Galaxy Note 10 battery replacement

Galaxy Note 10 Battery Replacement: Cost & DIY Guide

A Galaxy Note 10 battery replacement typically runs $15 to $30 if you do it yourself and about $55 to $99 at a repair shop. The job is absolutely DIY-doable in under an hour with a heat source, a couple of picks, and a fresh 3,500mAh cell — and on a phone launched in 2019, a new battery is the single cheapest way to make it feel new again.

The Note 10 was Samsung's compact flagship: a 6.3-inch screen, S Pen with Air actions, and a slim body that left room for only a 3,500mAh battery. That capacity was already modest for a Note in 2019, and after several years of daily charge cycles most of these phones now struggle to reach dinnertime. Below is exactly how to check the battery, what a replacement costs, and how to swap it yourself.

Checking Galaxy Note 10 battery health
Check your battery health before ordering a replacement.

How to check your Galaxy Note 10 battery health

Samsung buries battery information under Settings → Battery and device care → Battery. Tap through to see your usage graph, estimated remaining time, and per-app drain. On the Note 10's version of One UI, however, there is no native "battery health" percentage the way an iPhone shows one — Samsung didn't add that readout to older models.

To get a real capacity number, install AccuBattery from the Play Store and let it learn through a few charge cycles. It estimates your current mAh against the original 3,500mAh design capacity, so you can see whether you're sitting at, say, 2,400mAh — roughly 68% of new. That's the honest way to measure wear on this phone. You can also open Samsung Members → Get help → Interactive checks to run a battery diagnostic, though it reports pass/fail rather than a precise percentage.

Signs your Galaxy Note 10 battery is failing

After six-plus years, wear shows up in a handful of familiar ways:

  • Galaxy Note 10 battery draining fast — you lose 20–30% just browsing or navigating, and screen-on time has collapsed compared to when the phone was new.
  • Sudden shutdowns at 20–40%, or the phone dying and then showing a higher charge once plugged in — a classic sign of a worn cell that can no longer hold voltage under load.
  • The phone runs hot during charging or gaming, or charges much more slowly than the 25W it used to accept.
  • Galaxy Note 10 battery not charging past a certain point, or bouncing between percentages.
  • Heavy S Pen use — Air actions and the Bluetooth remote keep the pen paired and draining — makes a tired battery fade even faster.

Swelling is the safety issue to watch. If the screen or the glass back starts lifting at the edges, the phone rocks on a flat table, or the frame feels bowed, stop charging immediately. A swollen lithium-ion cell is a fire and puncture risk. The Note 10's curved glass back sits directly on the battery, so a swelling cell can crack that rear glass from the inside. Never press on a bulging battery, and never keep using a phone that's visibly deforming — replace the cell promptly or recycle the device.

Galaxy Note 10 battery replacement cost

Here's what you can expect to pay in 2026. Because the Note 10 is well past its support window, some manufacturer-authorized channels may no longer stock parts, which pushes most people toward local shops or DIY.

Option Typical 2026 price Notes
Samsung / authorized (uBreakiFix) $79–$99 If still offered for this end-of-life model; includes labor
Local repair shop $55–$80 Usually same-day; ask if they use a fresh (not pulled) cell
DIY with a quality battery $15–$30 Battery part plus basic tools; you supply the labor

Your Galaxy Note 10 battery replacement cost DIY comes down almost entirely to the cell itself, which generally lands in the $12–$25 range for a quality replacement, plus a few dollars for adhesive and picks if you don't already own them. You can browse compatible cells and tool kits in our replacement batteries collection.

The exact replacement battery for the Note 10

The Galaxy Note 10 uses a 3,500mAh lithium-ion battery, sold under Samsung part number EB-BN970ABU. It fits the standard Note 10 family — sold as SM-N970, SM-N9700, SM-N970F, SM-N970U, SM-N970U1 and SM-N970W across US, international, and carrier variants. This is the smaller 6.3-inch Note 10; do not confuse it with the larger Note 10+ (SM-N975), which carries a physically different 4,300mAh cell.

When shopping for a Galaxy Note 10 OEM battery or OEM-equivalent, match that EB-BN970ABU part number and confirm the flex-cable connector position. A reputable replacement will ship at storage voltage and hold its rated capacity out of the box. Because the Note 10 is discontinued, "genuine new old stock" is scarce — a quality aftermarket cell rated at the full 3,500mAh is the practical choice for most repairs.

