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    Volvo EX90 Battery Warranty: What It Covers and How It Works
    Battery & Range·9 min read·By Recharged Editorial Team

    Volvo EX90 Battery Warranty: What It Covers and How It Works

    volvo-ex90battery-warrantyev-battery-healthev-rangeused-evshigh-voltage-batteryev-ownership-costsev-warrantyrecharged-scoreluxury-suv-ev

    Table of Contents

    • Volvo EX90 battery warranty at a glance
    • How long the Volvo EX90 battery warranty lasts
    • What the Volvo EX90 battery warranty actually covers
    • What the Volvo EX90 battery warranty does not cover
    • Battery degradation: how much loss is a warranty issue?
    • High-voltage battery vs. 12‑volt battery coverage
    • Real‑world scenarios when the EX90 battery warranty helps
    • How to avoid voiding your Volvo EX90 battery warranty
    • Buying a used Volvo EX90: what to check about the battery
    • FAQ: Volvo EX90 battery warranty
    • Key takeaways for Volvo EX90 owners and shoppers

    If you’re considering a Volvo EX90, or already have one in the driveway, the big question is the same one every EV owner eventually asks: what happens if the battery goes bad? The Volvo EX90 battery warranty is generous on paper, but it has some fine print you’ll want to understand before you sign a purchase agreement or a lease.

    Short answer

    On recent U.S.-spec Volvo EX90 models, the high-voltage traction battery is covered for 8 years or 100,000 miles (whichever comes first). That’s in addition to the standard 4-year/50,000-mile new-vehicle warranty that covers the rest of the SUV.

    Volvo EX90 battery warranty at a glance

    Volvo EX90 U.S. battery & vehicle warranty snapshot

    8 yrs / 100k mi
    High-voltage battery
    Typical EX90 traction battery warranty on U.S. models
    4 yrs / 50k mi
    New‑vehicle warranty
    Covers the rest of the EX90 (including many electric components)
    12 yrs
    Corrosion
    Perforation warranty against rust-through on body panels
    4 yrs / unlimited
    Roadside assist
    Factory roadside assistance for breakdowns and towing

    The EX90 uses a large lithium‑ion pack, about 111 kWh gross, so replacing it out of warranty would be a serious financial event. Volvo knows that, which is why they separate the high‑voltage battery warranty from the standard bumper‑to‑bumper coverage. In practice you have two overlapping safety nets: one for the whole car, and a longer one just for the traction battery.

    Core Volvo EX90 U.S. warranty coverage

    Factory coverage you can expect on a new EX90 sold in the U.S. (exact terms can vary slightly by model year and state; always confirm your specific paperwork).

    ComponentTypical CoverageWhat it means for you
    New‑vehicle limited warranty4 years / 50,000 milesDefects in materials or workmanship on most non‑wear items across the vehicle.
    High‑voltage traction battery8 years / 100,000 milesRepair or replacement of the EX90’s main drive battery if it fails or drops below Volvo’s capacity threshold.
    Powertrain / EV drive systemGenerally within 4 yrs / 50,000 milesElectric motors, reduction gear and many high‑voltage components during the basic warranty period.
    Corrosion perforation12 years / unlimited milesRust‑through from the inside out on body panels.
    Roadside assistance4 years / unlimited milesTowing, jump‑starts and certain breakdown help, including EV‑related issues.

    High-level summary of coverage on new Volvo EX90 models in the U.S.

    Always check your specific paperwork

    Volvo has updated warranty language over time and sometimes issues regional or model‑year‑specific changes. Before you rely on any warranty information, especially for edge cases, double‑check your warranty booklet or ask a Volvo service advisor to print the current coverage for your VIN.

    How long the Volvo EX90 battery warranty lasts

    For U.S. buyers, the Volvo EX90’s high‑voltage battery is typically covered for 8 years or 100,000 miles, whichever comes first. That clock starts on the in‑service date, the day the vehicle was first sold or put into demo/service use by a Volvo retailer, not the day you drive a used one home.

