What Is a Battery Cycle? | PhoneDoctor Singapore

GlossaryBattery & Power Terms

What Is a Battery Cycle?

One complete charge-discharge cycle of your phone battery.

Definition: A battery cycle is one complete charge and discharge of a phone battery. Charging from 50% to 100% twice counts as one cycle — not two. Most lithium-ion phone batteries are rated for 300–500 cycles before noticeable capacity loss. Apple rates iPhones to retain 80% capacity at 500 cycles.

How cycles accumulate

A heavy user who charges their phone twice a day may accumulate 700+ cycles per year. A light user charging once daily accumulates around 365. At 500 cycles, most batteries retain roughly 80% capacity — meaning a full charge only lasts 80% as long as it used to. At 700–800 cycles, the phone may shut down randomly at 20–30% remaining as the battery can no longer deliver stable power under load.

How to check cycle count

iPhone: Settings → Privacy → Analytics → Analytics Data → look for files named “log-aggregated” — cycle count is listed as “CycleCount”.

Samsung: Dial *#0228# for a quick battery status check.

All Android: AccuBattery app tracks cycle count and health over time with daily use.

Related terms

→ Battery Health — cycles drive health decline over time

→ Charging Port — port faults can affect how effectively cycles complete

→ Power IC — manages charging and discharging across every cycle

Phone shutting down before 0%?

High cycle count causes random shutdowns under load. PhoneDoctor replaces batteries for all brands — 45 minutes, OEM parts, 90-day warranty.

Battery Terms · All Glossary Terms