Should you leave your laptop plugged in all the time?

It’s a fairly simple question with a surprisingly complicated answer. Here’s why you might not want to leave your laptop charging every day and night. It is safe to leave your laptop plugged in all the time, but ensure that the charger and electrical outlet are in good working order.

Leaving your laptop on the charger constantly can age the battery faster, reducing its lifespan and charge capacity.

 To prevent damaging the battery, charge it to full, unplug it, and avoid unnecessary charge cycles. OS-level mitigation tools can also help.
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The benefit of owning a laptop is that you can take it with you when you go somewhere. Portability is a big deal, after all, and there are even ultraportable laptops out there specifically for travel. However, we as humans don’t travel 24 /7/365. So, where does a laptop typically go? On a desk with a charger connected.Despite being a simple

question, the answer is rather complicated thanks to how battery chemistry works. Should you leave your laptop battery connected all the time ? Let’s find out.
Lenovo’s new Go multi-device mouse for travel can wirelessly charge photo 2Is it safe to leave your laptop plugged in all the time?In terms of physical safety, yes, it’s perfectly safe to leave your laptop plugged in all the time.


There is virtually no risk of anything catching on fire. Modern laptops have voltage control built into the machine that knows when the battery is full and will stop the charge, even if the charger is connected. These mechanisms rarely fail, and laptops have safety mechanisms that will sever the connection before real damage occurs.
However, that all assumes that the charger itself and the electrical outlet it’s connected to are in good working order. A short in an outlet can cause a fire, but that’s not limited to a charging laptop. Make sure to check up on your outlets occasionally as a general piece of advice.

apple found out what s messing with the new macbook pro s battery life image 1Pocket-lintShould you keep your laptop charging all the time?This is where the complexity comes in. There are a variety of things that are bad for lithium-ion batteries. Keeping the battery at too low of a charge as well as too high of a charge can cause the battery to age prematurely. As batteries age, they lose their ability to carry a full charge. Thus, while it won’t blow up your laptop, you may notice that your laptop battery doesn’t seem to hold as much charge as it once did.


The other worry is heat. Lithium-ion batteries lose charge over time even if the device is powered off. That means the battery is almost continuously getting topped off, which introduces heat. Heat, like high or low charge, can prematurely age the battery as well, which will cause it to lose charge capacity over the long-term.

apple patents fuel cell  laptop battery for long lasting macbook image 1Pocket-lintFinally, every lithium battery ever produced has a finite number of charges before it simply cannot charge anymore. By leaving it on AC, you’re introducing extra charge cycles that the battery doesn’t need since it’s off. This will shave off even more lifespan from the battery.
Thus, leaving your laptop on the charger is a bit of a triple whammy. Your laptop won’t catch on fire or receive any damage in the short-term. However, you will age out the battery much faster than if you used it off of AC power from time to time, which will cause the battery to die sooner than expected.
MacBook battery photo 7Pocket-lint
How to tell your laptop’s battery damageThere are methods for both Windows and macOS machines to check in on battery health. We’ll go through each one briefly and then go over how to read the reports.


MacClick the Apple menu button and select System Information.Open the hardware section in the left margin and select the Power option.Your battery information will be there.Admittedly, macOS is much easier than Windows in this regard, so you should be able to find it relatively quickly.


Windows PCOpen a Command Prompt. The easiest way to do this is to type “CMD” without the quotes in the Windows search bar.Type powercfg /batteryreport and press Enter on your keyboard.Command Prompt will generate a battery report and then save it to a folder, which it’ll show you when you enter the command.Navigate to that folder on your machine and access the report.The report is in HTML, so you’ll need to use a browser to open it. Fortunately, all browsers can handle HTML files.
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How to read your laptop’s battery informationMacFor macOS, it’s quite easy. The Power section will show you Cycle Count, which is how many times you’ve charged the battery. Under that is Condition. If it says anything other than Normal, then you may want to schedule a trip to the Apple Store to get it investigated. Maximum Capacity tells you how much charge your battery can still hold. Only brand new Macbooks show 100%, so expect to see yours below that.


Windows PCFor  Windows, it’s a bit more complicated. The information is broken up into the days that you used your laptop. Thus, if you look under the At Full Charge section and the Active column, you’ll see how long your battery was expected to last that day. You can compare that to the At Design Capacity section under the Active column to see how long the battery would last if the battery was brand new. Compare to see how much battery life you’ve lost.
Laptop battery


How to prevent damaging your laptop batteryMostly, just don’t leave it on the charger any longer than necessary. Charge it to full, unplug it, and then don’t plug it back in until it needs to charge again. This doesn’t prevent battery aging because nothing does , but it’ll age much more slowly when it’s not being held at 100% charge by the charger. Yes, you might lose a few percent of battery by the time you turn it back on, but it’s a small price to pay.

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