We
often fixate on smartphone battery life, but most laptops still don’t have
all-day battery life. Rather than tethering your laptop to an outlet, here are
some ways to squeeze more life from your laptop’s battery.
None
of these tricks will turn a laptop without much stamina into an all-day
workhorse, but they’ll help you go without an outlet for a while longer. Pay
particular attention to your laptop’s display—that’s a big battery sucker.
Use Windows 10’s
Battery Saver Mode
If
you want to extend your battery life without thinking too much about it, enable
Windows 10’s Battery Saver mode. Windows automatically enables this feature
when you’re down to 20% battery by default, but you can manually enable it
whenever you like. So, if you know you’ll be away from an outlet for a while,
you might enable it at the start of a long day.
Battery
saver performs a few tweaks automatically, like limiting background activity
and lowering screen brightness to achieve longer battery life.
To
enable Battery Saver mode, click the battery icon in your notification area and
drag the Power mode slider to the “Best battery life” point on the left.
Reduce Your
Display’s Brightness
The
biggest battery drain on any modern portable electronic device—whether it’s a
laptop, smartphone, or tablet—is the display. Reducing your screen’s brightness
is a simple way to squeeze significantly more time from your laptop’s battery.
On
a typical laptop, you’ll just need to press the brightness buttons on your
laptop keyboard (on some laptops, you may need to hold the Function (Fn) key
while pressing the brightness buttons). The lower the brightness level, the
longer you can use your laptop on battery power.
On
Windows 10, you can also open the Action Center by clicking the notification
icon on your taskbar and click the brightness icon to adjust brightness (click
“Expand” if you can’t see it). You can also head to Settings > System >
Display and adjust the slider here
Check Which
Applications Are Using the Most Battery on Windows 10
Windows
10 allows you to see which applications are draining your battery the most. It
does this by tracking CPU usage over time, then listing which programs are
using the most power. This feature isn’t available in Windows 7.
To
access this list, head to Settings > System > Battery > Battery Usage
By App. This screen will show you which applications are using the most
battery. This doesn’t necessarily mean the application is bad—the applications
you use the most will probably have used the most battery power, of course. But
you may want to consider switching to more power-friendly applications if
something is unusually heavy, or close background applications that seem to use
a lot of power even when you’re not actively using them.
Turn Off Your
Screen and Go to Sleep Sooner
Since
the display uses so much power, it’s important not to have it on longer than
necessary. You can configure your laptop to automatically go to sleep sooner
when you’re not actively using it—or at least turn off its display to save
power.
This
won’t help your battery life if you’re actively using the laptop the whole
time, or always put it to sleep immediately when you’re done, but it can ensure
your laptop doesn’t waste power by running for too long when you step away.
Disable
Bluetooth and Other Hardware Devices
Hardware
devices you don’t use can also waste battery power for no good reason. For
example, if you never use any Bluetooth accessories with your laptop, you can
turn off the Bluetooth hardware radio to eke out some more battery life. (f you
do use Bluetooth accessories regularly, toggling Bluetooth on and off may not
be worth the trouble, as the Bluetooth hardware in modern laptops is more power
efficient than it once was.)
Tweak Your Power
Plan
On
Windows 7, you can save energy by selecting the “Power saver” Power Plan from
Control Panel > Hardware and Sound > Power Options. This isn’t necessary
on Windows 10, as you can just use Battery saver mode instead.
You
can change a variety of settings from the Power Options window that appears,
including configuring your laptop to power off its hard drive more quickly and
telling your computer to slow down the processor rather than turning on the fan
if it becomes hot. Both of these behaviors will save power. The default
settings should be fairly optimal if you select Power saver mode, but you can
make the settings even more aggressive in some areas, if you like.
Run the Windows
Power Troubleshooter
Windows
7, 8, and 10 include a power troubleshooting tool that will scan your system
for common battery drains and automatically fix them. For example, this tool
will automatically decrease the time before the display dims if it’s too long,
or disable the unnecessary screensaver feature if it’s enabled.
Lighten Your
Software Load
To
save power, make your computer do less in general. For example:
Don’t
use a screensaver. They’re unnecessary on modern displays and will drain your
battery to do nothing useful when your display could be off and saving power.
Run
fewer programs in the background. Examine your system tray for programs you
don’t need and uninstall them or disable them and prevent them from
automatically starting with your computer.
Reduce
CPU usage. If you use heavy programs that have your CPU doing a lot of work all
of the time, your CPU will use more power and your battery will drain faster.
Running fewer programs in the background can help with this, as can selecting
lightweight programs that are easy on system resources.
Avoid
maxing out your RAM. If your computer fills its RAM and needs more memory, it
will move data to the page file on its hard drive or SSD, and this can drain
battery power. This shouldn’t be as much of a problem on modern computers with
a decent amount of RAM. If your laptop’s RAM is full, try to make more RAM
available—close programs running in the background or even upgrade your
laptop’s RAM.
The
less your computer has to do, the more power it can save. You can find more
information about CPU and RAM usage in your Task Manager.
Take Care of
Your Laptop Battery
All
batteries lose capacity over time, so your laptop’s battery life will decline
no matter what you do. But there are ways to keep your battery as healthy as
possible.
For
example, don’t always run your laptop down to 0% battery—try to charge it
before that. Over the long run, keeping your laptop battery cool will also
prevent unnecessary wear and tear caused by heat. Heat is a battery’s biggest
enemy.
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