iPhone 15 Pro Max Battery Health Dropped To 99% In Less Than A Month

My brother and I purchased the new iPhone 15 Pro Max when it released in September. At the beginning the iPhone was overheating even when charging. I also noticed that the battery would drain very quickly. I charge my phone up to 85-95% & only charge it to 100% when I know I will be out & about all day. But most of the time even if I do go out all day the max I charge the phone to is 95%.

I checked my battery health and it says 99% which is insane & NOT normal for a brand new iPhone that’s not even 2 months old. My brothers phone is at 100% on battery life and he is CONSTANTLY on his phone.


I’ve contacted apple and they have done their little test and shows that everything is fine but they don’t give an explanation as to WHY the iPhone has dropped to 99 in less than 2 months as well as to why the battery drains so quickly.


My iPhone is also updated to the latest IOS 17.1


I’ve had iPhone since the 4s & this is the first time I have experienced my iPhone battery health dropped to 99 in less than 2 months & the battery draining quicker than my old iPhone 13 Pro Max that had a battery life of 83% after having it for 2 years. I have always been careful with battery health & hardly charge to 100% and have gone 1-2 days until needing to charge my iPhone.


is anyone else having this issue? Apple hasn’t been very helpful and says my phone is fine even though the battery performance has been horrible even after the new update they claimed fixed the problem. I’m still having this problem & it’s coasting the health of my battery.


I shut off all background app refresh to see if it helps & so far it seems to be doing a little ok but the fact that the battery performance has been bad I’m very disappointed with apple.

iPhone 15 Pro Max

Posted on Nov 3, 2023 12:05 PM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Dec 17, 2023 8:16 AM

Jeff_88 wrote:

I am having the same issue, I have contacted Apple support via messages and they mentioned there is an issue with my phone and asked me if I want a replacement phone to be sent and to charge me the shipping cost or to go to the Apple store. I said I go to the Apple store, and I went there the staff told me and the manager there was no problem with my phone i asked them why they gave me an option to come here, they replied because apple online has a different procedure. they wasted my time and very bad experience.

Your battery did not drop 1%. It probably dropped 0.1% from 100% to 99.9%, because the gauge in the phone just displays the whole number, not the fraction, so 99.9% appears as 99%. But any loss of capacity is NORMAL.


Batteries are consumables; they lose a little capacity every time they are discharged, then recharged. On average this works out to about a 1% loss for every 25 “full charge cycles”. As one example, if you charge the phone overnight, every night (and that is what you should do; it is a best practice), it starts the day at 100%. If it drops to 20% by the end of the day before you charge it again overnight that counts as 0.8 full charge cycles (20% to 100%), or about 24 full charge cycles per month of use. For this example your battery capacity will lose about 1% per month. Of course, if the end-of-day level is higher than 20% the capacity loss will be a little less, and if it is lower than 20%, or you charge it during the day, the capacity loss will be higher.


Once the capacity drops below 80%, or if there is a message in Battery Health that the battery is not meeting peak performance expectations, it’s time to change the battery→iPhone Battery Replacement - Official Apple Support


The absolute best way to get maximum use on a charge, as well as slow the decline of battery capacity long term is to enable Optimized Battery Charging (Settings/Battery/Battery Health) and charge the device overnight, every night. The battery will fast charge to 80%, then pause. During the nighttime pause the phone will use mains power instead of battery power, allowing the battery to “rest”, and thus reducing the need to charge the battery quite as often. The phone will resume charging to reach 100% when you are ready to use your phone; it will “learn” your usage pattern. If you enable iCloud Backup (Settings/[your name]/iCloud - iCloud Backup) the phone will back up overnight also, assuring that you can never lose more than the current day’s updates. Here's more information→About Optimized Battery Charging on your iPhone - Apple Support

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255 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Dec 17, 2023 8:16 AM in response to Jeff_88

Jeff_88 wrote:

I am having the same issue, I have contacted Apple support via messages and they mentioned there is an issue with my phone and asked me if I want a replacement phone to be sent and to charge me the shipping cost or to go to the Apple store. I said I go to the Apple store, and I went there the staff told me and the manager there was no problem with my phone i asked them why they gave me an option to come here, they replied because apple online has a different procedure. they wasted my time and very bad experience.

