Maksym Shevchuk

How to Improve Smartphone Battery Life in 2026

Battery Guide · 2026

How to Improve Smartphone Battery Life in 2026
(iPhone & Samsung Guide)

Practical, proven tips to fix fast battery drain on your iPhone or Samsung — and keep it that way. No jargon. No gimmicks.

🕐 9 Min Read · iPhone & Samsung

If your phone is dying before dinner, you're not alone. Smartphone battery life is one of the most searched topics in tech — and for good reason. Whether you're on an iPhone 17 or a Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra, the right settings and habits can add hours to your daily charge.

This guide covers everything: the quick one-minute wins, the deeper settings changes, and the charging habits that protect your battery for years. We'll cover how to improve iPhone battery life and improve Samsung battery life — because while the menus look different, the principles are the same.

Who this guide is for: Anyone on an iPhone 13 through iPhone 17, or Samsung Galaxy A-series through S26 Ultra. Where iOS and Android settings differ, we've clearly marked both paths.
40%
of battery drain linked to screen brightness
3–4h
extra use possible with optimised settings
longer lifespan with better charging habits

The Root Cause

Why Your Smartphone Battery Drains So Fast

Before fixing the problem, it helps to know what's causing it. Battery drain isn't random — it's driven by specific features running in the background without you realising. Here are the six biggest culprits:

Screen Brightness

Your display is the single biggest power consumer on any phone. Auto-brightness set too high is the #1 hidden cause of fast battery drain.

Location Services

Apps constantly pinging your GPS in the background — even when you haven't opened them in days — silently eat through your battery.

Background App Refresh

Social media, email, and news apps constantly refreshing content in the background, whether you're looking at your phone or not.

Poor Mobile Signal

When your phone struggles to find a signal, it boosts its radio power dramatically — draining the battery up to 3× faster than normal.

Too Many Notifications

Every notification wakes your screen and processor. Apps with aggressive push settings can trigger dozens of these per hour.

Heat & Temperature

Running hot — from gaming, charging in the sun, or leaving your phone in a car — permanently degrades battery chemistry over time.


Start Here

Quick Settings That Instantly Improve Battery Life

These changes take under two minutes each. Do them now and you'll notice the difference today.

5 Immediate Fixes
  1. Lower screen brightness to 50–60%. You'll barely notice the visual difference, but your battery absolutely will.
  2. Enable Low Power Mode proactively. Don't wait until 10%. iPhone: Settings → Battery. Samsung: Settings → Battery → Power Saving.
  3. Switch to Dark Mode. On OLED screens (all modern iPhones and Samsung Galaxy phones), dark pixels use almost zero power. A single toggle saves real energy all day.
  4. Disable Always-On Display. Beautiful, but battery-costly. Go to Settings → Display and turn it off if you don't genuinely need it.
  5. Turn off unused Bluetooth and Wi-Fi. Each radio scanning for connections burns power. When you're out and not using them, switch them off.

Looking for a phone with class-leading battery life? Handyswap has the full 2026 lineup — brand new and sealed.

Shop Phones →

Go Deeper

Advanced iPhone and Samsung Battery Optimisation Tips

These are the less obvious settings that quietly drain your battery around the clock. Each one is fixable in under a minute.

01

Restrict Location Services to Necessary Apps Only

Go to Settings → Privacy → Location Services (iPhone) or Settings → Location → App Permissions (Samsung). Set most apps to "While Using" or "Never." Only Maps, ride apps, and weather apps genuinely need your location at all times.

02

Turn Off Background App Refresh

This alone can reclaim 15–20% battery per day.

  • iPhone: Settings → General → Background App Refresh → Off
  • Samsung: Settings → Battery → Background Usage Limits → Put unused apps to sleep
03

Reduce Screen Refresh Rate to 60Hz

If your phone has a 120Hz display (iPhone 15 Pro and above, most Samsung Galaxy S and A series), dropping to 60Hz saves meaningful battery without affecting normal use.

  • iPhone: Settings → Accessibility → Motion → Limit Frame Rate
  • Samsung: Settings → Display → Motion Smoothness → Standard
04

Switch Email from Push to Fetch

Push email wakes your phone every time a new message arrives. Fetch checks on a schedule instead — far less battery-intensive.

  • iPhone: Settings → Mail → Accounts → Fetch New Data → Select "Every 15 minutes" or "Manually"
  • Samsung / Gmail: Gmail → Settings → Account → Sync frequency
05

Enable Optimised Battery Charging

This smart feature learns your daily routine and avoids holding your battery at 100% for extended periods — one of the biggest causes of long-term battery degradation.

