Honda Accord Battery — The Complete Owner's Guide
Most Honda Accords use a 12-volt Group 51R battery (four-cylinder, 2003–2017); V6 models of that era take Group 24F, and 2018-and-newer turbo Accords use the smaller European H5 (47) or H6 (48) size. A good battery lasts 3–5 years, costs about $120–$250, and takes roughly 15 minutes to replace yourself with a 10mm wrench.
Battery finder
This is the hub. Each section links to a full guide — battery size by year, the best batteries to buy, step-by-step replacement, and the key fob battery.
What battery does a Honda Accord take?
Your Accord uses a standard 12V automotive battery, sized by a BCI group number that has to match your year and engine. The quick version:
| Generation | Years | Most common group size |
|---|---|---|
| 7th–9th gen (4-cyl) | 2003–2017 | 51R |
| 7th–9th gen (V6) | 2003–2017 | 24F |
| 10th gen | 2018–2022 | H5 (47) / H6 (48) on 2.0T, Touring, Hybrid |
| 11th gen | 2023–present | H6 (48) (verify on the label) |
The “R” in 51R means reversed terminals — a 51 and a 51R are not interchangeable, so the group number has to match exactly. For the full year-by-year breakdown with CCA and how to confirm yours, see the Honda Accord battery size chart.
⚠️ Always confirm against the label on your current battery (or the owner’s manual / a retailer fitment lookup) before buying. Trim, engine, hybrid vs gas, and region all change fitment.
Signs your Accord battery is dying
Catch it before it strands you. Watch for:
- Slow crank — the engine turns over lazily, especially on cold mornings.
- A single click (or rapid clicking) when you turn the key or press start.
- Dim or flickering headlights and dash lights; electrical glitches (radio resets, power windows slow).
- Frequent jump-starts or a car that won’t start after sitting a day or two.
- The battery / charging warning light on the dash.
- Corrosion (white/blue powder) on the terminals, or a swollen battery case.
- Age — if it’s over 4 years old, treat any of the above as “test it now.”
A free battery test at any auto-parts store takes five minutes and tells you whether it’s the battery or the charging system. If the car already won’t start, see the battery replacement guide.
How long does a Honda Accord battery last?
Typically 3–5 years. What shortens it most is heat, not cold — Accords in hot climates (Arizona, Texas, Florida) often need a battery at 3 years, while a garage-kept car up north can reach 5–6. Lots of short trips, heavy accessory use, and the auto start/stop system on newer trims also wear it faster. Once a battery is past four years, it can fail suddenly in the first cold snap — so test it annually after year three.
Flooded vs AGM (and the hybrid’s two batteries)
Honda Accord batteries come in two chemistries — and hybrids carry a second one:
- Flooded (standard wet-cell): the factory battery on most gas, non-start/stop Accords. Cheapest, fine for ordinary use.
- AGM (absorbed glass mat): sealed, longer-lasting, handles deep cycling and the charge demands of start/stop systems and hot climates. It’s the recommended upgrade — and it’s required if your Accord came with AGM. Putting a flooded battery into an AGM/start-stop system shortens its life.
- Hybrid Accords have two batteries: the big high-voltage drive pack (under the floor — not a DIY part, $2,000+) and a small 12V auxiliary battery (usually AGM) that does the same job as a normal car battery. This guide and our buyer picks are about the 12V battery — the one that strands you when it dies.
For which type fits your car and the top picks, see the best battery for a Honda Accord.
What does it cost — DIY vs shop?
| Option | Typical cost |
|---|---|
| Battery only (DIY) | $120–$250 depending on group size and AGM vs flooded |
| Installed at a shop | ~$230–$251 (RepairPal average) |
Replacing the 12V battery yourself on most Accords is a ~15-minute job with a 10mm wrench — the single easiest way to save money here. Walk through it in the battery replacement how-to (including how to keep your radio code and presets with a memory saver).
Shop Honda Accord batteries on Amazon →
The other battery: your key fob
When your remote/key fob stops working from a distance, that’s almost always its little coin cell, not the car battery. Most Accord smart keys (2013+) use a CR2032; older flip/clicker remotes use a CR1620 or CR1616. It’s a two-minute, a-few-dollars fix and needs no reprogramming — full steps on the Honda Accord key fob battery page.
Choose and replace — start here
- Find your size → battery size by year
- Pick the right one → best battery for a Honda Accord
- Install it yourself → battery replacement how-to
- Fix a dead remote → key fob battery