Your battery did not drop 1%. It probably dropped 0.1% from 100% to 99.9%, because the gauge in the phone just displays the whole number, not the fraction, so 99.9% appears as 99%. But any loss of capacity is NORMAL.


Batteries are consumables; they lose a little capacity every time they are discharged, then recharged. On average this works out to about a 1% loss for every 25 “full charge cycles”. As one example, if you charge the phone overnight, every night (and that is what you should do; it is a best practice), it starts the day at 100%. If it drops to 20% by the end of the day before you charge it again overnight that counts as 0.8 full charge cycles (20% to 100%), or about 24 full charge cycles per month of use. For this example your battery capacity will lose about 1% per month. Of course, if the end-of-day level is higher than 20% the capacity loss will be a little less, and if it is lower than 20%, or you charge it during the day, the capacity loss will be higher.


Once the capacity drops below 80%, or if there is a message in Battery Health that the battery is not meeting peak performance expectations, it’s time to change the battery→iPhone Battery Replacement - Official Apple Support


The absolute best way to get maximum use on a charge, as well as slow the decline of battery capacity long term is to enable Optimized Battery Charging (Settings/Battery/Battery Health) and charge the device overnight, every night. The battery will fast charge to 80%, then pause. During the nighttime pause the phone will use mains power instead of battery power, allowing the battery to “rest”, and thus reducing the need to charge the battery quite as often. The phone will resume charging to reach 100% when you are ready to use your phone; it will “learn” your usage pattern. If you enable iCloud Backup (Settings/[your name]/iCloud - iCloud Backup) the phone will back up overnight also, assuring that you can never lose more than the current day’s updates. Here's more information→About Optimized Battery Charging on your iPhone - Apple Support

Jan 17, 2024 12:22 PM in response to vighnesh2993

vighnesh2993 wrote:

I am facing the same issue. I bought my phone on 11/24/2023 and within 45 days after the update my batterhealth is at 99% andni gonwithiut charging my phone for 2 days and seeing this really disappoints me and makes me angry are i have spent a lot of money on this 15 pro max.. in India it is twice the amount compared to the U.S

You are not facing ANY issue at all. Your phone is performing as designed. If anything, 99% after 45 days is MUCH BETTER THAN AVERAGE.


Batteries are consumables; they lose a little capacity every time they are discharged, then recharged. On average this works out to about a 1% loss for every 25 “full charge cycles”. As one example, if you charge the phone overnight, every night (and that is what you should do; it is a best practice), it starts the day at 100%. If it drops to 20% by the end of the day before you charge it again overnight that counts as 0.8 full charge cycles (20% to 100%), or about 24 full charge cycles per month of use. For this example your battery capacity will lose about 1% per month. Of course, if the end-of-day level is higher than 20% the capacity loss will be a little less, and if it is lower than 20%, or you charge it during the day, the capacity loss will be higher.


Once the capacity drops below 80%, or if there is a message in Battery Health that the battery is not meeting peak performance expectations, it’s time to change the battery→iPhone Battery Replacement - Official Apple Support


The absolute best way to get maximum use on a charge, as well as slow the decline of battery capacity long term is to enable Optimized Battery Charging (Settings/Battery/Battery Health) and charge the device overnight, every night. The battery will fast charge to 80%, then pause. During the nighttime pause the phone will use mains power instead of battery power, allowing the battery to “rest”, and thus reducing the need to charge the battery quite as often. The phone will resume charging to reach 100% when you are ready to use your phone; it will “learn” your usage pattern. If you enable iCloud Backup (Settings/[your name]/iCloud - iCloud Backup) the phone will back up overnight also, assuring that you can never lose more than the current day’s updates. Here's more information→About Optimized Battery Charging on your iPhone - Apple Support

Feb 23, 2024 6:14 PM in response to ClumsyClown

ClumsyClown wrote:

do not let any of these workers convince you that this is normal. You are not supposed to go down 98% in 2 months of having an iPhone. Every iPhone has had their battery life go down 1% after a year. This is obviously a defect and they won’t admit it.

