8.6 Million UK Cars Are at Risk of a Sudden Breakdown From a Failing Battery
Around 8.6 million cars on British roads could be running on a weak 12 volt battery that is liable to fail with almost no warning, according to new analysis of more than half a million vehicles. That is roughly one in four cars, and the problem is easy to ignore right up until the morning the engine refuses to turn over. With many drivers wrongly assuming battery trouble is a winter only concern, the warning comes at the worst possible time, because summer heat is one of the biggest causes of the slow decline that leaves a battery unable to do its job.
Why one in four cars is running on a weak battery
The figure comes from the diagnostics specialist Carly, which analysed more than 550,000 vehicles across most major brands between January 2025 and January 2026. It found that about 25 per cent had 12 volt batteries in poor condition. Applied to the roughly 34.5 million cars on UK roads, that works out at about 8.6 million vehicles operating on low power and at risk of non starts and electrical glitches.
The 12 volt battery is the one part almost every driver forgets about. It is not the large drive battery in an electric car, but the small unit that powers the starter motor, the lights, the locking system and the electronics in every vehicle on the road, including hybrids and EVs. Unlike a tyre that visibly wears or a brake that starts to squeal, a 12 volt battery degrades quietly. The first time many drivers learn there is a problem is when they turn the key and nothing happens, often on a cold morning or after the car has sat unused for a few days.
The warning signs most drivers miss
A battery on its way out rarely dies overnight. It sends quiet signals for weeks, and knowing them can save you from a roadside breakdown. The most common is a sluggish or hesitant start, where the engine cranks more slowly than usual before it catches. Another is headlights or interior lights that briefly dim when you turn the ignition, a sign the battery cannot hold its voltage under load.
On newer cars, one of the clearest clues is the stop start system switching itself off without any fault message. Stop start needs a healthy battery to restart the engine repeatedly, so the car quietly disables it to protect itself when voltage drops. Drivers often notice the engine no longer cuts out at traffic lights and assume the feature has simply stopped working, when in fact it is an early sign the battery is fading. Other symptoms include flickering dashboard lights, electric windows moving more slowly, and central locking or the alarm behaving erratically.
Why modern cars and electric vehicles are more vulnerable
Modern vehicles place far heavier demands on the 12 volt battery than older models did. Keyless entry, alarms, tracking systems, dashcams left on standby and a long list of electronic control units all draw small amounts of power even when the car is parked. A car that is only driven a few miles at a time, or left standing for days, may never give the battery enough time to fully recharge, so it slowly drains over weeks.
Electric and hybrid cars are not exempt. They still rely on a conventional 12 volt battery to run the electronics and to wake the car up before the main drive battery takes over, and consumer group Which? has flagged 12 volt battery failure as a surprisingly common fault on new hybrids and EVs. An owner can have a fully charged drive battery and still be unable to start the car if the small 12 volt unit is flat. Heat plays its part too. While batteries often fail in winter when the cold makes starting harder, it is summer heat that accelerates the internal chemical wear, so a battery weakened over a hot spell frequently gives up at the first cold snap.
What to do and what it costs
The good news is that a 12 volt battery is cheap to check and replace compared with the cost of a recovery truck and a ruined day. Carly’s own repair cost estimator puts a replacement at roughly £150 to £330 including fitting, though the bill can climb higher if the underlying issue turns out to be the charging or starting system rather than the battery itself.
Most batteries last between three and five years, so if yours is older than that it is worth having tested. Many garages and parts retailers offer a free battery health check, which takes a few minutes and measures whether the battery can still hold its charge under load. If you cover low mileage or leave the car parked for long periods, a smart trickle charger left connected occasionally will keep the battery topped up and extend its life considerably. Longer drives also help, as a 20 minute motorway run does far more to recharge a battery than a series of short trips to the shops.
If you are already seeing the warning signs, do not wait for the battery to fail completely. A proactive replacement at a planned time is far less disruptive than a non start in a car park or on the driveway when you are late for work. With heat now adding to the strain, the next few months are exactly when a tired battery is most likely to be pushed over the edge. For more on protecting your car through the warmer months, see our guides to avoiding a costly summer air conditioning bill and the heat related risks to your tyres.
Is it the battery or the charging system?
Not every flat battery is the battery’s fault. If a unit that is only a year or two old keeps going flat, the problem often lies elsewhere, most commonly with the alternator that is meant to recharge it while the engine runs, or with a hidden electrical drain pulling power overnight. A failing alternator can leave even a brand new battery unable to hold its charge, and replacing the battery alone simply resets the clock until the same thing happens again. This is why a proper diagnostic check is worth the small cost: it tests the battery under load and confirms whether the charging system is actually doing its job.
A parasitic drain is the other common culprit. Aftermarket alarms, trackers, hardwired dashcams and faulty modules can all keep drawing current after the car is locked. If your battery is repeatedly flat after the car has been parked for a couple of days, an auto electrician can measure the standby draw and trace what is responsible, rather than you replacing batteries that were never the real issue.
Why you cannot always fit any battery
Drivers used to be able to buy any battery of roughly the right size and bolt it in. On many newer cars that is no longer true. Vehicles with stop start systems usually need a specific type of battery, often an AGM or enhanced flooded unit built to cope with constant restarting, and fitting a cheaper standard battery in their place tends to fail quickly. Many cars also require the new battery to be registered or coded to the vehicle’s electronics so the charging system knows it is dealing with a fresh unit. Skip that step and the car may never charge the battery correctly.
The upshot is that the right replacement for a modern car is not always the cheapest one on the shelf, and fitting may need a garage with the correct equipment. It is still a modest bill set against the alternative. A single recovery callout, a missed day of work and the inconvenience of a car stranded on the driveway add up to far more than a planned battery change carried out before the warning signs turn into a no start.
Sources:
- Motoring Research: Car battery shock, 1 in 4 at risk of failure
- GB News: Millions of drivers risk breakdowns over battery issue
- Which?: The surprising fault affecting new hybrids and EVs
- Bodyshop Magazine: Battery degradation driving up repair bills
- Motoring Chronicle: How to avoid a £200 car air conditioning bill this summer