  • iPhone: Settings → Battery → Battery Health → Optimised Battery Charging
  • Samsung: Settings → Battery → More Battery Settings → Adaptive Charging
06

Disable Wi-Fi and Bluetooth Scanning

Even with Wi-Fi off, your phone can scan for nearby networks in the background. On Samsung, go to Settings → Location → Improve Accuracy and disable both Wi-Fi and Bluetooth scanning. On iPhone, managing Location Services for System Services covers this.

07

Switch to 4G/LTE in Low-Coverage Areas

5G is fast, but power-hungry — especially when signal is weak and your phone keeps searching for a stronger connection. In areas with poor 5G coverage, manually switching to LTE saves significant battery.

  • iPhone: Settings → Cellular → Cellular Data Options → Voice & Data → LTE
  • Samsung: Settings → Connections → Mobile Networks → Network Mode → LTE/3G/2G

Pro Tip: Check your Battery Usage screen right now. iPhone: Settings → Battery. Samsung: Settings → Battery → Battery Usage. You'll see exactly which apps drained the most power in the last 24 hours — you may be surprised.


Charging Smart

Charging Habits That Keep Your Battery Healthy Longer

How you charge is just as important as how you use your phone. These habits protect your battery health over months and years — not just today.

The 20–80% Rule

Lithium-ion batteries last longest when kept between 20% and 80% charge. Regularly charging to 100% and draining to 0% creates extra stress on the battery cells, accelerating degradation. You don't need to be obsessive — just avoiding the extremes consistently makes a real difference over time.

Overnight Charging

Most modern iPhones and Samsung phones handle overnight charging better than older models, thanks to smart charging features that pause at around 80% and top up before your alarm. To make sure it's enabled:

  • iPhone: Settings → Battery → Battery Health → Optimised Battery Charging → On
  • Samsung: Settings → Battery → More Battery Settings → Adaptive Charging → On

Fast Charging: Use It Wisely

Fast charging generates more heat than standard charging — and heat degrades battery chemistry. Use fast charging when you genuinely need it, but standard charging overnight is gentler and better for long-term health.

Avoid cheap third-party chargers. Non-certified cables and adaptors can deliver inconsistent voltage, overheat the battery, and in rare cases cause permanent damage. Always use Apple MFi-certified or Samsung-approved accessories.

Temperature Matters More Than You Think

Lithium batteries hate extremes. Leaving your phone on a car dashboard in summer, or outside in freezing temperatures, permanently shrinks battery capacity. The ideal range is 16°C – 22°C (60°F – 72°F). Remove your case if your phone gets hot while charging.

Battery health dropping? Trade in your old phone and get top value at Handyswap — quick, easy, and fair.

Check Trade-In Value →

Hidden Drains

Apps That Secretly Kill Your Phone's Battery

Not all apps are equal. These categories consistently appear at the top of battery usage screens — and most people never think to check them.

Social Media Apps

Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and Snapchat combine video playback, location, camera access, and constant background refresh — making them among the heaviest battery drains on any phone.

Navigation Apps

Google Maps and Waze use GPS, bright screen, mobile data, and processing power simultaneously. Always connect to a charger when navigating long routes.

Mobile Games

High-graphics games push the processor and GPU hard while keeping the screen at full brightness. Keep sessions shorter if battery is a concern, or plug in while playing.

Streaming Apps

Netflix, YouTube, and Spotify drain quickly — especially at high brightness over mobile data. Download content offline beforehand to cut network load significantly.

The Easy Fix: Use Browser Versions

Many social media apps have lighter web versions accessible through Safari or Chrome. These use significantly less background power than their native equivalents. Try switching Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter/X to their browser versions — you keep most of the functionality at a fraction of the battery cost

When to Replace Your Battery — or Upgrade Your Phone

Sometimes the tips above aren't enough, because the battery itself is genuinely worn out. Here's how to tell.

Check Your Battery Health Right Now

  • iPhone: Settings → Battery → Battery Health & Charging → check "Maximum Capacity"
  • Samsung: Settings → Battery → Battery Health (One UI 6+)

If your maximum capacity is below 80%, your battery is significantly degraded. You'll notice your phone shutting off unexpectedly, lasting half a day on a full charge, or running noticeably hot.

Repair vs. Upgrade

A battery replacement costs €60–€100 at an authorised service centre and makes sense if your phone is otherwise in good shape. But if your phone is 3+ years old and showing other signs of age, upgrading to a brand-new device often makes more economic sense — especially when you can trade in your current phone and apply that value directly.

Trade in your old phone at Handyswap and get real money towards a brand-new iPhone or Samsung with a fresh, full-capacity battery.

