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    Hyundai IONIQ 5 Battery Warranty: What It Covers (and What It Doesn’t)
    Battery & Range·10 min read·By Recharged Editorial Team

    Hyundai IONIQ 5 Battery Warranty: What It Covers (and What It Doesn’t)

    hyundai-ioniq-5battery-warrantyev-battery-healthhyundai-evused-ev-buyingev-degradationhyundai-warrantyrecharged-score

    Table of Contents

    • Hyundai IONIQ 5 battery warranty at a glance
    • What the IONIQ 5 battery warranty actually covers
    • What isn’t covered: common surprises
    • Battery degradation: how much loss is “warrantable”?
    • New vs used IONIQ 5: how the battery warranty transfers
    • How the battery warranty compares to other coverage
    • Protecting your coverage: ownership habits that matter
    • Shopping used: how Recharged evaluates IONIQ 5 batteries
    • FAQ: Hyundai IONIQ 5 battery warranty
    • Key takeaways for IONIQ 5 shoppers and owners

    If you’re looking at a Hyundai IONIQ 5, especially on the used market, the battery warranty isn’t just fine print. It’s the safety net under the single most expensive component in the car. Understanding the Hyundai IONIQ 5 battery warranty, what it covers, and what it doesn’t tells you how much risk you’re really taking on, and how long you can count on Hyundai to stand behind the pack.

    Short answer

    For U.S.–market Hyundai IONIQ 5 models, the high‑voltage battery is generally covered against defects and excessive capacity loss for 10 years or 100,000 miles (whichever comes first). That coverage typically transfers to subsequent owners, but exact terms and degradation thresholds depend on model year and jurisdiction, always confirm against the current Hyundai warranty booklet for your VIN.

    Hyundai IONIQ 5 battery warranty at a glance

    Core IONIQ 5 U.S. warranty numbers

    10 yrs
    EV battery coverage
    Typical high‑voltage battery warranty term from original in‑service date on U.S. IONIQ 5 models.
    100k mi
    Mileage limit
    Whichever comes first, years or miles, usually defines when battery coverage ends.
    5 yrs/60k
    Bumper‑to‑bumper
    New Vehicle Limited Warranty that covers most non‑wear components beyond the battery.
    >70%
    Capacity floor
    Hyundai battery warranties often treat capacity below ~70% as excessive degradation that may be warrantable.

    Hyundai built its EV pitch around long‑term peace of mind, and the IONIQ 5 is no exception. In the U.S., most trims come with a 10‑year/100,000‑mile high‑voltage battery warranty, sitting on top of the regular 5‑year/60,000‑mile New Vehicle Limited Warranty. Some states and markets tweak the details, but that 10‑year/100k EV‑battery promise is the headline for most buyers.

    IONIQ 5 U.S. warranty cheat sheet

    Key warranty buckets that affect how your IONIQ 5 is protected, new or used. Exact terms can vary by model year, state (especially California‑emissions states), and whether the vehicle is leased or in commercial use.

    ComponentTypical U.S. Coverage*What it Mainly Covers
    High‑voltage battery pack10 years / 100,000 milesDefects in materials/workmanship and excessive capacity loss below Hyundai’s defined threshold.
    EV system components (e.g., inverter, onboard charger, motor)Often 10 years / 100,000 milesFailures of major electric drive components not due to abuse or accidents.
    Powertrain (non‑EV specific)10 years / 100,000 miles (original owner)Engine‑equivalent components like reduction gear, drive units.
    New Vehicle Limited (bumper‑to‑bumper)5 years / 60,000 milesMost non‑wear items: electronics, interior hardware, many sensors.
    Anti‑perforation (corrosion)7 years / unlimited milesRust‑through of body panels from the inside out.
    Complimentary maintenance3 years / 36,000 milesFactory‑scheduled maintenance visits on new vehicles.

    Always confirm coverage in the latest Hyundai warranty handbook for your specific model year and state.

    About the asterisk

    Hyundai’s exact terms can change by model year, and certain California‑emissions states or commercial/lease use may have different coverage. When in doubt, go to the current Hyundai warranty handbook for your VIN and state, or ask the seller to provide it in writing.

    What the IONIQ 5 battery warranty actually covers

    Let’s split the IONIQ 5 battery warranty into two big buckets: defects and degradation. The warranty isn’t a promise that your range will stay brand‑new forever, that’s not how lithium‑ion chemistry works. It’s Hyundai saying: “If something’s wrong with the pack itself or it fades far quicker than it reasonably should, we’ll step in.”

    • Defects in materials or workmanship: Manufacturing defects inside the battery pack, modules, or high‑voltage circuitry. This is the classic “something broke that shouldn’t have.”
    • Premature, excessive capacity loss: If the battery’s usable capacity falls below Hyundai’s specified percentage of original (often around 70% state of health) within the warranty period, Hyundai may repair or replace it.
    • Associated high‑voltage components: In many markets, the EV battery warranty is bundled with coverage for components like the Battery Management System (BMS), onboard charger, inverter, and sometimes the Integrated Charging Control Unit (ICCU), all under an “EV system” warranty bucket.

    How Hyundai fixes a warrantable battery issue

    • Diagnostic first: The dealer runs factory diagnostics, looks at error codes, and pulls battery health data.
    • Repair if possible: For some faults, they may replace modules, wiring, or electronics inside the pack.
    • Pack replacement if needed: If the diagnosis points to a systemic defect or severe degradation, Hyundai can authorize a full pack replacement.

    You’re not guaranteed a brand‑new, bigger‑battery upgrade; replacement packs are usually like‑for‑like or service‑level equivalents.

    What you’ll typically pay

    • $0 for covered repairs: When a repair is authorized under warranty, parts and labor are usually covered.
    • Diagnostics if not covered: If Hyundai deems the issue out of warranty (abuse, collision, no defect found), you may be billed diagnostic and labor time.
    • Loaners or rentals: Policies vary by dealer and region, battery repairs can take days, so clarify transportation options before authorizing work.

    Good news for used buyers

    On most U.S. IONIQ 5s, that 10‑year/100,000‑mile EV battery warranty follows the car, not just the first owner. If you’re buying a 3‑year‑old IONIQ 5 with 40,000 miles, you likely still have several years and tens of thousands of miles of battery coverage left.
    Hyundai IONIQ 5 plugged in at a fast charger with focus on charge port and high-voltage battery warning decals
    The IONIQ 5’s high‑voltage battery is engineered to last the life of the car, but the 10‑year/100,000‑mile warranty is there in case it doesn’t.

    What isn’t covered: common surprises

    Battery warranties don’t cover everything that feels unfair. They’re written by lawyers, not dreamers. With the IONIQ 5, there are a few predictable ways to fall outside the safety net.

    Things your IONIQ 5 battery warranty won’t save you from

    These scenarios are exactly the ones Hyundai’s fine print is designed to exclude.

    Collision & physical damage

    If the pack is damaged in a crash, flood, or off‑road adventure, that’s insurance territory, not battery warranty. Hyundai doesn’t cover impact or water intrusion.

    Unauthorized modifications

    Aftermarket tuning, non‑approved high‑voltage repairs, or hacking the BMS can give Hyundai grounds to deny coverage if they can link it to the failure.

    Neglect & misuse

    Chronic overheating, ignoring critical warnings, or using unapproved charging equipment can be cited as improper use. The burden of proof is squishy, but the language is there.
    • Normal, gradual range loss over many years that doesn’t cross Hyundai’s capacity threshold.
    • Wear items and 12‑volt accessories (the little 12V battery, tires, wipers, brake pads, etc.).
    • Cosmetic issues related to the battery housing unless they create a functional or safety defect.
    • Losses due to towing misuse, track use, or repeated operation outside the recommended temperature limits.

    Read the exclusions section

    The ugliest part of any warranty is the “what’s not covered” section, but that’s exactly where you learn how Hyundai might push back if you make a claim. Before you buy, ask the seller for the latest Hyundai warranty handbook that applies to that car’s model year and state.

    Battery degradation: how much loss is “warrantable”?

    All lithium‑ion packs lose capacity over time, and Hyundai is upfront that the IONIQ 5’s battery is no exception. The key question is how much loss triggers warranty action. Hyundai usually defines a minimum acceptable capacity, commonly around 70% of original usable capacity, below which it considers the pack to have degraded abnormally within the warranty window.

