OK, so the other day we looked at how to tell how worn your iPhone battery is, and we also looked at some of the weird lies the “battery health” screen tells you.
That led to the inevitable question — how worn is the battery in my Apple Watch?
This seems to be something that worries Apple Watch owners. After all, this is a device that seems to need to be charged daily, and it’s got a pretty small battery, and as such, users feel there’s not much wiggle room once the battery is worn.
Also, it’s not tricky to find somewhere that will change the battery in your iPhone, but with the Apple Watch you’re a lot more limited.
Probably your best answer here is to pay the $69 and let Apple do it.
But other than finding your Apple Watch dying on your arm in the middle of the day, how do you tell how much life it has left?
Well, it’s a similar process to figuring out how worn the iPhone’s battery is.
Fire up your iPhone and go to Settings > Privacy, then scroll to the bottom and tap on Analytics & Improvements.
Then you need to click on Analytics Data. This setting only exists if you have Share iPhone & Watch Analytics enabled. If it’s not enabled, you’ll need to enable it and wait a day or so for the iPhone to collect the data.
Yes, the information is only logged if you choose to share it with Apple. But oddly, Apple doesn’t make it easy for you to look at it.
If Analytics Data is enabled, then tap on it, and you’ll be presented with what looks like a wall of files.
Don’t panic!
You need to scroll until you find a file starting with the name log-aggregated. There’s likely to be a bunch of them with dates in the name.
The latest one will be at the bottom of the list. Oh, but if you have an Apple Watch paired with the iPhone, then there will be a similar file for that too. To tell the difference, tap on it to open up the file, scroll to the top and look for it to mention Watch OS and not iPhone OS.
And going through this data on the iPhone itself is a pain (although it can be done if you’re patient and do a copy and paste into an app like Notes).
What I do is I tap the Share button and email the file to myself so I can open it at my leisure on a Mac or PC (you could always AirDrop it to yourself).
Also: How to AirDrop
The file contains a lot of information, so once you have it open in a text editor, you can start looking for specific information.
Here I’m looking for one specific entry:
<key>com.apple.power.battery.CycleCount</key>
<integer>163</integer>
That number between the <integer> tags is the battery cycle count, which is the number of times the battery has been fully recharged. This means that if one day you take your Apple Watch down to 50% before recharging it, and 50% the next day, those two recharges count as one recharge cycle.
Now, I took delivery of my Apple Watch Series 7 in mid-October 2021, and I’ve worn it constantly since then. With this in mind, I’m quite surprised that it has only been through 163 recharge cycles, which means I’m on track for about 217 recharge cycles during the first year of ownership.
But how many recharge cycles can the battery endure before Apple considers it worn?
This is where I got another surprise!
According to Apple, the battery in the Apple Watch “is designed to retain up to 80 percent of its original capacity at 1000 complete charge cycles.” That’s twice the number of charge cycles that the iPhone can do and still retain 80 percent of its charge capacity.
That means the battery is good for at least 3.5 to 4 years, which is pretty impressive.