Batteries and Range: What Midwest EV Buyers Need to Know

by Gateway EV Advisor Charging 7 min read

What Your EV Battery Is Actually Doing Over Time — And What's Coming Next

For drivers of Battery Electric Vehicles (BEVs), Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicles (PHEVs), and Extended-Range Electric Vehicles (E-REVs), the question of battery longevity sits at the center of almost every ownership decision. Range anxiety and degradation concerns consistently rank among the top hesitations for prospective EV buyers, yet the published data tells a more reassuring story than most headlines suggest. A comprehensive new dataset from commercial fleet tracking firm Geotab — drawing on tens of thousands of vehicles across varied climates and use cases — puts fresh numbers on what degradation actually looks like over time. Meanwhile, chemistry advances from global battery leaders are reshaping what real-world range will look like in vehicles arriving within the next two years.

The single biggest controllable factor in battery health is not how far you drive.
It is how you charge.

What The Data Actually Shows About Degradation
According to Geotab's updated 2026 analysis, the average BEV battery now degrades at approximately 2.3% per year — a measurable increase from the 1.8% annual rate documented in their 2024 study. Researchers attribute the shift largely to a rise in high-power DC Fast Charging (DCFC) usage across the fleet, as public charging infrastructure has expanded and more drivers rely on it for regular top-ups rather than overnight home charging. The practical outcome: after eight years of typical use, the average battery retains roughly 81.6% of its original capacity. For most drivers, that translates to a noticeable but manageable reduction in available range — not a sudden or catastrophic failure. Hybrid Electric Vehicle (HEV) owners are largely insulated from these findings, since HEV batteries charge exclusively through regenerative braking and the ICE and do not accept external power, giving them a fundamentally different degradation profile.

WHAT REGULATORS ARE REQUIRING FROM FUTURE BATTERIES
The EPA has established formal battery durability benchmarks that will apply to all new BEVs and PHEVs sold in the United States. For model years 2027 through 2029, manufacturers must design vehicles to retain at least 70% of the EPA-certified range value across 70% of vehicles in a test group, over a useful life of ten years or 150,000 miles — whichever comes first. The standard tightens further beginning with model year 2030, at which point vehicles must maintain 80% of certified range as a fleet average over the same useful life window. These requirements give consumers a federally enforced performance floor for long-term range retention — a meaningful shift from the loosely written warranty language that has historically defined EV ownership promises. PHEV electric range is subject to the same durability requirements, which matters for buyers weighing plug-in hybrids against full BEVs when considering total ownership costs over a decade.

WHY YOUR CHARGING HABITS ARE THE LARGEST VARIABLE
The Geotab data draws a clear line between drivers based on charging behavior alone. Vehicles that rely predominantly on high-power DCFC above 100 kW degrade at approximately 3.0% per year — double the 1.5% annual rate observed in vehicles that primarily charge at Level 1 or Level 2 speeds. This finding carries particular relevance for E-REV (Extended-Range Electric Vehicle) owners, who may be tempted to use fast chargers frequently given their vehicles' larger battery packs and higher range expectations. Climate adds a secondary layer: EVs operating consistently in hot environments degrade roughly 0.4% faster per year than those in mild regions — a factor worth noting for drivers in southern and southwestern states. One finding that will likely surprise many drivers: the data shows no meaningful degradation penalty from routinely charging to 100% under typical use. Degradation only accelerates when a vehicle spends the large majority of its time pinned at either extreme — consistently above 90% or below 10% — for extended periods.

SODIUM-ION AND SOLID-STATE TECHNOLOGIES CHANGE THE RANGE EQUATION
The battery landscape is advancing rapidly in 2026. Global battery leader CATL has confirmed that the world's first sodium-ion battery-powered passenger sedan — the Changan Nevo A06 — will enter public roads by mid-2026, powered by the CATL Naxtra cell platform. That sodium-ion cell achieves an energy density of 175 Wh/kg and delivers an estimated range of approximately 249 miles per charge under China's standard test cycle. Sodium-ion chemistry contains no lithium, cobalt, or nickel, positioning it as a materially less expensive alternative and opening a meaningful path toward more affordable BEVs, PHEVs, and E-REVs globally. Separately, Electrek reported on March 18, 2026 that solid-state battery technology capable of delivering 800-mile driving ranges is advancing from laboratory concept toward engineering-grade production, with semi-solid mass production now targeted for 2026 and all-solid-state small-scale production planned for 2027.

What This Means for Drivers Right Now

The most actionable guidance today comes directly from the usage data: prioritize lower-power charging when your schedule allows, avoid keeping your battery at its outermost charge extremes for extended stretches, and account for climate when modeling long-term range expectations. Battery chemistry is advancing quickly enough that the gap between rated range and real-world experience will continue to close — driven by better cells, stronger regulatory standards, and more informed driver habits.

Sources
Geotab — EV Battery Health: Key Findings from 22,700 Vehicle Data Analysis — 2026
Electrek — A solid-state EV battery that can achieve 800 miles of driving range — March 18, 2026
U.S. EPA / fueleconomy.gov — Fuel Economy and EV Range Testing / Battery Durability Standards — 2026
Charged EVs / CarNewsChina — CATL confirms 2026 large-scale sodium-ion battery deployment — December 2025