Turn Off Features Not in Use
Turn off Bluetooth. Disable GPS when not in use. Shut down Wi-Fi. You might even consider disabling your hotspot features. These are some of the biggest battery drains on smartphones because they are always looking for possible connections, networks, or information. Turn off these features in your phone’s settings except when you need them to save power. Some phones, such as Android smartphones, have widgets that offer toggles to turn these features on or off so you can switch on Bluetooth when you’re in the car for hands-free driving or GPS navigation and then turn it off to save your phone’s battery life.
Turn On Wi-Fi When You Can Connect to a Wi-Fi Network
Having Wi-Fi turned on drains your battery if you’re not using it, but if you’re on a wireless network, it’s more power-efficient to use Wi-Fi than to use cellular data, so switch to Wi-Fi instead of your mobile network when you can to save your phone’s battery life. For most people, that means when you’re at your house, use Wi-Fi, but when you aren’t near any Wi-Fi networks, turn Wi-Fi off to keep your phone running longer.
Adjust the Display Screen Brightness and Screen Timeout
As with laptops and TVs, the screen on your phone drains a lot of its battery life. Your smartphone probably auto-adjusts its brightness level, but if your battery starts dipping to levels that make you anxious, adjust the screen brightness lower to conserve battery life. Another setting to look at is the screen timeout. That’s the setting for when your phone’s screen automatically goes to sleep—1 minute, for example, or 15 seconds after not getting any input from you; the shorter the time frame, the better the battery life. Adjust to your level of patience.
Turn Off Push Notifications and Data-Fetching
One convenience of modern technology is having everything delivered instantly, as it happens. Emails, news, the weather, celebrity tweets—you are constantly getting updates. Besides being bad for your sanity, the constant data-checking depletes your phone battery. Adjust the data-fetching intervals and push notifications in your phone’s settings and apps. News apps and social media apps regularly check in the background for new information. Set those to check manually or hourly. If you don’t need to know the second every email comes in, changing your email push notifications to manual can make a difference in your phone’s battery life. At the very least, you can turn on Do Not Disturb to prevent the screen from waking up each time your phone gets an alert.
Don’t Waste Battery Life Searching for a Signal
Your poor phone is low on battery, and it’s trying to find a signal. When you’re in an area with a weak cellular signal, turn cellular data off by going into Airplane mode. Airplane mode turns the cellular and data radio off on most phones, but it leaves Wi-Fi access on for some devices.
Buy Apps Instead of Using Free, Ad-Supported Versions
Shelling out a couple of bucks for apps you use may be worth it. Research suggests free, ad-supported apps drain battery life. In one case, 75 percent of an app’s energy consumption was used just to power the ads. Even in the case of Angry Birds, only 20 percent of the app’s energy use may go to actual gameplay. The other option is to use an ad blocker to see if it reduces the drain on your battery.
Keep Your Phone Cool
Heat is the enemy of all batteries, whether it’s your phone’s battery or your laptop’s. You might be able to eke out a bit more life from your phone if you take it out of a hot case or your pocket, don’t leave it overheating in a hot car, and can manage to find other ways to keep it cool. As a last resort, turning your phone off when it is not in use can cool it down and conserve the battery.