    • If you buy new, your battery warranty runs from the date on your original purchase/lease contract.
    • If you buy Certified Pre‑Owned or used, you inherit whatever remains of that original 8‑year/100,000‑mile term.
    • In some cases, Volvo has issued updates or clarifications that may slightly extend coverage or clarify components, those apply based on VIN and model year.

    Quick way to check remaining coverage

    Look at the car’s in‑service date on the original purchase paperwork or a vehicle history report, then subtract that from eight years. If you’re buying used, a seller like Recharged will typically do this math for you and show remaining factory battery coverage right on the listing.

    What the Volvo EX90 battery warranty actually covers

    Here’s where the rubber meets the road. The EX90’s high‑voltage battery warranty is designed to protect you from two big problems: defects that cause failure and, up to a point, excessive capacity loss. It’s not a blanket promise that your range will always match day‑one EPA numbers, but it does give you recourse if the pack has an abnormal issue.

    Covered under the EX90 high‑voltage battery warranty (in most cases)

    Think: defects, not abuse.

    Manufacturing defects

    If a module, cell group or internal connection in the pack fails because it was built wrong or used sub‑par materials, that’s exactly what this warranty is meant to handle.

    Internal battery failures

    Sudden loss of the ability to hold charge, voltage imbalances or a pack that can’t safely operate the vehicle under normal conditions are typically covered issues.

    Out‑of‑spec capacity loss

    All EV batteries lose some range, but if your EX90’s usable capacity drops below Volvo’s warranty threshold during the term, the pack may be repaired or replaced.

    Labor & diagnostics at Volvo

    When the repair is approved under warranty, Volvo covers parts and labor at an authorized retailer. You shouldn’t be paying diagnostic fees for clearly warrantable battery issues.

    Volvo can repair individual modules or, if necessary, replace the entire high‑voltage battery assembly with a new or Volvo Genuine Refurbished Battery. If a refurbished pack is installed while you’re still inside the original warranty window, coverage continues until the original 8‑year/100,000‑mile limit, not a brand‑new 8‑year term.

    Good news on refurbished packs

    If your EX90 needs a replacement high‑voltage battery and Volvo installs a Genuine Refurbished Battery under warranty, the pack is built to a strict standard and carries the balance of your original 8‑year/100,000‑mile coverage. You don’t get a new clock, but you do get a factory‑approved solution instead of a mystery third‑party fix.

    What the Volvo EX90 battery warranty does not cover

    On the other side of the ledger are the things Volvo is very clear about not covering. These exclusions aren’t unique to Volvo, most automakers use similar language, but they’re easy to trip over if you don’t read the fine print.

    Common exclusions in the EX90 battery warranty

    Gradual, normal capacity loss

    Every lithium‑ion pack slowly loses capacity as you fast‑charge, cycle through seasons and rack up miles. As long as that loss stays within Volvo’s "normal" band, it’s considered wear, not a warrantable defect.

    Damage from misuse or improper charging

    Using severely out‑of‑spec chargers, ignoring warnings, or modifying the charging system can all give Volvo an easy path to deny coverage. Think spliced wiring, sketchy adapters, or charging methods the manual tells you to avoid.

    Accident or collision damage

    If a curb strike, crash or road debris physically damages the pack, that’s an <strong>insurance</strong> claim, not a battery warranty repair, even if the cells fail later because of that incident.

    Water intrusion from flooding

    Submerging the underbody in deep water, driving through flood zones, or ignoring damage to underbody shields can lead to corrosion or shorts that are treated as environmental damage, not defects.

    Third‑party modifications to the HV system

    Aftermarket power taps, non‑approved high‑voltage repairs or tampering with the pack enclosure are almost guaranteed to cause headaches if you later need a warranty claim approved.

    A hard line on abuse and tampering

    If Volvo can reasonably argue that your actions caused the problem, say, drilling into the floor to mount accessories or letting an unqualified shop open the battery pack, they can deny coverage. When in doubt, let a Volvo retailer or a qualified EV specialist handle anything that touches the high‑voltage system.

