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Battery Drains Overnight

Park it at night, dead by morning? That’s not “old car charm.” That’s a parasitic drain killing your battery while you sleep.

Why It Happens

Even parked, cars sip a little juice to keep alarms, clocks, and modules alive. But if something stays on — a glovebox light, stuck relay, or greedy module — the drain’s too big. By morning, your battery’s flat and your plans are shot.

Most Common Culprits

  • Interior light or trunk light stuck on.
  • Glovebox light that never shuts off.
  • Bad relay — circuit stays powered all night.
  • Faulty alternator diode — drains battery backward.
  • Infotainment/nav modules — known power hogs when they glitch.

What You Can Check

  • Do the obvious — make sure all lights are actually off when doors close.
  • At night, peek inside — dome, glovebox, trunk lights glowing? Bingo.
  • Check battery terminals for corrosion — poor connections mimic drain.
  • Pull fuses one by one with a test light to find the hungry circuit.

What a Mechanic Will Do

  • Measure parasitic draw with an ammeter.
  • Test the millivolt of fuses systematically to isolate the circuit.
  • Test alternator diodes for back-drain.
  • Scan modules for faults and sleep-mode issues.

Rough Damage to Your Wallet

  • Battery: $120–$250.
  • Relay replacement: $50–$150.
  • Alternator replacement: $400–$800.
  • Electrical diagnosis: $100–$200 per hour.
  • Module replacement: $500–$1,200+.

When to Park It

If your car needs a jump every morning, don’t ignore it. Drains fry batteries fast, and dead batteries kill alternators. You’ll be throwing good money after bad until the leak’s fixed.