Ford Fusion battery drain problem

Asked by Guru6JDJQ Apr 09, 2020 at 08:47 AM about the 2015 Ford Fusion Hybrid

Question type: Maintenance & Repair

Ford Fusion hybrid battery drains and car will not start

5 Answers

40,280

You need to have the electrical system checked for a parasitic draw, or maybe the battery is just old and needs replacing. Is it original?

5 people found this helpful.
40

Battery is 4 months old. The Ford dealer is asking hundreds to diagnose.

4 people found this helpful.
200

I am having similar issues with my 2019 fusion hybrid, I will have to jump it if i don't use it for a day. the dealer didn't find any issues with the battery after testing. Any advice? Thanks.

20 people found this helpful.
60

Read another forum to move keyfob far from the car when parked. The fob was trying to continuously connect causing the battery to drain. Daughters car doing the same thing. Going to try this workaround

6 people found this helpful.
10

Our 2020 Ford Fusions in our fleet are doing the same thing. If one sits for more than a week, it's dead. It has sat at ford for a month, and nothing; even has had battery replaced twice. Another car shop said it's the radio Module pulling. we didn't replace that cause it was like $1100. So we are continuously jump starting vehicle and hope someone signs it out to use for a trip. No recalls, so Ford dealer can't do much. I've even read where a car sitting next to the 2020's can actually drain the battery; like really????

1 people found this helpful.

Your Answer:

Fusion Hybrid

Looking for a Used Fusion Hybrid in your area?

CarGurus has 101 nationwide Fusion Hybrid listings starting at $6,950.

Postal Code:

CarGurus Experts

  • #1
    GuruL5TQM
    Reputation
    890
  • #2
    Allen Chan
    Reputation
    700
  • #3
    Árpád Kun
    Reputation
    610
View All

Find great deals from top-rated dealers

Search

Related Models For Sale

Used Ford Fusion
20 Great Deals out of 399 listings starting at $5,499
Used Ford Fusion Energi
7 Great Deals out of 109 listings starting at $8,995
Used Toyota Camry Hybrid
14 Great Deals out of 178 listings starting at $7,990
Used Honda Accord Hybrid
7 Great Deals out of 140 listings starting at $12,995
Used Toyota Camry
62 Great Deals out of 934 listings starting at $2,995
Used Hyundai Sonata Hybrid
10 Great Deals out of 104 listings starting at $4,995
Used Toyota Prius
13 Great Deals out of 173 listings starting at $1,496
Used Honda Accord
49 Great Deals out of 963 listings starting at $4,295
Used Lincoln MKZ Hybrid
14 listings starting at $12,498
Used Honda Civic Hybrid
3 listings starting at $6,500
Used Toyota Corolla
128 Great Deals out of 2,197 listings starting at $2,200
Used Ford Focus
30 Great Deals out of 514 listings starting at $2,400

Content submitted by Users is not endorsed by CarGurus, does not express the opinions of CarGurus, and should not be considered reviewed, screened, or approved by CarGurus. Please refer to CarGurus Terms of Use. Content will be removed if CarGurus becomes aware that it violates our policies.