    Battery degradation: how much loss is a warranty issue?

    The question every EV owner eventually asks is, "How much range loss is too much?" Volvo, like most brands, expects some decline in the EX90’s usable capacity over time. While Volvo’s public materials don’t always shout a specific percentage from the rooftops, internal guidelines and industry norms point to a capacity threshold in the neighborhood that many automakers use, often around 70% of original usable capacity within the warranty window.

    • Losing a few percent in the first year or two is normal, especially if you DC fast‑charge often or live in a very hot or very cold climate.
    • A slow glide from 100% down to the low‑80s over many years is considered typical usage, not a defect.
    • A sudden, sharp drop in range, say from 240 miles of highway reality to 160 in a season, with normal use is exactly the kind of behavior that triggers deeper investigation.

    Degradation vs. warranty threshold

    Volvo will look at measured battery capacity, not just the number you see on the dash on a chilly January morning. The dealer can pull battery health data from the EX90 and compare it with Volvo’s internal threshold. If your pack falls below that line while under warranty, you’re in strong territory to request repair or replacement.

    High‑voltage battery vs. 12‑volt battery coverage

    The EX90 actually has more than one battery on board. The big traction pack under the floor moves the SUV. A smaller 12‑volt battery powers control modules, locks, and other low‑voltage gear, just like in a gas car. They’re covered very differently.

    High‑voltage traction battery

    • Purpose: Drives the motors, stores the bulk of your energy.
    • Coverage: About 8 years / 100,000 miles on most EX90s.
    • Focus: Manufacturing defects, internal failures, excessive capacity loss.
    • Repair approach: Module repair or full pack replacement at an authorized Volvo retailer.

    12‑volt battery

    • Purpose: Powers computers, locks, alarms and wake‑up circuitry.
    • Coverage: Typically falls under the 4‑year/50,000‑mile new‑vehicle warranty.
    • Focus: Early failures or defects, not wear from age or repeated drains.
    • Repair approach: Straightforward replacement; often considered a wear item once you’re out of the basic warranty.

    Don’t confuse a 12‑volt issue with a bad traction pack

    Many dramatic EV horror stories start with a weak 12‑volt battery that prevents the car from waking up properly. That can leave you stranded, but it’s not the same as a failed high‑voltage pack, and it’s typically cheaper, faster and much less scary to fix.
    Close-up of a Volvo EX90 charging port with a connector plugged into a home wallbox
    Most of your day‑to‑day peace of mind comes from how you treat the EX90’s battery, not just what the warranty says on paper.

    Real‑world scenarios when the EX90 battery warranty helps

    It’s one thing to read bullet points, another to picture how this plays out when you’re staring at a warning message on the screen. Here are a few real‑world‑style situations where the EX90’s battery warranty can make the difference between a massive bill and a covered repair.

    Common battery‑related situations and how Volvo may respond

    Not every case is black‑and‑white, but these give you a feel for the boundaries.

    Sudden big range loss

    You notice your typical 230‑mile road‑trip range has dropped to 160 with the same driving style and temperatures.

    What happens: Dealer runs diagnostics and capacity tests. If measured capacity is below Volvo’s threshold within 8 yrs/100k mi, a repair or pack replacement is usually on the table.

    Repeated DC fast‑charging

    You’ve fast‑charged heavily for three years and lost, say, 10–15% of range.

    What happens: That’s likely considered normal wear unless capacity has dropped below the official warranty floor.

    Flooded street adventure

    You plow through standing water after a storm and weeks later the car throws high‑voltage isolation faults.

    What happens: If Volvo can tie the failure to water intrusion, this is usually treated as environmental damage for insurance, not a free battery under warranty.

    Aftermarket HV tinkering

    A non‑Volvo shop opens the pack to "fix" a problem or add a power tap for aftermarket accessories.

    What happens: Expect serious push‑back on any future battery warranty claims. Tampering gives Volvo ammunition to deny coverage.

    Cold‑weather range shock

    Your winter range plummets 30–40% on icy mornings, but returns in summer.

