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Battery Health draining fast

My MacBookPro m1 bought on May 2023, is having only 85% of battery health, i had noticed the battery health going down in a faster rate, even the cycle count is 115.

MacBook Pro 14″, macOS 14.1

Posted on Nov 27, 2023 4:35 AM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Nov 28, 2023 7:24 PM

Keep in mind Apple only just recently showed the Battery Maximum Capacity in macOS so people have never seen how the Lithium Batteries degrade over time. In fact, the Maximum Capacity can fluctuate up & down. For example....a battery with a Full Charge Capacity of 4,315 mAh (battery for MBPro 13" 2017). A 200mAh fluctuation results in a fluctuation of 5%. A 200 mAh fluctuation is not unusual for an Apple Lithium Battery. I only begin to worry about the battery once the fluctuations get to 400 - 500 mAh.


Design Capacity = 4,315 mAh = 100%


Full Charge Capacity = 4,115 mAh = 95%


Before Apple exposed the Battery Maximum Capacity value, the only people who may even have noticed were the users utilizing a third party app such as Coconut Battery to monitor their batteries health.


Unfortunately even most Apple techs are not aware of these specific details. I only discovered it when I analyzed my organization's Apple laptops when people were complaining of battery related issues, but macOS showed the Battery Condition as Normal and the Apple Diagnostics reported no issues either. Apple only cares about when macOS shows the Battery Condition is "Service Recommended", or when the Battery Cycle Count is over 1,000 cycles, or the Apple Diagnostics report a battery failure.


You can take the laptop to an Apple Store to be examined, but they won't do anything unless one of those conditions I mentioned are met.


My recommendation to everyone is to ignore the battery information until the battery no longer performs to your expectations to see if it merits a replacement. Some people may be happy with the battery performance even when the Battery Maximum Capacity is below 80%....it all depends on a user's workload & expectations.


3 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Nov 28, 2023 7:24 PM in response to Dhanalekshmi

Keep in mind Apple only just recently showed the Battery Maximum Capacity in macOS so people have never seen how the Lithium Batteries degrade over time. In fact, the Maximum Capacity can fluctuate up & down. For example....a battery with a Full Charge Capacity of 4,315 mAh (battery for MBPro 13" 2017). A 200mAh fluctuation results in a fluctuation of 5%. A 200 mAh fluctuation is not unusual for an Apple Lithium Battery. I only begin to worry about the battery once the fluctuations get to 400 - 500 mAh.


Design Capacity = 4,315 mAh = 100%


Full Charge Capacity = 4,115 mAh = 95%


Before Apple exposed the Battery Maximum Capacity value, the only people who may even have noticed were the users utilizing a third party app such as Coconut Battery to monitor their batteries health.


Unfortunately even most Apple techs are not aware of these specific details. I only discovered it when I analyzed my organization's Apple laptops when people were complaining of battery related issues, but macOS showed the Battery Condition as Normal and the Apple Diagnostics reported no issues either. Apple only cares about when macOS shows the Battery Condition is "Service Recommended", or when the Battery Cycle Count is over 1,000 cycles, or the Apple Diagnostics report a battery failure.


You can take the laptop to an Apple Store to be examined, but they won't do anything unless one of those conditions I mentioned are met.


My recommendation to everyone is to ignore the battery information until the battery no longer performs to your expectations to see if it merits a replacement. Some people may be happy with the battery performance even when the Battery Maximum Capacity is below 80%....it all depends on a user's workload & expectations.


Battery Health draining fast

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