Yes, you are “supposed” to go down to 98% in 2 months. Sometimes you are lucky and get a phone with a battery that exceeds Apple’s minimum specification of 500 full charge cycles to stay above 80%, but not every phone for every user.


Batteries are consumables; they lose a little capacity every time they are discharged, then recharged. On average this works out to about a 1% loss for every 25 “full charge cycles”. As one example, if you charge the phone overnight, every night (and that is what you should do; it is a best practice), it starts the day at 100%. If it drops to 20% by the end of the day before you charge it again overnight that counts as 0.8 full charge cycles (20% to 100%), or about 24 full charge cycles per month of use. For this example your battery capacity will lose about 1% per month.


A battery is a chemical device, and chemistry is generally pretty variable and uncertain, as well as being analog, not digital. Apple specs the battery capacity to remain above 80% for 500 full charge cycles, but that is a minimum requirement; there is no published maximum expected capacity. So sometimes batteries will perform much better than that minimum specification, and sometimes the change in maximum capacity won't be linear. There is no way to predict in advance what the real-life performance of any specific battery will be, so if your battery goes down less than 1% per month, or stays at 100% for several months, consider yourself very lucky. You are the exception, not the rule.


All iPhones have a specification for the battery. As an example, for the iPhone 14 Pro that is 3200 milliampere-hours (MaH). So the battery monitor is calibrated for 100% at that value. But there are variations in manufacturing, so some batteries will have less capacity, and some will have more. Suppose your battery had, say, 3520 MaH capacity (10% over standard). That would still show as 100% (even though it was actually 110%), but as it aged the health would stay at 100% until it fell below 3200 MaH. This would appear to you as if the battery had fabulous life, until suddenly it didn’t.

Nov 3, 2023 12:11 PM in response to soitsjesse

Separately, the Maximum Capacity only shows the whole percentage, so if it drops to 99.9% that will display as 99%. Most likely that is what you are seeing; a 0.1% drop.


Batteries are consumables; they lose a little capacity every time they are discharged, then recharged. On average this works out to about a 1% loss for every 25 “full charge cycles”. As one example, if you charge the phone overnight, every night (and that is what you should do; it is a best practice), it starts the day at 100%. If it drops to 20% by the end of the day before you charge it again overnight that counts as 0.8 full charge cycles (20% to 100%), or about 24 full charge cycles per month of use. For this example your battery capacity will lose about 1% per month. Of course, if the end-of-day level is higher than 20% the capacity loss will be a little less, and if it is lower than 20%, or you charge it during the day, the capacity loss will be higher.


Once the capacity drops below 80%, or if there is a message in Battery Health that the battery is not meeting peak performance expectations, it’s time to change the battery→iPhone Battery Replacement - Official Apple Support


The absolute best way to get maximum use on a charge, as well as slow the decline of battery capacity long term is to enable Optimized Battery Charging (Settings/Battery/Battery Health) and charge the device overnight, every night. The battery will fast charge to 80%, then pause. During the nighttime pause the phone will use mains power instead of battery power, allowing the battery to “rest”, and thus reducing the need to charge the battery quite as often. The phone will resume charging to reach 100% when you are ready to use your phone; it will “learn” your usage pattern. If you enable iCloud Backup (Settings/[your name]/iCloud - iCloud Backup) the phone will back up overnight also, assuring that you can never lose more than the current day’s updates. Here's more information→About Optimized Battery Charging on your iPhone - Apple Support

Dec 27, 2023 7:23 AM in response to Ashif7821

Ashif7821 wrote:

My iPhone 15 battery health dropped to 99% after less than 2 months of usage ….its only 67 cycles of charging

That is better than average. It will drop 1% for every 25 full charge cycles, so you are actually ahead of the curve. After 67 charge cycles most phones would be at 97.3% (which would display as 97%).