Galaxy Note 10 battery replacement tools
The basic toolkit for a DIY battery swap.

How to replace a Galaxy Note 10 battery yourself

Difficulty: moderate-to-hard (about 6/10). Like most 2019-era glass-sandwich phones, the Note 10 opens from the back, and the rear glass is bonded with strong adhesive. There is no rush, but there is real risk of cracking the back glass if you force it. Budget 45–60 minutes and work slowly.

Here's the step overview for how to replace a Galaxy Note 10 battery:

  • Power down and gather a heat source (hair dryer, heat mat, or iOpener), thin picks, a suction cup, a Phillips #00 driver, and plastic spudgers.
  • Heat the back glass evenly for a minute or two to soften the adhesive, then use the suction cup and a pick to open a gap and work around the perimeter. Go gently near the camera bump.
  • Unscrew and lift the internal charging/NFC bracket and coil, then disconnect the battery flex connector first — always release the battery before anything else.
  • Release the old cell. The Note 10's battery is held by stretch-release adhesive; pull the tabs slowly, or apply a little isopropyl alcohol around the edges to loosen it. Never bend or puncture the old battery while prying.
  • Seat the new EB-BN970ABU cell, reconnect the flex, and test that the phone powers on before you re-seal.
  • Re-adhere the back glass with fresh pre-cut adhesive and press firmly for a few minutes.

If you've never opened a phone before, watch a full teardown video first and keep the old battery away from anything sharp until you can recycle it.

After the swap: calibrate and reconnect

Samsung phones don't throw an iPhone-style "unknown part" lockout, so your Note 10 will simply boot and run on the new cell. To get an accurate battery gauge, do one calibration cycle: charge to 100%, use the phone until it shuts down on its own, then charge uninterrupted back to 100%. That resyncs the software's fuel gauge with the real capacity of the new battery.

If you use AccuBattery, reset its learned stats so it can re-measure against the fresh cell. And if your S Pen felt like it was contributing to drain, this is a good moment to review which Air actions and background features you actually use — a genuinely healthy battery plus a trimmed feature set is what restores that all-day Galaxy Note 10 battery life you remember.

Repair instead of replace
A fresh battery keeps a good phone out of the landfill.

Repair vs. upgrade: keep the Note 10 alive

A new flagship costs $800 or more. A Note 10 battery costs a fraction of that, and it revives a phone whose display, S Pen, and cameras still hold up fine for everyday use. Spending roughly $15–$30 to get another year or two out of hardware you already own is the definition of a smart repair — and it keeps a perfectly good device out of the e-waste stream. That's the whole idea behind PhonePartPro: repair, don't replace.

Ready to fix yours? Start with our replacement batteries collection, and if you own another device, our master guide to phone battery replacement by model covers the whole lineup.

FAQ

How much does a Galaxy Note 10 battery replacement cost?

Expect $15–$30 to do it yourself (the 3,500mAh cell is usually $12–$25) and $55–$99 at a repair shop. DIY is by far the cheapest route on an out-of-warranty phone.

How do I replace a Galaxy Note 10 battery?

Power off, heat the rear glass to soften the adhesive, open the back with a suction cup and picks, remove the charging bracket, disconnect the battery flex, release the old cell's adhesive, seat a new EB-BN970ABU battery, test, then re-seal. Plan on 45–60 minutes.

Why is my Galaxy Note 10 battery draining fast?

After several years the original 3,500mAh cell has lost a large share of its capacity, so it drains quickly and may shut down early. Heavy S Pen and background features accelerate it. A fresh battery is the fix; a full charge cycle afterward recalibrates the gauge.

What size battery does the Galaxy Note 10 use?

3,500mAh, Samsung part number EB-BN970ABU, fitting SM-N970, SM-N970F, SM-N970U, SM-N970U1 and SM-N970W. Note that the larger Note 10+ (SM-N975) uses a different 4,300mAh cell.

Is a swollen Galaxy Note 10 battery dangerous?

Yes. A swelling lithium-ion cell can push against and crack the curved glass back, and it poses a fire and puncture risk. Stop charging, don't press on it, and replace or recycle the phone promptly.

Can I find a Galaxy Note 10 battery replacement near me?

Most local repair shops can do it same-day for $55–$80. If you'd rather DIY, order a quality 3,500mAh cell online and follow the steps above — it's the same part the shop would install.

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