Aviloo has launched a warranty for batteries offering protection based on battery health data.
The warranty is issued as a standalone document, separate from Aviloo’s existing independent battery certificate.
It is managed through Aviloo Connect, a digital dashboard. For each vehicle, an individual State of Health (SoH) level is calculated using Aviloo’s battery health dataset.
The calculation sets the minimum SoH the battery must maintain at 20,000 kilometres over the one-year warranty period.
Dealers can offer this warranty to buyers as a “credible, independently underwritten” selling point, without carrying the risk themselves.
Buyers receive a one-year warranty period during which they can carry out an Aviloo Flash Test, assessing real battery capacity, thermal management, and charging capability against original factory specifications, covering 96% of EV models currently on the road.
If the battery’s SoH falls below the calculated threshold during the warranty period, the buyer receives £2,700 in compensation plus a refund of the Flash Test costs.
Marcus Berger, CEO of Aviloo, said: “For the first time in the UK, we are providing the foundation for a warranty based solely on objective, independent measurement data.
“This builds trust and gives British dealers and buyers a level of certainty that simply has not existed before.
Mercedes-Benz, Volvo, and Porsche us the firm as their preferred third-party battery testing provider for dealerships across Europe with the Flash Test used on own-brand and trade-in vehicles.
Aviloo is used by auction houses and leasing firms. Dealer groups Hedin and Emil Frey are also live. All relationships are underpinned by European-level agreements.