Batteries are consumables; they lose a little capacity every time they are discharged, then recharged. On average this works out to about a 1% loss for every 25 “full charge cycles”. As one example, if you charge the phone overnight, every night (and that is what you should do; it is a best practice), it starts the day at 100%. If it drops to 20% by the end of the day before you charge it again overnight that counts as 0.8 full charge cycles (20% to 100%), or about 24 full charge cycles per month of use. For this example your battery capacity will lose about 1% per month. Of course, if the end-of-day level is higher than 20% the capacity loss will be a little less, and if it is lower than 20%, or you charge it during the day, the capacity loss will be higher.


Once the capacity drops below 80%, or if there is a message in Battery Health that the battery is not meeting peak performance expectations, it’s time to change the battery→iPhone Battery Replacement - Official Apple Support



Nov 16, 2023 1:07 PM in response to joe3066

A battery is a chemical device, and chemistry is generally pretty variable and uncertain, as well as being analog, not digital. Apple specs the battery capacity to remain above 80% for 500 full charge cycles, but that is a minimum requirement; there is no published maximum expected capacity. So sometimes batteries will perform much better than that minimum specification, and sometimes the change in maximum capacity won't be linear. There is no way to predict in advance what the real-life performance of any specific battery will be.


All iPhones have a specification for the battery. As an example, for the iPhone 14 Pro that is 3200 milliampere-hours (MaH). So the battery monitor is calibrated for 100% at that value. But there are variations in manufacturing, so some batteries will have less capacity, and some will have more. Suppose your battery had, say, 3520 MaH capacity (10% over standard). That would still show as 100% (even though it was actually 110%), but as it aged the health would stay at 100% until it fell below 3200 MaH. This would appear to you as if the battery had fabulous life, until suddenly it didn’t.

Jan 5, 2024 8:16 AM in response to Athibz

Athibz wrote:

I’m having the exact same issue. I’ve had my 15 Pro Max for just under 2 months and I’m now at 99% battery health. The first thing I do when I get a new iPhone is optimize it. I turned off nearly all non essential notifications in settings, turn off all but one app for background app refreshing and changed my email from push to manual and here we are, experiencing battery degradation at a level I’ve never seen in an iPhone at such an early stage of ownership.

I use my iPhone daily, I’m not a heavy user either so this is deeply concerning. Apples response to this isn’t acceptable, if the device is a month old and the battery drops to 99%, imagine what it will look like in 6 months.

it’s not alright to charge $1749 cdn for a device and have this level of degradation only a month in. That is not acceptable. I’ll definitely be heading to put a push on Apple to replace this or at least start a history on these reports.

As you didn’t read any of the thread you posted to either, I will repeat what has been posted a dozen or so times:


That is about where it is expected to be; on average an iPhone will lose about 1% a month, so 99% in 2 months is BETTER that expected.


Batteries are consumables; they lose a little capacity every time they are discharged, then recharged. On average this works out to about a 1% loss for every 25 “full charge cycles”. As one example, if you charge the phone overnight, every night (and that is what you should do; it is a best practice), it starts the day at 100%. If it drops to 20% by the end of the day before you charge it again overnight that counts as 0.8 full charge cycles (20% to 100%), or about 24 full charge cycles per month of use. For this example your battery capacity will lose about 1% per month. Of course, if the end-of-day level is higher than 20% the capacity loss will be a little less, and if it is lower than 20%, or you charge it during the day, the capacity loss will be higher.


Once the capacity drops below 80%, or if there is a message in Battery Health that the battery is not meeting peak performance expectations, it’s time to change the battery→iPhone Battery Replacement - Official Apple Support


Feb 6, 2024 12:02 PM in response to _iphone15user

It’s not in the slightest weird. A battery is a chemical device, and chemistry is generally pretty variable and uncertain, as well as being analog, not digital. Apple specs the battery capacity to remain above 80% for 500 full charge cycles, but that is a minimum requirement; there is no published maximum expected capacity. So sometimes batteries will perform much better than that minimum specification, and sometimes the change in maximum capacity won't be linear. There is no way to predict in advance what the real-life performance of any specific battery will be.


