Even if you’ve got a long-lasting notebook, sometimes you need to preserve every last bit of your laptop’s battery to help it survive the day. And if your laptop’s getting older, its battery life may be dropping fast. suffered from extended power and Internet outages during a brutal wind storm. These three tactics helped my laptop battery stay alive until the lights turned back on.
Is there more you can do to make your laptop survive until you’re able to connect to a power outlet?
Definitely—you’ll want to avoid power-sucking tasks like gaming or 3D modeling, for example. But these three tips deliver the most bang for most people’s bucks.
Change your Windows power profileWindows 10 and 11 ship with several power profiles available, ranging from a setting that maximizes performance to another than prioritizes battery life. Obviously, if your laptop is on its last legs, you’ll want to use the latter. Most laptops use a Balanced power plan that splits the difference, however, and some gaming-focused laptops default to the Performance mode even when you’re not plugged in.
It’s easy to switch between power profiles. Simply click the battery icon in your laptop’s system tray, at the bottom-right edge of your screen. You’ll see a slider of various power profiles appear: The leftmost side prioritizes power, while the rightmost side prioritizes performance.
To help your laptop last longer, simply drag the slider all the way to the left. Note that doing so puts Windows into power saver mode, which might prevent some background tasks—such as uploading files to OneDrive—from occurring until you switch back to a more balanced profile.
Lower your screen brightnessNothing chews through battery lifefaster than a bright screen. Your laptop’s display should automatically become dimmer when you change the Windows power profile to battery saver, but it doesn’t become as dark as possible. Enabling battery saver mode on my HP Envy 15 laptop, for example, drops the screen brightness to 20 percent, but when I’m inside I can see the screen just fine even at lower levels.
Search for “Display settings” or navigate to Start button > Settings > System > Display. At the very top, you’ll see yet another slider that manages your screen brightness. Reduce it as much as possible to squeeze out as much battery life as possible.
Airplane ModeThis is a more drastic measure, but one that helps a ton if you’re able to work offline—in a Word document or Excel spreadsheet, say, or if you’ve configured your email client to be available with no Internet connection. default, your laptop is constantly pinging for Wi-Fi (and likely Bluetooth) signals to connect to other devices, and that scanning can use a surprising amount of power. Activating Airplane Mode shuts it all down and prolongs your battery life.
Turning on Airplane Mode is easy-peasy. Click the Notifications button all the way on the right edge of your taskbar. It looks like a text bubble from a comic book. A pop-out screen with some options will appear. “Expand” text to reveal even more. Airplane Mode will be one of them. Click that button to turn on Airplane Mode and shut down your wireless signals.
Note that besides Airplane Mode, the Quick Actions portion of the Notifications interface includes individual options to turn off Wi-Fi and Bluetooth separately. If you can’t work without Wi-Fi active, at least disable Bluetooth (assuming yourlaptop supports Bluetooth) This near-range wireless technology can use a surprising amount of battery by constantly pinging for other Bluetooth devices to connect to.