You can't stop battery degradation entirely — it's a natural chemical process — but you can meaningfully slow it down. The difference between a well-maintained Tesla battery and a poorly treated one can be several percentage points of retained capacity. Here's what actually works.
1. Keep Your Daily Charge Limit in the Sweet Spot
This is the single most impactful thing you can do.
| Battery Chemistry | Daily Charge Limit | Why |
|---|---|---|
| NCA / NMC (Long Range, Performance) | 80% or lower | Cells experience most stress at very high and very low SoC |
| LFP (Standard Range, 2021+) | 100% weekly | LFP tolerates high SoC well; full charges keep BMS calibrated |
Not sure which chemistry you have? If your charge limit slider goes to 100% without a warning, you likely have LFP. NCA/NMC vehicles show a "Daily" and "Trip" distinction on the slider.
2. Avoid Letting the Battery Sit at Extremes
Leaving your Tesla at 100% for extended periods (days or weeks) accelerates calendar ageing in NCA/NMC packs. Leaving it below 10% for long periods isn't great either. Going on holiday? Aim for around 50%–60% — this is the lowest-stress state for long-term storage. A week at the airport? Not worth worrying about. Months in a garage? This matters.
3. Favour Home Charging Over Supercharging
Home charging at 7–11 kW generates minimal heat and is easy on the cell chemistry. Make it your default when you have the option. Supercharging is perfectly fine for road trips and occasional use — see our full breakdown in our Supercharging article.
4. Keep the Battery Cool
Heat is the primary accelerant of battery degradation. Park in shade or a garage when possible — over years, this adds up meaningfully in hot climates. Precondition before driving — the Tesla app can warm or cool the battery using grid power while plugged in. Take breaks between Supercharging sessions on long road trips.
5. Don't Obsess Over Phantom Drain
The small amount of energy used while parked (computers, Sentry Mode, Cabin Overheat Protection) isn't a degradation concern. The shallow cycling involved is one of the gentlest forms of battery use. Turn off Sentry Mode to save energy if you like, but don't worry about it from a health perspective.
6. Let the BMS Do Its Job
Tesla's battery management system handles cell balancing, thermal control, and charge rate limits. Trust it. Trying to "game" the system with manual tricks rarely improves on what the BMS already does. The one exception: if you have an LFP battery, do follow Tesla's recommendation to charge to 100% weekly to keep the BMS calibrated.
7. Drive Smoothly (When It Makes Sense)
Frequent hard launches and sustained high-speed driving generate extra heat. Over hundreds of thousands of miles, gentler habits do translate to slightly better retention. But the Tesla is designed to be driven enthusiastically. The occasional sprint isn't going to damage your battery.
What About "Battery Hacks"?
There are no aftermarket products, apps, or tricks that improve battery health beyond what Tesla's own systems provide. Claims about special charging patterns or third-party accessories that "extend battery life" aren't supported by evidence. Stick to the fundamentals.
Track your battery over time — use our free Tesla Battery Health Calculator to check in periodically.
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