All iPhones have a specification for the battery. As an example, for the iPhone 14 Pro that is 3200 milliampere-hours (MaH). So the battery monitor is calibrated for 100% at that value. But there are variations in manufacturing, so some batteries will have less capacity, and some will have more. Suppose your battery had, say, 3520 MaH capacity (10% over standard). That would still show as 100% (even though it was actually 110%), but as it aged the health would stay at 100% until it fell below 3200 MaH. This would appear to you as if the battery had fabulous life, until suddenly it didn’t. There are apps that can show you the actual battery capacity; Coconut Battery for Macs is a free one that will show capacity in MaH and percent for any devices that sync to the Mac.

Dec 18, 2023 7:15 AM in response to jenayyyyyy

jenayyyyyy wrote:

is there any ways to reduce this ? because i already do all the ways for mantains battery health conditions but the result is not helpful 🥹

I have no way to know if the ways you do to maintain battery health are correct or are the usual internet bunkum.


But here is the absolute best way to get maximum use on a charge, as well as slow the decline of battery capacity long term is to enable Optimized Battery Charging (Settings/Battery/Battery Health) and charge the device overnight, every night. The battery will fast charge to 80%, then pause. During the nighttime pause the phone will use mains power instead of battery power, allowing the battery to “rest”, and thus reducing the need to charge the battery quite as often. The phone will resume charging to reach 100% when you are ready to use your phone; it will “learn” your usage pattern. If you enable iCloud Backup (Settings/[your name]/iCloud - iCloud Backup) the phone will back up overnight also, assuring that you can never lose more than the current day’s updates. Here's more information→About Optimized Battery Charging on your iPhone - Apple Support


For more information, here is the long answer→When to charge your iPhone or iPad | Communities

Jan 5, 2024 8:19 AM in response to Athibz

Athibz wrote:

That is not factual information at all. I’ve owned every iPhone that’s dropped and tracked battery health since that feature launched and that is not how this works.

Sorry, you are wrong. Bob Timmons is correct. What is confusing is that some iPhones have better battery life than the design target. That doesn’t mean that all iPhones do. A battery is a chemical device, and chemistry is generally pretty variable and uncertain, as well as being analog, not digital. Apple specs the battery capacity to remain above 80% for 500 full charge cycles, but that is a minimum requirement; there is no published maximum expected capacity. So sometimes batteries will perform much better than that minimum specification, and sometimes the change in maximum capacity won't be linear. There is no way to predict in advance what the real-life performance of any specific battery will be.


All iPhones have a specification for the battery. As an example, for the iPhone 14 Pro that is 3200 milliampere-hours (MaH). So the battery monitor is calibrated for 100% at that value. But there are variations in manufacturing, so some batteries will have less capacity, and some will have more. Suppose your battery had, say, 3520 MaH capacity (10% over standard). That would still show as 100% (even though it was actually 110%), but as it aged the health would stay at 100% until it fell below 3200 MaH. This would appear to you as if the battery had fabulous life, until suddenly it didn’t.

Dec 26, 2023 11:58 AM in response to Aamir1921

Aamir1921 wrote:


iPhone 15 Pro Max battery drops to 99% capacity after 30 days of usage. Only charged once every day 🤯

Most likely it dropped to 99.9% because battery health doesn’t include the fraction. But as a normal battery loses about 1% a month you are right on target.


And, as you almost certainly didn’t read any of the thread that you added to, I’ll repeat the most important content:


Batteries are consumables; they lose a little capacity every time they are discharged, then recharged. On average this works out to about a 1% loss for every 25 “full charge cycles”. As one example, if you charge the phone overnight, every night (and that is what you should do; it is a best practice), it starts the day at 100%. If it drops to 20% by the end of the day before you charge it again overnight that counts as 0.8 full charge cycles (20% to 100%), or about 24 full charge cycles per month of use. For this example your battery capacity will lose about 1% per month. Of course, if the end-of-day level is higher than 20% the capacity loss will be a little less, and if it is lower than 20%, or you charge it during the day, the capacity loss will be higher.


