Dash cams that run only when the ignition is on draw power only while the engine runs—the alternator keeps the battery topped up. But parking mode (recording while parked) keeps the camera running when the engine is off. That draws from the battery—and over hours or days, can drain it enough that the car won't start. This guide explains how much drain to expect and how to protect your battery. If parking mode frequently runs your battery down, a battery maintainer can help when the car sits; see our comparison for options.
Yes, dash cams can drain your battery—especially in parking mode. Always-on parking mode may draw 0.5–2A depending on the camera. Use a hardwire kit with low-voltage cutoff (typically 11.8–12.2V) so the camera turns off before the battery is too weak to start. Without cutoff, a weekend of parking mode can kill the battery.
If you plug into the cigarette lighter and the socket turns off with the key, you're fine. Hardwiring for parking mode is where drain becomes a concern. A car battery charger can help recover a drained battery quickly when you return to the vehicle.
| Mode | Typical Draw | Battery Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Recording (driving) | 0.3–0.8A | None—engine running |
| Parking—always recording | 0.5–1.5A | High—drains over hours |
| Parking—motion only | 0.1–0.3A idle | Moderate—depends on activity |
| Standby/sleep | 0.05–0.2A | Low but cumulative |
A 50Ah car battery has roughly 25Ah usable before it struggles to crank. At 1A draw, that's about 25 hours. Cold weather and an older battery reduce that.
Quality hardwire kits include a module that monitors battery voltage. When it drops to a set level (often 11.8V, 12.0V, or 12.2V), the kit cuts power to the dash cam. That preserves enough battery to start the car.
Choose a cutoff that matches your climate—colder batteries read lower at rest. 12.0V is a common safe default. Too high and the cam shuts off early; too low and you risk a dead battery.
Depends on battery health, temperature, and draw. A healthy 50Ah battery with 1A draw might last 15–20 hours. Weak or cold batteries less. Use a hardwire kit with cutoff—don't guess. If you park for days (airport, trip), consider unplugging or disabling parking mode.
Only if your car keeps that socket powered when off (some do for phone charging). Most turn off with the key. For parking mode, you need a hardwire kit.
Possibly, without a cutoff. With a proper hardwire kit set to 12.0V, it should shut off before the battery is too weak to start.
Even with cutoff, a week of cold weather or a weak battery can be risky. Disable parking mode or unplug if you'll be gone that long.
Yes, but the difference is usually modest. Parking mode draw depends more on whether it's always-on vs motion-triggered.
Last updated: February 2025