Tesla's VP of Vehicle Engineering, Lars Moravy, revealed in September 2025 that new nickel-based battery technology significantly improves durability.
The daily charging recommendation will increase from 80% to 90%, thanks to material science breakthroughs.
1. Battery Background: LFP vs. Nickel-Based
Tesla currently offers two battery types: LFP and nickel-based (NMC/NCA).
Battery Type |
Strengths |
Limitations |
|---|---|---|
LFP |
Charge to 100% daily, better durability |
Temperature sensitive, lower energy density |
Nickel-based |
Higher energy density, better performance |
Previously limited to 80% daily charging |
Moravy stated the new technology "halves the convenience gap" between battery types.
2. Technical Breakthrough: Cathode Doping
The improvement comes from patent US20240383770A1: "Doped Cathode Active Materials and Methods Thereof."
Key achievements:
Precise doping with trace metal elements
Reduces capacity fade during cycling
91% capacity retention vs. 83% in previous batteries
5% capacity loss vs. 20% in non-doped batteries
Metric |
Traditional Batteries |
New Doped Batteries |
|---|---|---|
Capacity Loss |
~20% |
<5% |
Capacity Retention |
83% |
91% |
Degradation Rate |
Standard |
4x lower |
3. Market Impact & US Implications
This development is particularly important for the US market where:
All current Tesla models use nickel-based batteries
LFP battery versions suspended due to supply chain issues
LFP vehicles cannot receive federal tax credits
High tariffs on Chinese LFP batteries increase costs
The new technology makes nickel-based batteries more competitive with LFP for daily usability while maintaining their performance advantages.