Real-world State of Health (SoH) for the Tesla Model X, based on 9 aggregated data points across 2022–2022 model years. On average the Model X loses about 2.3% per year — here's what that means for range, resale, and when (if ever) you'd need a replacement.
State of Health vs. mileage, from real Model X data. The curve flattens after the initial break-in drop — the steepest losses happen early, then degradation slows.
| Mileage | Typical SoH | Status | Est. range |
|---|---|---|---|
| 50,000 km | 94% | Excellent | 429 km |
| 100,000 km | 91% | Excellent | 416 km |
| 150,000 km | 88.5% | Good | 404 km |
| 200,000 km | 86% | Good | 393 km |
Estimates from aggregated real-world data. Individual results vary with climate, charging habits, and use.
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Gentle Level 2 home charging generates far less heat than DC fast charging — the single biggest driver of degradation. See our best home EV chargers for 2026 to slow wear and save on every charge.
Based on aggregated real-world data, the Tesla Model X loses roughly 2.3% of its capacity per year. At 100,000 km it typically retains about 91% State of Health, and it is covered by a 8-year / 240,000 km battery warranty down to 70% capacity. Most Model X batteries are expected to outlast the rest of the car.
A full Tesla Model X pack is around 100 kWh. At current installed prices of roughly $120–$180 per kWh, an out-of-warranty replacement would land in the $12,000–$18,000 range — but module-level repair is often far cheaper, and most owners never need it. See our EV battery replacement cost guide.
A used Tesla Model X can be an excellent value as long as the battery is healthy. Always check the State of Health before buying — at 88% (typical at higher mileage) the car still delivers strong daily range. Run a free VoltChek estimate and confirm with an OBD2 scanner before you commit.
Two ways: get an instant data-driven estimate from VoltChek using your year and mileage (free, no hardware), or read the exact value from the car's Battery Management System with an OBD2 scanner. We recommend starting with the free estimate, then verifying with a scanner.