When you read the fine print on an electric vehicle warranty, you’ll usually see a phrase like “70% battery capacity retention.” That’s the EV battery warranty capacity threshold, the line where the automaker promises to step in if your pack degrades faster than expected. Understanding how that threshold works is critical if you already own an EV, and absolutely essential if you’re shopping for a used one.
In one sentence
What is an EV battery warranty capacity threshold?
Every traction battery naturally loses capacity over time. To give buyers confidence, most automakers combine a time/mileage limit (for example, 8 years/100,000 miles) with a capacity threshold. If measured usable capacity falls below that threshold during the warranty, and you’ve followed the rules, you may qualify for repair or replacement.
- Time/mileage coverage – how long the battery is covered (e.g., 8 years/100,000 miles, whichever comes first).
- Capacity threshold – the minimum percentage of the battery’s original usable capacity (often 70%) that must be retained during that period.
- Trigger – if capacity falls below that percentage while still within time and mileage limits, and no exclusions apply, the automaker is obligated to act.
Think in range, not just percentage
Common capacity thresholds by automaker
While the exact numbers and wording vary, most mainstream EV brands in 2026 converge around a similar pattern: roughly 8–10 years of coverage with a 70% capacity retention guarantee. Here’s how that looks in broad strokes for popular brands in the U.S. market.
Typical EV battery warranty capacity thresholds (2026)
Representative examples for mass‑market EVs sold in North America. Always confirm the exact language for your specific model year.
| Brand / Platform (example) | Duration / Mileage (whichever comes first) | Capacity threshold | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tesla Model 3 / Y | 8 years / 100k–120k miles | 70% | Applies to most current U.S. Model 3/Y variants. |
| Tesla Model S / X | 8 years / 150k miles | 70% | Higher mileage cap on larger packs. |
| Hyundai Ioniq 5 / 6 | 10 years / 100k miles | 70% | Longer time coverage than industry average. |
| Kia EV6 | 10 years / 100k miles | 70% | Similar structure to Hyundai’s warranty. |
| VW ID.4 | 8 years / 100k miles | 70% | Common structure for European‑designed EVs. |
| GM Ultium (Lyriq, Blazer EV, etc.) | 8 years / 100k miles | 70% | Module‑based pack design to simplify repairs. |
| Nissan Leaf | 8 years / 100k miles | ~66% (8 bars) | Capacity measured via 12‑bar gauge; warranty triggers at 8 bars or fewer. |
Most brands now promise at least 70% of original battery capacity through the warranty period.
Model years matter
How capacity thresholds are measured in practice
Here’s where things get less intuitive. Your dashboard range estimate or percentage gauge is not the official yardstick for warranty claims. Automakers rely on internal diagnostics and specific procedures to decide whether your pack has fallen below the warranty capacity threshold.
How manufacturers decide if your battery is below the threshold
What they look at when you bring an EV in for a battery warranty check
Factory diagnostics
Standardized test conditions
Warranty criteria
Nissan’s “bar” system is different
Because automakers control both the measurement tools and the definitions, capacity‑related claims aren’t always straightforward for owners. Some brands specify that only their internal tests, not third‑party apps or home chargers, count toward warranty decisions. That’s one reason independent battery health diagnostics, like the Recharged Score used on every vehicle on Recharged, are becoming more important in the used market: they provide a transparent, third‑party view of capacity and pack condition before you buy.

Capacity thresholds vs. real‑world battery degradation
Well‑designed EV packs are turning out to be more durable than many drivers expected. Real‑world data from taxis, ride‑hail fleets, and long‑term tests shows that most modern packs stay well above their warranty thresholds through 100,000 miles and beyond, especially when they use liquid cooling and modern chemistries.



