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    Fiat 500e Battery Warranty: What It Covers (2013–2024+)
    Battery & Range·10 min read·By Recharged Editorial Team

    Fiat 500e Battery Warranty: What It Covers (2013–2024+)

    fiat-500ebattery-warrantyev-battery-healthused-ev-buyingev-rangehigh-voltage-batteryrecharged-scoreev-ownership-costs

    Table of Contents

    • Fiat 500e battery warranty at a glance
    • Fiat 500e battery warranty by model year
    • What the Fiat 500e battery warranty actually covers
    • What isn’t covered under the 500e battery warranty
    • Does the Fiat 500e warranty cover battery degradation?
    • How long the Fiat 500e battery warranty lasts and when it starts
    • Transferring the Fiat 500e battery warranty to a new owner
    • Real‑world battery life: Fiat 500e track record
    • Checklist: Buying a used Fiat 500e with battery warranty left
    • How Recharged evaluates Fiat 500e battery health
    • Fiat 500e battery warranty FAQ
    • Bottom line: Is the Fiat 500e battery warranty good enough?

    If you’re shopping for a Fiat 500e, or already own one, the battery warranty is the single most important part of the paperwork. The high‑voltage pack is the heart of the car and the most expensive component to replace, so it pays to understand exactly how Fiat’s 8‑year/100,000‑mile coverage works, where it differs by model year, and what that means for you as a current or future used‑EV owner.

    Two generations, same basic promise

    Both the original 2013–2019 Fiat 500e sold in the U.S. and the new 2024‑on 500e offer a long high‑voltage battery warranty, typically 8 years or 100,000 miles, separate from the basic bumper‑to‑bumper warranty. The details of what’s covered (and what isn’t) are where things get interesting.

    Fiat 500e battery warranty at a glance

    Core Fiat 500e warranty numbers

    8 yr / 100k mi
    HV battery warranty
    Typical coverage for the high‑voltage traction battery on most Fiat 500e models sold in the U.S.
    24 kWh
    2013–2019 pack
    First‑gen 500e used a smaller lithium‑ion pack with a reputation for low degradation when treated well.
    42 kWh
    2024+ pack
    New‑generation 500e uses a larger, liquid‑cooled pack with an 8‑year/100k‑mile EV battery warranty.
    8 yr / 100k mi
    Electric drivetrain
    On 2024 500e, Fiat also backs the electric drive unit and internal components for 8 years/100k miles.

    The headline is simple: most Fiat 500e models in the U.S. get an 8‑year/100,000‑mile high‑voltage battery warranty. That sits alongside a shorter basic warranty (3–4 years depending on model year) that covers the rest of the car. But the fine print matters, especially if you’re buying used or worried about range loss over time.

    Fiat 500e battery warranty by model year

    Fiat 500e U.S. warranty overview by generation

    Key warranty terms for the first‑generation 2013–2019 Fiat 500e and the new 2024+ model. Always confirm specifics in the warranty booklet for your exact year and VIN.

    Model years (U.S.)Battery sizeBasic (bumper‑to‑bumper)Powertrain / Electric driveHigh‑voltage battery warranty
    2013–2015 500e~24 kWh4 yr / 50,000 mi (typical)5 yr / 100,000 mi electric powertrain (varies by year)8 yr / 100,000 mi HV lithium‑ion battery
    2016–2019 500e~24 kWh4 yr / 50,000 mi (typical)5 yr / 100,000 mi electric powertrain (varies by year)8 yr / 100,000 mi HV lithium‑ion battery
    2024+ 500e42 kWh4 yr / 50,000 mi basic8 yr / 100,000 mi electric powertrain8 yr / 100,000 mi EV battery (high‑voltage pack)

    Battery coverage is similar across generations, but basic warranties and pack size differ.

    Always read your own booklet

    Fiat (now under Stellantis) has tweaked warranty terms slightly over the years. Before you bank on coverage, read your specific warranty manual in the glove box or download it by VIN from the Mopar/Fiat owner site to confirm the exact years and mileage that apply to your car.

