Estimate how long it takes to charge a 12-volt battery from its amp-hour capacity, how far it is discharged, and your charger output. Useful for trickle chargers, smart chargers, and jump packs alike.
Lead-acid charging is not perfectly efficient — 75 to 85% is typical. Smart chargers also taper near full, so the last 20% takes longer than this estimate.
How it works
The amp-hours needed equal the battery capacity times the gap between current and target charge. Divide that by the charger output (adjusted for efficiency) to get the time: hours = Ah needed / (charger amps × efficiency).
FAQ
Why does the last bit take so long? Smart chargers switch to a lower absorption and float current as the battery fills, so real time to 100% runs longer than a flat estimate.
Check state of charge with the Battery Voltage Chart and size a battery with the Battery Group Size Chart.
Estimating battery charge time
Charge time depends on how much energy the battery needs and how fast your charger supplies it. The basic estimate: hours ≈ amp-hours to replace ÷ charger amps. If a 100 Ah battery is 50% discharged, it needs about 50 Ah back; on a 10-amp charger that’s roughly 5 hours. In practice add 10–20% because charging isn’t 100% efficient and the final “absorption” phase tapers the current.
Don’t just chase speed: lead-acid batteries last longer charged at a moderate rate (often around 10–20% of their Ah capacity in amps), and a smart multi-stage charger protects the battery by reducing current as it fills. Lithium (LiFePO₄) tolerates faster charging. Capacity is also rated at a given temperature — cold batteries charge more slowly and shouldn’t be fast-charged below freezing.