    What happens: That’s temperature behavior, not a dying battery. Annoying, but not a warranty issue.

    No‑start due to HV fault

    The EX90 throws a high‑voltage system error and refuses to go into drive well within 8 yrs/100k mi.

    What happens: If diagnostics point to an internal pack fault, that’s exactly the sort of thing the battery warranty exists to cover.

    How to avoid voiding your Volvo EX90 battery warranty

    You don’t have to baby the EX90, but you do need to respect the limits Volvo sets in the owner’s manual. The fastest way to turn a strong warranty into a polite denial is to give Volvo evidence that the battery was abused, modified, or serviced improperly.

    Habits that help keep your EX90 battery warranty safe

    1. Follow the charging instructions

    Use <strong>properly installed</strong> Level 2 home charging and reputable public stations. Avoid janky adapters, home‑brewed extension cords, or anything the manual flags as off‑limits.

    2. Stay current on software updates

    Let Volvo install over‑the‑air or dealer updates that improve battery management, safety, and charging behavior. Many updates are designed specifically to protect the pack long‑term.

    3. Skip high‑voltage DIY projects

    Drilling into the floor, tapping the high‑voltage system for accessories, or letting an unqualified shop "open the pack" are all quick ways to give Volvo a reason to walk away from coverage.

    4. Document problems early

    If you notice weird charging behavior or big swings in displayed range, get it documented at a Volvo retailer while you’re <strong>still</strong> squarely inside the warranty window.

    5. Avoid repeated deep abuse

    Occasional DC fast‑charging is fine, but routinely fast‑charging from 0–100% in extreme heat isn’t doing your pack, or your warranty position, any favors.

    Get everything in writing

    If a dealer tells you something is, or is not, covered, ask them to note it on your repair order. A paper trail can help if you ever need to escalate a questionable battery decision with Volvo corporate.

    Buying a used Volvo EX90: what to check about the battery

    Because the EX90 is still relatively new, almost every one on the used market today still has factory battery coverage left. That’s great news, but only if you understand what you’re inheriting and how to verify the pack’s health before you buy.

    Questions to ask the seller

    • In‑service date: When did the 8‑year clock start?
    • Current mileage: How close is it to the 100,000‑mile limit?
    • Charging habits: Mostly home Level 2, or heavy DC fast‑charging history?
    • Climate history: Has the car spent its life in extreme heat or cold?
    • Warranty repairs: Any previous high‑voltage or battery work? Ask to see repair orders.

    Battery health checks that matter

    • On‑screen range vs. EPA figures: A little short is normal, a huge gap deserves questions.
    • Diagnostic scan: A Volvo retailer can pull battery health data and fault histories.
    • Third‑party battery report: With used EVs on Recharged, every vehicle comes with a Recharged Score Report that includes verified battery health, so you’re not guessing.

    How Recharged helps with used EX90 battery peace of mind

    Every EV listed on Recharged, including models like the EX90, comes with a Recharged Score Report that verifies battery health and compares it with similar vehicles. You see real data, not just a guess based on odometer and age, and our EV‑specialist team can walk you through what the numbers mean before you buy.

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    FAQ: Volvo EX90 battery warranty

    Frequently asked questions about the Volvo EX90 battery warranty

    Key takeaways for Volvo EX90 owners and shoppers

    The Volvo EX90’s battery warranty is designed to take the terror out of owning a six‑figure electric SUV with a massive lithium‑ion pack. You’re looking at 8 years or 100,000 miles of coverage on the high‑voltage battery, layered on top of the usual new‑vehicle warranty, as long as you use the car the way Volvo intended and steer clear of high‑voltage heroics.

    If you’re shopping new, use the warranty as your safety net, not an excuse to ignore good charging habits. If you’re shopping used, focus on remaining warranty term and actual battery health instead of mileage alone. And if you’d rather have someone do that homework for you, Recharged combines verified battery diagnostics, transparent pricing and EV‑specialist support so you can enjoy the EX90’s smooth, silent shove without worrying what the fine print says.

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