimmest display
level you're comfortable with.
14.
Tone down those live wallpapers
You can kit out your home screen and lock screen with some nifty
animated wallpapers that change in ombre or style as the day wears on – but
this doesn’t come for free. Save on battery by heading to Settings > Display
> Wallpaper to select a static counterpart instead.
15.
Decrease screen timeout
You can save a little bit of battery power many times over by
decreasing the length of time your phone remains idle before its display
automatically goes dark. Head to Settings > Display to adjust Screen timeout
to, say, 10 seconds rather than an interval like 30 minutes (which you may have
chosen if you were doing something like using the phone for a recipe).
16.
Stop vibrating
If your phone is ringing, you don't need it to vibrate as well.
Head to Settings > Sound and uncheck “Vibrate for calls”. To really get into
battery miser mode, turn off haptic feedback, the handy little vibe when you
press virtual keys, by going to Settings > Language and keyboard and
unchecking “Vibration feedback”.
17.
Keep weather updates local
Who doesn't love the weather widget that tells the time and the
temperature in one handy, live-updating home screen box? If you've loaded yours
up with cities where you've been vacationing, that widget could be contributing
to heavy battery drain. Remove superfluous cities from your weather app by
heading to Settings.
18.
Keep your phone cool
Like Goldilocks’ pilfered porridge, phone batteries should be
neither too hot nor too cold. An ideal temperature range for smartphone
batteries is around 68°F to 86°F. If a phone
is customarily left in temperatures outside this range, especially on the
hotter side, it can eventually damage the battery, notes Galindo.
According to the Battery University blog by Cadex
Electronics, phone batteries degrade much faster when they’re hot, whether
you're using the phone or it's idle. Avoid leaving your phone on the dashboard
of your car on a sunny day.
19.
Charge between 40% and 80%
The best way to maintain smartphone batteries is to keep your
phone battery more than 40% charged. Constantly allowing the battery to go from
completely full to completely empty can damage it and decrease its capacity
over time. On the flip side, leaving your phone plugged in when it's completely
full can also degrade the battery. Best practice? Keep your battery between 40%
and 80% charged.
20.
Get a certified or original charger – especially for fast-charging
Newer Android phones can take advantage of ‘fast charging’ tech which
tops up batteries at around twice the speed – but if you’re not using a cable
and charge head from the original manufacturer or a certified third-party, it
could be contributing to battery drain, and in some cases, degrading the
function of your phone.
“One thing that’s often overlooked is the use of low-quality
chargers from third-party manufacturers,” says Galindo. “Especially with
wireless and fast charging technology, it’s more complicated to ensure that
cables work with batteries as they were designed.”
We like the AnkerPowerline+ ($11.99, check price on Amazon)
and the AmazonBasicsUSB 3.0 cable ($5.80, check price on Amazon)
21.
Let your phone battery die once a month
If you never let your phone go to zero, fret not – it’s not
doing your phone any harm. Previous warnings about the need to fully discharge
batteries are more relevant to older types of batteries, not the lithium-ion
batteries used by smartphones. However, allowing the phone to discharge fully
to zero, then allowing it a full, uninterrupted charge may help with the
calibration of the OS with the battery itself.
“The recommendation is once a month, as this can help the OS
‘remember’ what 100% or 10% of power left means,” says Galindo. “However, if
you don’t do it, you won’t damage the battery.”
A sign that your battery could do with some discharge/recharge
time is if the battery says it’s extremely low – say, 2% - but ends up lasting
for ages, which may indicate the phone software is out of sync with the battery
operation.
22.
Restart your phone
That’s the official advice from Google support, as
it can flush out any battery-hogging processes running in the background.
23.
Try a factory reset
If these tips don’t sort out your battery drain, you can try
returning your phone to factory settings. This can help if the issue is
that the OS or some downloaded data is corrupted, says Galindo. Back up your phone– or at least make sure
your photos are backing up– then head to Settings
> System > Reset options.
24. Always download updates
Whether updates are intended for downloaded apps or the Android
OS itself, they generally include bug fixes and tweaks that improve
performance, including how efficiently battery is used.


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