    From a used‑car shopper’s perspective, the big takeaway is that a 2017 Fiat 500e and a 2024 Fiat 500e both have essentially the same 8‑year/100,000‑mile high‑voltage battery protection. What changes is how many of those years and miles are left.

    Charging port and battery gauge illuminated on a plugged-in Fiat 500e, showing state of charge
    On any used Fiat 500e, the battery’s age and mileage matter just as much as its current state of charge when you’re evaluating remaining warranty coverage.

    What the Fiat 500e battery warranty actually covers

    Automakers write battery warranties to protect you from defects, not from everyday wear and tear. With the Fiat 500e, the high‑voltage battery warranty is designed to cover problems where something in the pack or its control systems fails before its time, not simply because the car has aged.

    • Main high‑voltage battery pack: the lithium‑ion traction battery assembly and internal modules if they fail due to defects in materials or workmanship.
    • Internal battery electronics: components like the battery management system (BMS), internal contactors, sensors, and wiring that are integral to the battery assembly.
    • Electric powertrain components: on many model years, the 8‑year/100k‑mile coverage also extends to the electric drive unit and related internal parts, separate from the shorter basic warranty.
    • Safety‑related failures: verified defects that create a fire risk, cause a loss of isolation (electrical leakage), or prevent the car from safely charging or driving.
    • Diagnostic and replacement labor: when a covered battery defect is confirmed by an authorized Fiat/Chrysler/Stellantis dealer, the warranty typically covers both parts and the labor to repair or replace the pack.

    Think: “defect,” not “old age”

    If the high‑voltage battery or its control hardware fails in a way Fiat considers abnormal for the age and mileage of the car, that’s where the 8‑year/100k‑mile warranty is meant to step in. It’s not a promise that the pack will always feel brand‑new.

    What isn’t covered under the 500e battery warranty

    The exclusions section is where owners often get tripped up. Fiat’s fine print looks a lot like other EV makers’, and it’s worth reading slowly. Here are the big categories that usually are not covered by the Fiat 500e battery warranty:

    Common exclusions in Fiat 500e battery coverage

    These are typical examples; always confirm against your own warranty booklet.

    Damage from outside events

    • Collisions or impacts
    • Flooding or submersion
    • Fire from external sources
    • Improper lifting or towing damage

    Environmental or storage abuse

    • Leaving the car parked at 0% state of charge for long periods
    • Extreme heat damage from misuse
    • Corrosion from chemicals or saltwater exposure

    Unauthorized repairs or modifications

    • Opening or modifying the HV battery pack
    • Non‑approved repairs on the battery or orange‑cable system
    • Aftermarket modifications that affect the pack

    Normal wear and tear

    • Gradual loss of driving range over years of use
    • Changes in charging speed as the pack ages
    • Capacity loss that stays above Fiat’s threshold (if specified)

    Capacity loss is generally not “defect”

    On earlier U.S.‑market Fiat 500e models, the warranty language specifically notes that normal loss of battery capacity (range) is not covered. In other words, if the pack still works but holds less energy than when it was new, that alone usually isn’t a warranty event.

    Does the Fiat 500e warranty cover battery degradation?

    This is the question that keeps used‑EV shoppers up at night, and with the Fiat 500e the answer is more conservative than with some rivals. Many EVs promise to repair or replace the pack if it drops below about 70% of its original capacity within the warranty period. Fiat’s U.S. battery warranty language, especially on the first‑generation 500e, leans harder on defects and safety than on capacity guarantees.

    First‑gen 2013–2019 500e

    • Warranty documents emphasize failure of the HV battery or BMS, not a specific capacity floor.
    • Normal or expected capacity loss from age/use is called out as not covered.
    • In practice, some owners have had packs replaced for severe issues, but mainly when the car can’t operate correctly, not just when range shrinks.