    A realistic scenario

    Say your 2023 IONIQ 5 started life with a usable pack of roughly 74 kWh. After 7 years and 90,000 miles, telematics or dealer diagnostics show around 76–78% remaining capacity. Your highway range has dipped noticeably, but you’re still above Hyundai’s threshold. In that case, it’s annoying but normal, and unlikely to be covered.

    A potential warranty case

    Different story if, after 5 years and 60,000 miles, diagnostics put your usable capacity in the mid‑60% range with no history of abuse or major incidents. That kind of drop is exactly what degradation coverage is meant to catch, and a dealer can open a case with Hyundai for repair or replacement.

    The specific percentage and test procedure are spelled out in Hyundai’s warranty documents; expect the dealership to rely on their own tools, not third‑party apps.

    Track your range early

    Make note of your realistic highway range when the car is young, say within the first year, under the way you drive. Down the road, you’ll have a personal baseline to compare against, not just a hazy memory and the number in the brochure.

    New vs used IONIQ 5: how the battery warranty transfers

    Hyundai’s long‑term EV battery coverage is one reason the IONIQ 5 is so popular in the used market. But the question every shopper eventually asks is: do I still get the 10‑year/100,000‑mile protection if I’m not the first owner? In the U.S., the answer is usually yes, Hyundai structures its EV battery warranty to be transferable in most cases, though you should always double‑check the fine print for your specific year.

    Battery warranty: new vs used IONIQ 5 (typical U.S. pattern)

    How much EV battery coverage you’ll usually have left, depending on age and mileage at purchase.

    ScenarioVehicle Age / Miles at PurchaseTypical Remaining EV Battery Coverage
    You buy new from a Hyundai dealer0 years / 50 milesUp to 10 years or 100,000 miles from in‑service date.
    You buy a 3‑year‑old used IONIQ 5 (private party)3 years / 36,000 milesRoughly 7 years or 64,000 miles of EV battery coverage remaining.
    You buy a 6‑year‑old used IONIQ 5 from a marketplace6 years / 80,000 milesRoughly 4 years or 20,000 miles left, assuming standard warranty and no special state rules.
    You buy a high‑mileage example4 years / 102,000 milesEV battery warranty likely expired by mileage, even if years remain.

    These are examples, not promises, always confirm remaining coverage by VIN with a Hyundai dealer or Hyundai USA.

    CPO vs regular used

    Certified Pre‑Owned (CPO) Hyundais sometimes include extra limited‑warranty perks, but those don’t necessarily extend or change the EV battery coverage. Don’t assume “CPO” means more battery protection, press for details in writing.

    How the battery warranty compares to other coverage

    One reason the IONIQ 5 looks so appealing on paper is that the EV battery warranty outlasts almost everything else on the car. By year eight or nine, your bumper‑to‑bumper coverage is long gone, but the pack and major EV hardware may still be under Hyundai’s umbrella.

    Where the battery warranty fits in the bigger picture

    Think of your IONIQ 5’s coverage as overlapping circles rather than one monolithic promise.

    New Vehicle Limited

    Covers most non‑wear items for 5 years/60,000 miles. Your infotainment, window regulators, lots of cabin electronics live here.

    Powertrain & EV system

    Longer‑term 10‑year/100,000‑mile coverage for the bits that make the car go: motors, reduction gear, drive shafts, many EV‑specific components.

    High‑voltage battery

    The star of the show. Also 10‑year/100,000‑mile coverage on most U.S. IONIQ 5s, with specific rules for what counts as a defect or abnormal degradation.

    Warranty isn’t a maintenance plan

    Hyundai’s complimentary maintenance (usually 3 years/36,000 miles) is nice, but it’s not a blanket repair promise. After that period, routine services and wear‑and‑tear are on you, regardless of how much battery warranty you have left.

    Protecting your coverage: ownership habits that matter

    You can’t baby a battery into immortality, but you can avoid giving Hyundai easy excuses to deny a claim. The warranty is written to exclude abuse, neglect, and certain types of misuse. Smart habits make it much easier to argue that any big problem is on them, not you.

    Battery‑friendly habits that keep you in Hyundai’s good graces

    Follow Hyundai’s maintenance schedule

    Even though EVs need less routine work, Hyundai still expects certain inspections and fluid changes at specified intervals. Keep the service history tidy and documented.

