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With the iPhone 15 series, I did an experiment and kept my iPhone's Charge Limit set at 80 percent for an entire year. It provided an interesting look at the impact of charge limits on battery longevity, so I decided to repeat it for the iPhone 16 line.

iOS-26-Battery-Glass-Feature.jpg

Since September 2024, my iPhone 16 Pro Max has been limited to an 80 percent charge, with no cheating. As of today, my battery's maximum capacity is at 94 percent with 299 charge cycles.

With last year's test, I spent a lot of time with my battery below 20 percent. I saw some comments suggesting that draining it so low could also affect battery capacity over time, so this year, I tried hard to keep my battery between 20 and 80 percent. I wasn't always successful, but my iPhone 16 Pro Max was in that middle charge area most of the time.

You can compare your own battery health with mine, but my guess is that my 94 percent battery capacity is about average, regardless of whether charging limits are on or off. In fact, my iPhone 15 Pro Max was also at 94 percent capacity at the 12 month mark when I did this same test last year.

iphone-16-pro-max-battery-test.jpg

I did a mix of charging via MagSafe and charging with USB-C, and my iPhone 16 Pro Max can get hot when charging over MagSafe, especially with MagSafe battery packs. Since I was trying to keep above a 20 percent charge, I did more wireless charging when I was out. I can't help but wonder if heat was an issue this year.

It continued to be inconvenient limiting my iPhone battery to an 80 percent charge. It was fine when home, but if I was out and wanted to use the camera or needed GPS, it often wasn't enough battery. When you set an 80 percent charge limit, the iPhone will charge to full every so often to calibrate, and I appreciated surprise days with 20 percent extra battery.

If I had to guess, I probably had a 50/50 split between MagSafe charging and fast charging with USB-C. Most charging was indoors at around 72 degrees, but there were times when I was outdoors with a battery pack in warmer conditions.

I use my older iPhones for software tests, so my iPhone 15 Pro Max is still around. At the two year mark, its capacity is 88 percent, down from 94 percent in September 2024. It has 352 cycles, and I've kept it at the 80 percent limit.

During this year's testing, my iPhone 16 Pro Max battery was still at around 98 percent just a couple of months ago, so I thought the limit was having more of an impact, but I saw a decent drop as we got closer to September. It was even at 95 percent about a week ago, but now I'm down to 94 percent.

I now have two years of data with my iPhone limited to an 80 percent charge, and I don't think it's been worth it. My coworker who also has a 16 Pro Max did not have an 80 percent charge limit set, and his battery capacity is 96 percent with 308 charge cycles.

Maybe setting an 80 percent limit improves battery health over a longer period of time, but over a one-year period, the results have been disappointing. Setting charging to a 90 or 95 percent might make more sense.

I have upgraded to the iPhone 17 Pro Max and did already limit it to an 80 percent charge for another 12-month test. I'm interested to see how the larger battery changes things, and whether the switch to aluminum will make a difference.

What's your iPhone battery capacity and cycle count? Let me know in the comments below, and weigh in on whether you think the 80 percent charge limit is a good idea.

Article Link: iPhone 16 Pro Max 80% Charge Limit: One Year Later, Was It Worth It?
 
iPhone 15 Pro Max

Majority on 80% limit, last few months no battery limitations set. Mostly Magsafe charger overnight. Coconut battery app also confirms the current capacity shown on iOS side.

Not sure if it is good or bad, but I wanted to share.
 

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Interesting. I am not saying it doesn't slightly improve battery life, but for people upgrading to a new iPhone every year, I don't think it's as big of a deal as those who hold onto their iPhone's for for several years before upgrading.

I guess if you are on something like the IUP then it's not a big deal. But if you go 3 or 4 years in between upgrade cycles than I could see it being very useful.
 
Honestly, I thought the idea was silly when I first read about it, and even sillier when I was searching the web for why my iPhone 16 Pro Max never charged up to 100%. So I disabled the limit.

After one year, my battery health is normal, my battery capacity is 95% (!) after 296 charging cycles.

Maybe if you keep your iPhone for several years between upgrades this will start to make a difference, but it seemed very inconvenient to me, and I have no plans to turn it back on.
 
I charge to 90% with a mix of wireless and wired charging. I am at 99% health after 284 cycles. I also have an automation to go into low power mode while charging up to 80% and when battery level goes below 20%. Not sure if the 99% is as a result of any of this or not, but it hasn’t inconvenienced me at all so I suppose it doesn’t hurt.
 
I have owned my 16 Plus for a year....
always charge it to 100% and it has 231 cycles. I have always used the MagSafe charger to charge my phone and my charging is pretty consistent where i put it on the charger at the same time ever night and pick it off the charger the same time ever morning.
I am max capacity of 100%.
Apple is recommending my charge limit be set to 95% but Im keeping it at 100%
 
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I've been mostly using my phone at 80% this year, with about 6 weeks at 100% for travel. After 227 cycles the Maximum Capacity is still showing 100%. That is significantly better than the numbers I used to get. I am frequently near a charger so it's not an inconvenience and my battery probably doesn't drop low very frequently.
 
My iPhone 16 Pro Max, bought very nearly a year ago ("First use: October 2024"), has been on this 80% limit the whole time. Maximum Capacity is still at 100%

I think probably because my normal usage is light enough that even with that charging limit it almost never falls very low - say, below 20% - by the time I put it back on charge at the end of the day, so it's well suited to my lifestyle. On a couple of occasions I had a busier than normal day and nearly ran flat before getting home - it was predictable though and I should have forced a charge to 100% at the start of those days. But those were the exception. Even then I didn't actually run flat; when I noticed it was getting low I stopped doomscrolling on the train and put it on low power mode. (I think the continual seeking for base stations (often not finding them) during the train journey was probably the real drain.)

So the lesson might be: Do it, if your normal usage is light enough that you're not skating close to running flat all the time; because if you are, that's probably doing as much or more harm than just letting it charge to full and having more left in the tank by the end of the day.

edit, as others are listing it: 145 cycles. Very light compared to most of you lot 😉
 
My 14PM is at 93% health. As I can't limit charging automatically, I have always tried to charge at no less than 30 and unplug at 80 as a best practice that I also use with my LiFePo4 solar batteries.
 
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When I got my 17 Pro, I asked the Apple associate about limiting charging to 80% (which I do with my iPad Pro). He said it doesn't matter. The iPhone knows how to cycle itself, so just let it charge to 100%. 🤷‍♂️

(BTW, after a year my iPad Pro battery health is still at 100%)
 
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