    New 2024+ 500e

    • The 8‑year/100k‑mile EV battery warranty is in line with broader industry norms.
    • Fiat focuses again on defects, loss of function, and safety, public materials don’t prominently advertise a numeric capacity guarantee.
    • That doesn’t mean they’ll ignore extreme degradation, but it does mean you shouldn’t count on a precise percentage threshold being honored like a Tesla or Hyundai policy.

    So what happens if range drops a lot?

    If your 500e’s range suddenly falls off a cliff or the car can no longer complete a reasonable commute, it’s still worth a dealer visit. The techs can pull battery diagnostic codes; if Fiat decides the cause is a defect rather than normal aging, the battery warranty can still apply, even without a published capacity number.

    How long the Fiat 500e battery warranty lasts and when it starts

    The 8‑year/100,000‑mile clock doesn’t start the day the car was built. It starts on the original in‑service date, in plain English, the day the first owner took delivery or the vehicle was first put into service as a demo, lease, or company car.

    • Time limit: 8 years from the original in‑service date on most U.S.‑market 500e models (both generations).
    • Mileage limit: 100,000 miles on the odometer. Once you pass the earlier of time or mileage, coverage ends.
    • Geography: Warranty applies in the U.S. (and often Canada and Puerto Rico); coverage can look different in Europe and other regions.
    • Battery age vs. model year: A 2015 500e that sat on a lot until early 2016 might have its in‑service date in 2016, giving you a little more calendar time than the model year suggests.

    How to find your in‑service date

    Ask a Fiat/Stellantis dealer to run the VIN and show you the warranty start date, or check prior service records and original purchase paperwork if available. At Recharged, we verify in‑service dates as part of every Fiat 500e listing so you can see at a glance how much battery warranty time is left.

    Transferring the Fiat 500e battery warranty to a new owner

    Here’s good news for used‑car buyers: the Fiat 500e high‑voltage battery warranty is designed to be transferable to subsequent owners. You don’t have to be the first owner to benefit from remaining years and miles, as long as you’re still inside the original 8‑year/100k‑mile window and the car hasn’t been branded salvage.

    What you need for a smooth warranty transfer

    Most of this happens automatically, but it’s smart to check the paperwork.

    Clean title

    The vehicle shouldn’t carry a branded “salvage,” “rebuilt,” or similar title status. Salvage status can void battery warranty coverage.

    Documented mileage

    Warranty mileage is based on the odometer. On a used 500e, make sure there’s no sign of odometer tampering and that mileage lines up with service history.

    Updated owner info

    When you buy a used 500e, submit the change‑of‑ownership information. Dealers can update Stellantis’ records so future warranty work is simpler.

    Private sale? Do a quick dealer check

    If you’re buying from a private seller, it’s worth a quick trip to a Fiat/Chrysler/Stellantis dealer before handing over cash. Ask them to confirm remaining battery warranty, in‑service date, and any prior high‑voltage repairs on record.

    Real‑world battery life: Fiat 500e track record

    On paper, the Fiat 500e battery warranty looks pretty typical. Out on the road, the first‑gen 24‑kWh pack has actually earned a reputation for being sturdier than people expected, especially in mild climates with careful owners.

    • Plenty of 2013–2016 cars are still running around with only modest range loss, even at 60,000–80,000 miles.
    • The pack uses a fairly conservative usable capacity window, which helps slow down noticeable degradation.
    • Where owners do report capacity loss, it’s often tied to extreme heat or long periods at 100% charge, exactly the kind of use most EV makers warn about.
    • A smaller subset of cars have experienced hard failures in the high‑voltage battery or its electronics; those are the situations where the 8‑year warranty usually comes into play, assuming Fiat approves the repair.

    Climate matters

    Any EV battery will age faster in very hot climates, and the Fiat 500e is no exception. If you’re shopping used, a California‑coast commuter might age more gracefully than a car that spent its life baking in a Phoenix parking lot.

