► Average EV loses tiny amount of battery capacity each year
► Result is above warranty expectations after eight years
► But is this enough to make going electric worth the fuss?
Fleet telematics firm Geotab has announced the results of its 2025 survey into real-world electric car battery degradation. While the average drop in battery capacity each year has actually gotten worse since the last round of data – in 2023 – the upshot of this is that you probably don’t need to worry about your electric vehicle (EV) becoming an expensive doorstop anytime soon.
For on average, battery decline is still just 2.3 percent per year. Which means that after eight years, some 81.6 per cent of the original battery capacity is projected to remain. Whether that’s comparable to a petrol or diesel model having nearly a fifth of their fuel tank removed is a point worth considering.
Perhaps more usefully, the survey also suggests a few steps you can take to give the battery pack the best chance of a long and happy life. Let’s take a look.
Geotab analysed the data from 22,700 electric cars, a sample including 21 different models of EV. While no specifics have been revealed – so no finger pointing at the below-average performers – this includes not only conventional passenger cars but also ‘multi-purpose vehicles’ (MPVs, including light electric vans) and even a couple of trucks.
As a result, the survey covers quite a range of different battery chemistries, such as those battery packs designed for maximum performance (be that driving range or charging speed) and those emphasising longevity. Rightly, Geotab points out that the sophistication of the battery management systems also comes into play.
But with a difference of just 0.7 per cent per year between the MPVs (2.7 per cent degradation) and the cars (2.0 per cent degradation) it turns out that how you charge may have a bigger impact than the inherent design and engineering difference.
When the Geotab first delved into its EV data in 2020, the average annual battery decline was the same 2.3 per cent it showed in 2025. However, in 2023, that decline had slowed to 1.8 per cent – so what’s made it worse again?
Charging habits.
The two years between 2023 and 2025 has seen the availability of high-power (above 100kW) DC public chargers increase significantly, and it’s the regular use of these that’s most likely to account for the accelerated battery degradation. Add to that the increased ability to ‘punch’ a high rate of charge into the pack straight away, and things get even worse:
While those still look like tiny numbers, the last is actually double the rate of decline. And after eight years it’s the difference between 88 per cent of the original battery capacity remaining and just 76 per cent.
Also contributing to the decline between 2023 and 2025 is the arrival of newer models that see a steeper drop off in capacity in the first two years before ‘levelling out’.
Another important factor – though one we don’t have to worry about so much in the UK – is temperature. According to the data, electric cars that experience 35 per cent of days above 25 degrees C see battery life fall by an extra 0.4 percent every year compared with those that spend less than 35 per cent of days above 25 degrees C.
Geotab acknowledges it doesn’t have enough data to show what happens in countries with extreme cold, however. But this does also offer insight into the importance of good software and thermal management for the battery pack within the car itself.
Geotab says this is less of an issue than it used to be, since carmakers keep a difference between the usable capacity and total capacity of their battery packs now. In ‘routine’ use, it won’t matter too much if your EV is fully charged or nearly empty on occasion.
However, if ‘extreme’ states of charge (SOC) are maintained for more than 80 per cent of the time, there is evidence to suggest it can impact the battery’s lifespan. Extreme means below 20 per cent or above 80 per cent charged.
The difference between this and low exposure to extreme SOC (less than 50 per cent of the time) is 0.6 percentage points. But since that’s 1.4 per cent versus 2.0 per cent, we’re still looking at small numbers. And because fast charging speeds usually significantly decline above 80 per cent battery charge, drivers often naturally avoid going above this anyway.
On the basis that the more energy moves through the battery cells the more the cells are degraded, how often you charge is another factor. Geotab discusses this in terms of full discharge and recharge cycles – meaning that four 25 per cent charges are the equivalent of one 100 per cent charge.
Batteries that are subject to this full cycle only once every seven days are more will suffer the lowest degradation at 1.5 per cent per year. A full charge equivalent every three to six days will likely result in 1.9 per cent degradation, while a full cycle every one to two days averages out to 2.3 per cent degradation.
So maybe think: do you really need to top up again tonight?
The conclusion is generally that EVs aren’t about to start dropping dead after a few years of use. This data is a decent sample size, covers a reasonably wide range of vehicles and has been undertaken by a company that has direct access to real world info and has carried out this analysis before.
In other words, it seems legit. After eight years, your average EV is still going to be a useful and capable machine, and if the degradation trend continues you’ll still be looking at around 75 per cent of the original battery capacity after 10 years.
Is that enough to make all the fuss – meaning not just the added hassle of charging but also the various environmental impacts of EV manufacturing versus the probably still longer useful service of life of internal combustion – worth it in exchange for zero emissions in motion? It’s apparently not up to us to decide.
CJ is a former Associate Editor of CAR, and now runs parent company Bauer Media’s Digital Automotive Hub – the in-house team that provides much of the online content for CAR and sister site Parkers.co.uk as well as helping out with CAR magazine. He’s been writing about cars professionally (if that's the right word) for nearly two decades, though attempts to hide this fact with an extensive moisturising routine.
By CJ Hubbard
Head of the Bauer Digital Automotive Hub and former Associate Editor of CAR. Road tester, organiser, reporter and professional enthusiast, putting the driver first