    Use approved charging equipment

    Home charging should be via a properly installed circuit and quality EVSE. If Hyundai can tie a failure to sketchy wiring or non‑approved hardware, you’re on thin ice.

    Avoid chronic extreme SoC use

    Occasional 0–100% swings are fine, but living at 100% or repeatedly running to 0% and ignoring warnings isn’t great for longevity, or your chances in a warranty debate.

    Keep an eye on warnings

    If the car shows high‑voltage or cooling warnings and you ignore them for months, it’s easier for Hyundai to call resulting damage “neglect.” Get issues logged early.

    Protect the pack physically

    Avoid deep water, don’t high‑center the car off‑road, and repair collision damage properly. Physical damage to the pack is an insurance problem, not a warranty one.

    Document everything

    If you’re a long‑term owner, keep a simple folder: service receipts, photos of range or battery‑health readouts over time, and notes on when warnings appeared. In a borderline claim, that paper trail can be persuasive.

    Shopping used: how Recharged evaluates IONIQ 5 batteries

    On the used market, the Hyundai IONIQ 5’s generous factory warranty is a big reason shoppers feel brave enough to chase a futuristic crossover instead of a familiar gasoline CUV. But a warranty is only half the story; you also want to know how healthy the battery is today, not just how long Hyundai might cover it.

    • Recharged Score battery diagnostics: Every IONIQ 5 on Recharged comes with a battery health report that looks at capacity, charging history indicators, and error codes where available.
    • Remaining warranty snapshot: We track in‑service date and mileage to estimate how many years and miles of EV battery coverage you likely have left.
    • Fair, data‑driven pricing: Battery state of health and remaining warranty factor into how we price cars, so you’re not paying “like‑new” money for a pack that’s clearly well into middle age.
    • Specialist EV support: Our EV‑focused team can walk you through what a given IONIQ 5’s battery data means in real‑world range, not just in abstract percentages.

    Why that matters

    Replacing an out‑of‑warranty high‑voltage pack can cost tens of thousands of dollars. A solid factory warranty plus verified battery health doesn’t just feel reassuring, it’s a concrete part of the car’s value proposition. That’s exactly what Recharged is built to surface.

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    FAQ: Hyundai IONIQ 5 battery warranty

    Frequently asked questions about the IONIQ 5 battery warranty

    Key takeaways for IONIQ 5 shoppers and owners

    Remember these points when you’re buying or owning an IONIQ 5

    The big number: 10 years / 100,000 miles

    For most U.S. IONIQ 5s, that’s the length of the high‑voltage battery warranty. It’s one of the strongest EV battery promises in the segment.

    Warranty ≠ no degradation

    Hyundai is promising to step in if the pack fails or fades <strong>abnormally fast</strong>, not that your range will be frozen in time. Some loss is baked into the chemistry.

    Used buyers still benefit

    Because coverage usually transfers, a clean, low‑mileage used IONIQ 5 can give you years of battery protection at a big discount to new, especially when paired with independent battery‑health data.

    Your habits still matter

    Following Hyundai’s maintenance guidance, using quality charging gear, and respecting warning lights all make it easier to get help if something goes wrong.

    Data is your friend

    A <strong>Recharged Score battery report</strong> plus clear documentation of remaining factory warranty gives you a sharper picture of risk than a seller’s “It’s fine, trust me.”

    The Hyundai IONIQ 5’s battery warranty is more than a marketing slogan; it’s the backbone of the car’s long‑term value proposition. Get clear on what it covers, what it excludes, and how much you have left, and the IONIQ 5 turns from a futuristic gamble into a well‑underwritten piece of technology. If you’re shopping used, pairing that factory protection with a transparent battery‑health report, like the Recharged Score you’ll see on every IONIQ 5 at Recharged, is about as close as you can get to risk management in a world that runs on electrons.

    Hyundai IONIQ 5 on Recharged

    See all →
    2024 Hyundai IONIQ 5

    2024 Hyundai IONIQ 5

    SEL•19K mi•251 mi range
    4.9/5Recharged Score
    $27,599
    2024 Hyundai IONIQ 5

    2024 Hyundai IONIQ 5

    SEL•22K mi•248 mi range
    5.0/5Recharged Score
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    2024 Hyundai IONIQ 5

    2024 Hyundai IONIQ 5

    Limited•13K mi•257 mi range
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