See Trade-In Value →

Top Picks · 2026

Best iPhone and Samsung Phones for Battery Life in 2026

If you're ready to upgrade, here are the phones that genuinely stand out for smartphone battery life in 2026 — all available brand new at Handyswap.

Best iPhone Battery

iPhone 17 Plus

The longest battery life of any iPhone in the 2026 lineup. The larger form factor houses a bigger cell, and the A19 chip's efficiency means it lasts well into a second day for most users.

View iPhone 17 Plus at Handyswap →
Top iPhone Performance

iPhone 17 Pro Max

Close behind the Plus on battery life, with the added benefit of the A19 Pro chip, 8× optical zoom, and Dual Capture — the most powerful iPhone ever made, and it lasts all day easily.

View iPhone 17 Pro Max at Handyswap →
Best Samsung Battery

Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra

A 5,000mAh battery paired with the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 makes this the most capable Galaxy ever. It also supports 60W fast charging — the quickest Samsung has ever shipped in a flagship.

View Galaxy S26 Ultra at Handyswap →
Best Value Battery

Samsung Galaxy A57

Exceptional battery life at a much more accessible price point. The efficient processor and large battery make the Galaxy A57 one of the best all-day phones available in 2026 for budget-conscious buyers.

View Galaxy A57 at Handyswap →

Frequently Asked Questions

Smartphone Battery Life — FAQs

Quick, clear answers to the most common battery questions we hear from Handyswap customers.

No — and try to avoid it regularly. Lithium-ion batteries are stressed by deep discharge cycles. Regularly draining to 0% shortens overall battery lifespan faster than almost any other habit. Aim to plug in when you reach 20%, and ideally avoid charging above 80% for daily use. Modern iPhones and Samsung phones have built-in protections, but those can't fully compensate for consistently draining to zero.

On modern smartphones — no, not really. Both iOS and Android are designed to efficiently suspend background apps. Constantly force-closing apps can actually use more battery, because the phone has to fully reload them from scratch each time you open them. The exception: apps actively using GPS, audio playback, or sync in the background. Manage those through Settings (Background App Refresh, Location Services), not by force-closing.

It's not dangerous, but it does generate extra heat — particularly if you're gaming or watching video while fast charging. Since heat is the main enemy of long-term battery health, it's better to avoid heavy use while charging if you can. Casual browsing, texting, or music playback while charging is completely fine and won't cause measurable harm.

Yes — noticeably so, especially in areas with weak 5G coverage. When your phone is constantly hunting for a stronger 5G signal, battery drain spikes significantly. If you're in a low-coverage area or don't need 5G speeds, switching to LTE manually is a quick win:

  • iPhone: Settings → Cellular → Cellular Data Options → Voice & Data → LTE
  • Samsung: Settings → Connections → Mobile Networks → Network Mode → LTE/3G/2G

A healthy modern smartphone should easily last a full day (8–12+ hours of screen-on time) when new. With good charging habits, it should retain 85–90%+ capacity after two years. Most users notice a significant decline in smartphone battery life after 3–4 years of average use — at that point, replacing the battery or upgrading the phone are both reasonable options.

Check your Battery Health:

  • iPhone: Settings → Battery → Battery Health & Charging → Maximum Capacity
  • Samsung: Settings → Battery → Battery Health (One UI 6+)

If capacity is below 80%, performance will noticeably suffer. Other signs: unexpected shutdowns, a swollen back panel, or lasting less than half a day on a full charge. At that point, either replace the battery through an authorised service centre, or consider trading in and upgrading.

For iPhone, the iPhone 17 Plus leads the lineup for battery endurance, with the iPhone 17 Pro Max close behind. For Samsung, the Galaxy S26 Ultra delivers the best combination of battery capacity and 60W fast charging, while the Galaxy A57 offers outstanding all-day life at a friendlier price. All are available brand new at Handyswap.

Ready to Upgrade?

Get a Brand-New Phone With All-Day Battery Life

Every phone at Handyswap is brand new, factory sealed, and comes with the full manufacturer warranty. No refurbished. No surprises. And if you have an old phone to trade in, we'll give you real value towards your next device.

Brand New & Sealed Full Manufacturer Warranty Free DHL Express Shipping 30-Day Returns Trade-In Available

iPhone 17 · iPhone 17 Pro Max · Galaxy S26 Ultra · Galaxy A57 — all in stock, all brand new.

Last updated: May 2026. Battery statistics based on data from Apple, Samsung, GSMArena, and PhoneArena. Tips apply to iOS 18 and Android 16 / One UI 8.5. Individual results vary by usage pattern and device model. All Handyswap products are brand new, factory sealed, with full manufacturer warranty.