    Checklist: Buying a used Fiat 500e with battery warranty left

    Used Fiat 500e battery warranty checklist

    1. Confirm in‑service date and warranty end date

    Call a dealer with the VIN or work with a retailer like Recharged that shows verified in‑service and warranty end dates on the listing. Make sure there’s still time left on the 8‑year clock.

    2. Check current mileage vs. 100,000‑mile cap

    A 500e with 92,000 miles but two years left on the calendar has very little battery warranty left. One with 45,000 miles and a couple of years remaining gives you a much better cushion.

    3. Review title status and accident history

    Avoid cars with salvage or rebuilt titles if you care about battery coverage. Major crash or flood damage can void high‑voltage warranties, even if the pack seems fine today.

    4. Look for battery‑related warning lights or error messages

    During the test drive, watch for dash warnings, reduced‑power modes, or charging problems. Anything odd in the high‑voltage system should be diagnosed before you buy.

    5. Ask for charging habits and climate history

    You can’t change a car’s past life, but you can choose a better one. Favor cars that lived in moderate climates and weren’t kept at 100% state of charge for days on end.

    6. Get an independent battery health report

    A third‑party EV health check, like the <strong>Recharged Score</strong>, can show real‑world battery performance and degradation so you’re not relying on a guess or a dash gauge alone.

    How Recharged evaluates Fiat 500e battery health

    With any used EV, you’re really buying two things: the car you can see and the battery you can’t. That’s why every Fiat 500e listed on Recharged comes with a Recharged Score Report that digs into the pack’s real‑world behavior instead of just repeating the brochure.

    What’s in a Recharged Fiat 500e battery assessment

    Going deeper than a dash readout or a quick test drive.

    Battery health diagnostics

    We use specialized tools and road testing to evaluate effective capacity, charging behavior, and any error codes stored in the car’s systems, then translate that into an easy‑to‑understand score.

    Fair‑market pricing

    Battery condition is baked into the price. A 500e with healthier‑than‑average range is priced differently than one that’s closer to the end of its useful pack life.

    Ownership cost outlook

    We model likely battery performance over the next several years, so you can see whether a particular car fits your daily driving and budget without gambling on an unknown pack.

    EV‑specialist support

    Recharged’s EV specialists can walk you through what the warranty covers, how much is left on a specific 500e, and whether extended coverage or a different model might be smarter for you.

    Ready to find your next EV?

    Browse Vehicles

    Why this matters for 500e shoppers

    Because Fiat’s warranty focuses more on defects than on a hard capacity guarantee, independent battery health data becomes even more valuable. It helps you decide whether the remaining warranty is a safety net, or a formality you’re unlikely to ever use.

    Fiat 500e battery warranty FAQ

    Frequently asked questions about the Fiat 500e battery warranty

    Bottom line: Is the Fiat 500e battery warranty good enough?

    Seen from 30,000 feet, the Fiat 500e’s 8‑year/100,000‑mile battery warranty is perfectly competitive. It gives you long‑term protection against outright failures in the most expensive part of the car, whether you’re driving an early 2013 city car or a brand‑new 2024 500e. Where it’s more conservative is in explicitly covering capacity loss, Fiat leans on defect‑based language instead of promising a specific percentage of original range.

    That doesn’t make the 500e a bad bet; in fact, real‑world experience suggests these packs hold up quite well when they’re not abused, especially in moderate climates. It just means you shouldn’t treat the warranty as a guarantee that your range will feel factory‑fresh forever. The smart move is to combine an understanding of what the warranty does and doesn’t cover with a solid, data‑backed view of the actual battery health on the specific car in front of you.

    If you’d rather not play battery roulette, shopping through Recharged can take a lot of the anxiety out of buying a used Fiat 500e. Every car comes with a Recharged Score Report, expert EV guidance, financing and trade‑in options, and the ability to buy entirely online, so you can enjoy the 500e’s charming, go‑kart personality without sweating the fine print alone.

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