There are too many variables that go into battery usage to get any meaningful insight. Different apps, cpus, screen brightness/refresh rates, active radios, etc... It's an endless list. Best you can do is compare with someone you know with the same model who has similar usage patterns. Good luck.
@yoz batteries have evolved a lot lately, with those having 5000 mAh or more being more common. My phone has one and it lasts me well over 1 day with moderate use. Previous one had just bellow 3000 mAh and I was happy if I got a full day with it while trying to get the most spartan on it.
My stock moto 8g plus lasts two days with regular use as well. Sometimes Firefox dies but it's a minor inconvenience. Apart from that, it has been a beast. Have been with Motorola for a while. Main gripe is that they don't offer software updates very long.
Depends. Running in 90hz mode and on 5G, dual sim with low connectivity on one sim, 6-7hrs at best. Setting the refresh rate to 60hz and turning off 5G and the 2nd sim, it can be an hour or 2 higher and easily all-day battery life with some to last the next day.
Fold3 5G, I charge to <85% nightly and it almost always lasts me all day from 6am to 11pm.
I'm not a super light user, but my screen on time is nowhere near yours, 7 and a half hours screen on seems crazy high to me. I usually come out at 3 to 4 hours.
I keep the screen brightness down, wifi and bluetooth are automatically on and off only when needed, very rarely receive phone calls or video chats so that's saving quite a bit.
All my previous phones had 3-4hours screen on time and battery might last for 12 hours max. Now if I don't use my phone much , little browsing and calls then my phone lasts around 4 days on a single charge. Its crazy !!
For the longevity of the battery, you shouldn't let it get that low. Lithium batteries really dislike being below 10% or above 90%. Ideally you should charge above 30% and stop at 90%. Samsung even offers a feature for when to stop charging. Apple has a battery health report that tells you how well it's performing compared to when it was new. Fast charging above 30W is hard on health too. You should use a charger below that. I personally use an 18W charger.
You may have long battery life now, but it won't last with poor battery hygiene. I've personally ruined batteries in the past in 3-4 years to where the phone can no longer accurately read the battery level. People I know have done it too. My last phone lasted a whopping 6 years before the battery finally started screwing up.
Sony also has a feature that will limit battery top-up, called "Battery care". You can set it to limit charging to 90% or 80% (they recommend 80%), it has several modes (e.g. always vs "smart" that will resume charging if you replug), and it will go to 100% once in a while just to check your max capacity.
It's not stock, I have a custom launcher (Nova) and DuckDuckGo browser installed which blocks all trackers in other apps (tracking is pretty egregious in this phone and without tracking blocking I wouldn't recommend it)
For me it depends greatly on usage, but currently I drain about half battery in a day, and a full charge will (with light to medium usage) last me two full days.
Phone is a Oneplus 5T, though I replaced the battery two years ago.
I charge my phone over night with battery protection limiting charge to 85%. Then one hour before my alarm, it tops up to 100%. The phone claims that from there it would last 30 hours which is above the advertised time for the model. But it seems congruent as I rarely go to bed with less than 30%-40% and I'm not a light user. I'm usually texting and browsing internet all day, Bluetooth and GPS location turned on continuously. Batteries have come a long way the past decade.
It's a setting with Samsung. But I guess some other Android vendors have some similar stuff. Allegedly limiting the time the battery spends on the extremes, nearly empty and completely full, is supposed to help with battery longevity. It's a heavily technical and disputed topic. But they bothered to put it there and it doesn't hurt anything, so I use it.
I have a pixel 7 pro and I don't use my phone for much other than the occasional text and internet search. But I can usually go two days and not charge it
I'm always on a VPN usually on WiFi unless I'm driving. I get a day or so if I'm not working and not taking a lot of photos, and since my phone is usually plugged in while I'm driving around for work I don't charge it at night except for weekends.
I should probably plug it in at night, does anyone know how the feature that does a slow charge until your alarm is scheduled to go off in the morning affects battery longevity?