Electric cars have far fewer moving parts than petrol or diesel vehicles, which means less to go wrong mechanically. But the battery pack is the single most expensive component on the car, and its condition is much harder to judge with a quick glance or a test drive. Before you buy a used EV, it pays to slow down and dig into battery health, charging history, and how the previous owner actually used the car.

Why the battery matters more than the engine ever did

On a combustion car, engine wear is usually gradual and repairs are relatively predictable. On an EV, the battery degrades slowly over thousands of charge cycles, but a poorly treated pack can lose noticeable range years before the rest of the car shows any wear at all. A battery replacement outside of warranty can cost more than the used car itself, so this is the one check you cannot skip.

Ask for a battery health report

Many EVs can display or export a state-of-health estimate, usually as a percentage compared to the battery's original capacity. Ask the seller for this figure, ideally generated recently and, if possible, verified through an independent diagnostic tool rather than just the dashboard readout. A healthy battery in a car a few years old will typically still show high capacity retention; a sharp drop is worth investigating further before you commit.

Check the manufacturer's battery warranty

Most EV batteries come with a separate, longer warranty than the rest of the car, often covering a set number of years or a distance threshold, with a minimum capacity guarantee. Confirm exactly what is left on this warranty and whether it transfers to a new owner. Get this in writing or verified directly with the manufacturer or an authorized dealer rather than taking the seller's word for it, since warranty terms and any prior claims are usually tied to the vehicle identification number.

Look into the car's charging history

How a battery was charged over its life affects long-term health just as much as age or mileage. Frequent fast charging, letting the battery sit empty or fully charged for long periods, or regular exposure to extreme heat can accelerate wear. Ask the seller: