Your phone’s battery is dying faster than it should — and the culprit is almost always a handful of apps running silently in the background. In 2026, the average smartphone user has 40–80 apps installed, but only 5–10 of them are responsible for most of the battery drain.
This guide shows you exactly how to find those apps and stop them — on both iPhone and Android.
How to See Which Apps Are Draining Your Battery
On iPhone (iOS 18)
- Go to Settings → Battery
- Scroll down to see Battery Usage by App
- Tap Last 10 Days for a more accurate picture
- The top offenders are listed by percentage — anything above 20% needs attention
On Android 15
- Go to Settings → Battery → Battery Usage
- Tap Show Full Device Usage to include system processes
- Look for apps with unusually high usage that you rarely open
The 7 Biggest Battery Killers in 2026
Based on data from millions of devices, these app categories consistently top the battery drain charts:
- TikTok and Instagram Reels — constant video decoding + GPS + camera access in the background
- Facebook — notorious for background activity even when closed
- Google Maps and Waze — GPS and real-time traffic data running 24/7
- Snapchat — always-on camera access and push notifications
- Email apps (Gmail, Outlook) — constant background sync every few minutes
- Weather apps — frequent location polling throughout the day
- Music and podcast apps — background audio processing and downloads
Fix 1: Restrict Background App Refresh
iPhone
- Go to Settings → General → Background App Refresh
- Set it to Wi-Fi Only or turn it off completely for non-essential apps
- Toggle off specifically for: Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok
Android 15
- Go to Settings → Apps → [App Name]
- Tap Battery → Restricted
- Apply this to apps you don’t need running in the background
Fix 2: Disable Location Access for Non-Essential Apps
GPS is the single biggest battery drain after screen brightness. Many apps request “Always On” location access when they only need it “While Using.”
- Go to Settings → Privacy → Location Services (iPhone) or Settings → Location → App Permissions (Android)
- Review each app’s location setting
- Change social media, shopping, and utility apps from “Always” to “While Using” or “Never”
Fix 3: Enable Low Power Mode Strategically
You don’t need to wait until 20% battery to enable Low Power Mode. Turning it on at 50% when you know you’ll be away from a charger can make your battery last 2–4 hours longer.
- iPhone: Settings → Battery → Low Power Mode (or add it to Control Center)
- Android: Settings → Battery → Battery Saver
Fix 4: Reduce Screen Refresh Rate
If your phone has a 120Hz or 144Hz display (Samsung Galaxy, iPhone Pro models), running at that rate constantly wastes significant battery. Switch to 60Hz for daily use and only enable the high refresh rate when needed:
- iPhone 15 Pro/16 Pro: Settings → Accessibility → Motion → Limit Frame Rate
- Android: Settings → Display → Screen Refresh Rate → 60Hz
Fix 5: Turn Off Push Email (Use Fetch Instead)
Push email keeps a constant connection to mail servers, waking your phone every few minutes. Switching to “Fetch” (checks every 15–30 minutes) can save up to 15% battery per day:
- iPhone: Settings → Mail → Accounts → Fetch New Data → switch from Push to Fetch
- Set fetch interval to Every 30 Minutes
Fix 6: Uninstall Facebook, Use the Browser Instead
This is the single biggest battery improvement most users can make. The Facebook app is one of the most aggressive background processes on any phone. Deleting it and using facebook.com in Safari or Chrome instead can improve battery life by 15–20% on its own.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is my phone battery draining so fast all of a sudden?
Sudden battery drain is usually caused by a recent app update that introduced a background process bug, or a new app you installed that has aggressive location or notification settings. Check your Battery Usage screen (Settings → Battery) to identify the culprit.
Does dark mode actually save battery?
Yes — but only on OLED screens (iPhone 12 and later, Samsung Galaxy S series, Google Pixel). On OLED displays, true black pixels are turned off completely, saving significant battery. On older LCD screens, dark mode makes no difference for battery life.
How many years does a phone battery last?
Most phone batteries maintain good capacity for 2–3 years (500–800 charge cycles). After that, you’ll notice significantly shorter battery life. iPhone shows battery health at Settings → Battery → Battery Health. Android users can use apps like AccuBattery to check battery wear.
