Battery Warning / Charging System Fault
Volvo Vehicle
Severity: CriticalWhat it means
Volvo battery warning means the charging system is not maintaining adequate voltage.
The most common causes are a failing alternator, a battery at end of life, or a Volvo VGLA (voltage battery) sensor fault.
Volvo models also require battery registration when a new battery is fitted — an unregistered battery causes persistent warnings.
Affected Models
- Volvo XC60
- Volvo XC90
- Volvo S60
- Volvo V60
- Volvo XC40
- Volvo V90
- Volvo S90
Common Causes
- Alternator failure — not generating adequate charge
- Battery at end of life — Volvo AGM batteries typically last 4–6 years
- VGLA (battery current sensor) failure — reports incorrect charge state
- Battery not registered after replacement — Volvo's power management charges incorrectly
- Loose or corroded battery terminal
How to Fix It
-
Note the specific dashboard message.
Volvo displays text messages alongside the battery symbol.
'Battery charging fault — see manual' points to the alternator or charging circuit.
'Battery low — engine may not restart' indicates the battery charge is critically depleted.
The specific wording helps narrow the diagnosis. -
Test charging system voltage.
With the engine running, measure voltage across the battery terminals with a multimeter.
A healthy Volvo charging system produces 13.5–14.8V.
Below 13.5V indicates the alternator is undercharging — either the alternator itself or the voltage regulator has failed. -
Register a replacement battery.
When fitting a new battery to a Volvo, the car's power management module (VGLA) must be told via VIDA or a compatible scanner.
The registration process tells the module the new battery's capacity (Ah) and technology (AGM, EFB, conventional).
Without registration, the VGLA uses the wrong charging profile — the battery is overcharged and fails within months. -
Inspect battery terminals and the VGLA sensor.
The main battery in most Volvo models is located in the boot under the floor — check terminals for corrosion and tight connections.
The VGLA (battery current sensor) is clamped onto the negative battery cable — if it fails, the power management system gets incorrect data and may warn about battery issues despite a healthy battery.
A Volvo scan tool shows VGLA fault codes separately from battery faults. -
Check for parasitic drain on older models.
Volvo models with Sensus infotainment, air suspension, and active chassis electronics can develop parasitic drains from a module failing to sleep.
A drain above 80–100mA after 15 minutes of parking is abnormal.
A Volvo specialist with VIDA can perform a current drain test and identify the offending module.
When to Call a Professional
Volvo battery replacement requires registering the new battery with VIDA, VIDA DiCE, or a Volvo dealer scan tool.
An unregistered battery is overcharged and fails prematurely.