Skip to main content
Calkulon

Practical

Drone Battery & Range Calculator

What is Drone Battery & Range?

The Drone Battery & Range Calculator estimates maximum safe flight time and effective range based on battery capacity (mAh), voltage (V), drone power draw (W), cruise speed (m/s), and headwind. Energy in watt-hours: capacity × voltage / 1000. Usable energy after typical 80% safe discharge: Wh × 0.8. Flight time minutes = usable Wh / power × 60. Safe flight time (with 30% reserve for return-to-home) = max time × 0.7. Range km = effective speed (cruise minus headwind) × safe flight time ÷ 60. Why 30% RTH reserve matters: when battery hits 30% remaining, most consumer drones (DJI, Autel) automatically trigger Return-to-Home. If you push past this without enough remaining capacity to make it back, drone lands wherever it runs out — often in water, traffic, or unreachable terrain. Lost drones from battery depletion are the #1 cause of consumer drone fatalities. Always plan flights assuming you need the RTH battery, especially over water, mountains, or unfamiliar terrain. Real-world ranges vary by drone class. DJI Mini 4 Pro (2453 mAh, 7.38V → 18 Wh): 34 min advertised, ~24 min safe, range ~10 km (in still air at 36 km/h). DJI Mavic 3 (5000 mAh, 15.4V → 77 Wh): 46 min advertised, ~32 min safe, range ~30 km. Autel EVO Lite+ (6175 mAh, 11.55V → 71 Wh): 40 min advertised, ~28 min safe. Manufacturer 'max flight time' assumes ideal conditions — perfect weather, no payload, smooth flight; reduce by 25–40% for real-world use. Wind effects: headwind reduces effective speed (and thus range) directly while increasing power consumption. A 15 m/s cruise drone facing 5 m/s headwind has 10 m/s effective forward speed AND draws ~20% more power. Tailwind increases range but creates risk on return leg. Crosswind doesn't change forward range but increases lateral drift consumption. Best practice: plan flights into the wind first, return downwind. Never fly out farther than you can return on remaining battery considering the prevailing wind.

Calkulon makes complex calculations simple — built for students and everyday problem-solvers.

Formula

f(x)Wh = (mAh × V) / 1000; Safe Time = Wh × 0.8 / Power × 60 × 0.7; Range km = (Speed − Wind) × Time / 60

Variable Legend

SymbolNameUnitDescription
CBattery CapacitymAhBattery capacity in milliamp-hours
VVoltageVBattery nominal voltage
PPower DrawWAverage power consumption during cruise flight
SCruise Speedm/sDrone's typical cruise speed
WHeadwindm/sWind speed against direction of flight

How to Drone Battery & Range

  1. 1Step 1 — Enter battery capacity (mAh) from drone specification or battery label
  2. 2Step 2 — Enter battery voltage (typically 7.4V for small drones, 15.4V for mid-size, 22.2V for larger)
  3. 3Step 3 — Enter average power draw (W) during cruise (DJI Mini ~30W, Mavic 3 ~95W)
  4. 4Step 4 — Enter cruise speed (typical 10–18 m/s for consumer drones, 25+ for racing)
  5. 5Step 5 — Enter headwind speed (estimate from local weather or ask drone hover-and-observe)
  6. 6Step 6 — Calculator computes Wh = (C × V) / 1000, usable Wh = Wh × 0.8, flight time = Wh / P × 60
  7. 7Step 7 — Applies 30% RTH reserve for safe flight time; computes range from effective speed × time

Worked Examples

Example 1DJI Mini 4 Pro typical flight
Given:2453 mAh, 7.38V, 30W power, 15 m/s, 0 wind
Result:18 Wh, 24 min safe flight, 13.5 km range

Matches manufacturer claims approximately. Real-world reduces by 20–30% for wind, payload, cold weather.