Once the capacity drops below 80%, or if there is a message in Battery Health that the battery is not meeting peak performance expectations, it’s time to change the battery→iPhone Battery Replacement - Official Apple Support


Jan 3, 2024 8:27 AM in response to SidhuSekhar

SidhuSekhar wrote:


My iPhone 15 pro max is just 2 months old but battery health is already 98%.And it either gains or loses battery of 3 to 4% everytime I restart my mobile(you can refer to the screenshot- how can battery percentage increase/decrease by more than 3% within a minute ). It has overheating issues not only during charging but also while using.Apple customer care runs a diagnostic test and says everything is normal .the service centre people had even reset my mobile but it hasn’t helped.This isn’t expected from apple.

That is EXACTLY where it is expected to be; on average an iPhone will lose about 1% a month, so 98% in 2 months is right on target.


Batteries are consumables; they lose a little capacity every time they are discharged, then recharged. On average this works out to about a 1% loss for every 25 “full charge cycles”. As one example, if you charge the phone overnight, every night (and that is what you should do; it is a best practice), it starts the day at 100%. If it drops to 20% by the end of the day before you charge it again overnight that counts as 0.8 full charge cycles (20% to 100%), or about 24 full charge cycles per month of use. For this example your battery capacity will lose about 1% per month. Of course, if the end-of-day level is higher than 20% the capacity loss will be a little less, and if it is lower than 20%, or you charge it during the day, the capacity loss will be higher.


Once the capacity drops below 80%, or if there is a message in Battery Health that the battery is not meeting peak performance expectations, it’s time to change the battery→iPhone Battery Replacement - Official Apple Support

Jan 27, 2024 8:21 AM in response to Caleexa

Caleexa wrote:

Thank you for the insight. I did read through the posts, and I appreciate your perspective. I was just comparing the battery health of my previous iPhones to the one I'm using now. Each experience can be unique, and it's interesting to see the variations. Thanks again for the information!

Here’s why there is a difference in battery capacity changes between devices:


A battery is a chemical device, and chemistry is generally pretty variable and uncertain, as well as being analog, not digital. Apple specs the battery capacity to remain above 80% for 500 full charge cycles, but that is a minimum requirement; there is no published maximum expected capacity. So sometimes batteries will perform much better than that minimum specification, and sometimes the change in maximum capacity won't be linear. There is no way to predict in advance what the real-life performance of any specific battery will be.


All iPhones have a specification for the battery. As an example, for the iPhone 14 Pro that is 3200 milliampere-hours (MaH). So the battery monitor is calibrated for 100% at that value. But there are variations in manufacturing, so some batteries will have less capacity, and some will have more. Suppose your battery had, say, 3520 MaH capacity (10% over standard). That would still show as 100% (even though it was actually 110%), but as it aged the health would stay at 100% until it fell below 3200 MaH. This would appear to you as if the battery had fabulous life, until suddenly it didn’t.

Feb 6, 2024 7:39 PM in response to errodd01

errodd01 wrote:

I think it's random on the batteries from Apple. Some people get lucky on having great battery health and others don't. Example my wife's iphone 15 has only 32 charging cycles, I have it 80 % charging limit and it's already 98% battery health. My iphone 14 pro has 202 charging cycles and battery health is 97%. I use apple's original charging cable and 20w charging brick.

It is random on ALL Lithium Ion batteries. A battery is a chemical device, and chemistry is generally pretty variable and uncertain, as well as being analog, not digital. Apple specs the battery capacity to remain above 80% for 500 full charge cycles, but that is a minimum requirement; there is no published maximum expected capacity. So sometimes batteries will perform much better than that minimum specification, and sometimes the change in maximum capacity won't be linear. There is no way to predict in advance what the real-life performance of any specific battery will be.


All iPhones have a specification for the battery. As an example, for the iPhone 14 Pro that is 3200 milliampere-hours (MaH). So the battery monitor is calibrated for 100% at that value. But there are variations in manufacturing, so some batteries will have less capacity, and some will have more. Suppose your battery had, say, 3520 MaH capacity (10% over standard). That would still show as 100% (even though it was actually 110%), but as it aged the health would stay at 100% until it fell below 3200 MaH. This would appear to you as if the battery had fabulous life, until suddenly it didn’t.

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iPhone 15 Pro Max Battery Health Dropped To 99% In Less Than A Month

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