If you are an iPhone user, you probably enjoy the look and feel of your phone and relish the productivity and fun iPhone provides towards both your business and personal life. Nevertheless, there is a single insurmountable and rather common iPhone users’ complaint - limited battery life. Depending on the iPhone generation and how you use the device, average battery life on a single charge may widely vary. Heavy iPhone 5 users, for example, might find it difficult not having to charge up every night. The tips below are helpful for minimizing iPhone battery drain on a daily basis while conserving normal iPhone experience and operation as much as possible. The article will help you optimize and extend iPhone battery life and most of the tips are also valid for other iOS devices such as the iPad, iPad Mini and iPod Touch. Optimizing iPhone settings is the single most important factor to weather battery drain.
Here are the steps which will help extend the daily life of your iPhone battery with immediate effect. Reduce screen brightness or enable Auto-Brightness. The backlight used to make your phone screen visible is a major consumer of iPhone battery energy. If you’d rather not dim the brightness of your iPhone, you can alternatively turn on “Auto-brightness”. Turn off location services or minimize their use. Phone automatically uses the in-built GPS antenna in addition to 3G and WiFi data to accurately localize the device. Many applications use the iPhone location services which ultimately hurts battery life. If you do not wish to completely disable location services, select the apps for which to keep location services turned-on. Turn off push notifications and fetch new data less frequently or manually. Apple Push Notification service is used to bring new-mail, notes, contacts and other cloud data to the iPhone. Fetch is another method of bringing data when Push is disabled.
Push is in general more power-hungry than Fetch. Therefore, turn off Push and set Fetch to bring data less frequently or manually (i.e. upon request). Warning: if you disable Push you will not receive notifications on-the-spot (e.g. as soon as you receive an email). OFF. This will reduce battery usage. Disable 3G and LTE. When data such as email and web-browsing is transferred over the cellular network, it loads faster over 3G but this consumes more power than data loaded over older cellular protocols such as EDGE. Note: Cellular data regardless of protocol used is more power-hungry than WiFi. Turn off non-essential cellular data usage. Avoid poor- or no-reception areas. The iPhone will use more power to maintain an operational cellular connection in low-coverage regions. The lower the amount of bars, the less the signal-strength and the more battery power used by iPhone to stay connected. Disable app-specific notifications. Most iOS apps have the ability to send notifications. This increases iPhone activity. Set Auto-Lock to 1 Minute. Setting your iPhone to automatically go to standby mode when not used is essential for conserving battery life. Auto-Lock and set the time interval to the minimum available which is 1 Minute.
Some of iPhone Life's most popular articles have been about saving battery life on the iPhone, which just goes to show how much room Apple still has to improve when it comes to battery life. Luckily, you have a new source of information for saving battery life that’s directly from Apple: Battery Life Suggestions. Now, when you view Battery in your Settings app, Apple will present some suggestions for ways you can improve your battery life. Here’s how to use those Battery Life Suggestions for better battery life with iOS 11 on iPhone. Related: These Popular Apps Are Causing iPhone Battery Drain. Here's How to Stop Them. Sign up to iPhone Life's Tip of the Day Newsletter and we'll send you a tip each day to save time and get the most out of your iPhone or iPad. Under Battery Life Suggestions, you’ll see a small list of settings that you can change for better battery life. When you click on an item in the list, it will take you directly to the setting so you can change it. Not all the settings your iPhone suggests will be something you’ll want to change; it will depend on how you use your iPhone. For example, my iPhone is telling me to Reduce Brightness. But my screen really isn’t that bright and that’s not a change worth making for me. If you don’t see any suggestions in Battery, that just means your iPhone can’t find anything to change for better battery life. Of course, these suggestions aren’t the only things you can do for better battery life. We recently updated our battery life tips article for iOS 11; check that out for more ways to save battery life.


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