Low Power Mode is one of those features many users tap without thinking twice. The battery dips below 20 percent, the alert appears, and with one press the icon turns yellow. But behind that simple switch, several system changes begin immediately — across both iPhone and Apple Watch.
Understanding what actually gets disabled helps explain why battery life stretches noticeably when it’s turned on.
What Changes on iPhone When Low Power Mode Activates
On iPhone, Low Power Mode reduces or temporarily pauses several background activities. The goal isn’t to shut the phone down — it’s to slow nonessential processes.
The most visible change is performance scaling. The processor reduces peak performance to conserve energy. In everyday use, most people won’t notice this unless running heavy tasks like gaming or video editing.
Screen brightness may dim slightly, and automatic display behaviors adjust to reduce power draw.
Background App Refresh pauses. Apps no longer update content in the background unless opened manually. That means social feeds, email syncing, and cloud updates wait until you actively use the app.
Settings > General > Background App Refresh
Mail fetch also pauses. Instead of pulling new emails continuously, the device waits for manual refresh.
5G may be limited in certain conditions, especially when it consumes more energy than LTE.
Auto-lock shortens to 30 seconds by default. The screen turns off faster, reducing display usage — one of the largest battery drains.
Settings > Display & Brightness > Auto-Lock
Some visual effects, like subtle animations and motion-based interface elements, are reduced. These are small individually, but collectively they save measurable power.
iCloud Photos syncing may temporarily pause. Automatic downloads stop. Even Siri background processing slows.
None of these changes remove core functionality. Calls, messages, navigation, and apps still work normally. The system simply trims activity happening quietly in the background.
What Happens on Apple Watch
Apple Low Power Mode works differently on Apple Watch. It’s designed around preserving core functionality while extending battery life during long days or workouts.
When enabled, the Always-On display turns off. The screen wakes only when you raise your wrist or tap it.
Heart rate measurements may be reduced. Continuous background heart rate monitoring pauses except during workouts.
Background health measurements such as blood oxygen sampling may also be limited. Wi-Fi and cellular connections may reduce frequency when the watch isn’t actively in use.
To enable it:
Settings > Battery > Low Power Mode
During workouts, Low Power Mode on Apple Watch can optionally disable heart rate and GPS to extend tracking time significantly. This is especially useful during long hikes or endurance sessions where finishing the activity matters more than capturing every metric.
More Than a Simple Switch
Apple Low Power Mode doesn’t remove features. It prioritizes. It focuses energy on what you’re actively doing instead of what’s happening invisibly.
The largest battery consumers on modern devices are the display, wireless radios, processor spikes, and background synchronization. Low Power Mode systematically reduces each of those without interrupting essential communication.
On iPhone, you’ll often see battery life stretch by several hours. On Apple Watch, the difference can be even more noticeable, especially with Always-On display disabled.
And once the battery rises above 80 percent, iOS automatically turns Low Power Mode off, restoring full performance.
Settings > Battery > Low Power Mode
For many users, the feature becomes less of an emergency tool and more of a travel habit — turned on during long flights, road trips, or busy days when charging isn’t guaranteed.
It’s not about restricting the device. It’s about choosing efficiency when it matters.