Example 2DJI Mavic 3 windy conditions
Given:5000 mAh, 15.4V, 95W, 15 m/s, 5 m/s wind
Result:77 Wh, 27 min safe, 16 km range

5 m/s headwind cuts effective speed by 33%, reducing range significantly

Wind is the #1 factor reducing real-world range. Always plan for current wind, not advertised range.

Example 3Mountain photography
Given:Same Mavic 3, 22 m/s, 8 m/s wind (mountain ridge)
Result:27 min safe, 22 km range — but plan for ridge turbulence cutting safe time 20%

Mountain flying adds turbulence overhead — derate calculator by 20%.

Real-World Applications

🏗️

Pre-flight planning for photography/inspection missions

🔬

Choosing drone model for distance requirements

📊

Battery purchase decisions for working drones

🏥

Multi-battery planning for extended jobs

⚙️

Insurance documentation of flight planning practices

🌍

Training new pilots on battery safety

Frequently Asked Questions

Q

Why is real-world range so much less than advertised?

A

Manufacturer 'max flight time' assumes: no wind, ideal temperature (20°C), no payload, smooth flight, fresh battery. Real conditions reduce by 20–40%: wind costs energy (headwind dramatically), cold below 10°C reduces lithium chemistry capacity by 20–30%, fast or aggressive flight burns more power, camera/gimbal payload adds drag. Always reduce manufacturer claims by 25% for planning.

Q

How much reserve battery is enough?

A

30% minimum for return-to-home. More for: long missions over water (50%), unfamiliar terrain (40%), high altitude reducing motor efficiency (40%), cold weather (40%). Most drones auto-RTH at 30%; you can override but shouldn't unless you have visual confirmation of safe landing zone within remaining capacity.

Q

What kills battery life fastest?

A

Aggressive flying (sport mode at full throttle), cold weather, full payload, headwind, high altitude. Combined effect: cold + windy + sport mode can cut advertised flight time in half. Hover uses about 70–80% of max-throttle power; gentle forward flight is often most efficient (10–12 m/s).

Q

How do I extend range?

A

(1) Fly into wind first, return with tailwind. (2) Plan altitude — battery dies faster at high altitudes (less air density). (3) Use smaller, more efficient drone if range is critical. (4) Carry spare batteries — landing to swap takes <2 min. (5) Avoid hover — forward flight 10–15 m/s is most efficient. (6) Reduce gimbal/camera activity (4K recording uses more power than 1080p).

Q

Do lithium batteries degrade over time?

A

Yes. Expect 20–30% capacity loss after 200–300 charge cycles, 50% after 500–800 cycles. Storage matters: store at 50% charge in cool dry place; full or empty long-term degrades batteries fastest. DJI Intelligent Flight Batteries have built-in storage discharge (auto-discharge to ~70% after 10 days idle). Replace batteries showing >25% capacity loss for safety.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • !Trusting advertised max flight time — real-world is 25–40% less
  • !Pushing past 30% RTH battery — leading cause of drone losses
  • !Not factoring headwind into return leg — drone arrives home empty
  • !Cold weather without warming batteries — sudden voltage drop can crash drone mid-flight
  • !Hovering for photos consuming as much battery as moving flight
💡

Pro Tip

Always plan flights into the wind first, return with tailwind. Plan max outbound distance assuming current wind doubles by return time — weather can shift faster than you can fly home. When in doubt, fly closer; lost drones cost $500–8,000 to replace.

Regional Guides

US (FAA Part 107)
EU (EASA)
Industrial / Surveying
📖Difficulty:Intermediate
Ask a Question

Have a question about this calculator? Get a detailed answer.

Deep Dive

Read the full guide on how to use this calculator effectively

Read more
Mathematically verified
Reviewed June 2026
Our methodology

Get Weekly Math Tips

Join 12,000+ subscribers who get calculator tips every week.

🔒
100% Free
No sign-up ever
Accurate
Verified formulas
Instant
Results as you type
📱
Mobile Ready
All devices

Settings

PrivacyTermsAbout© 2026 Calkulon