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How to show battery percentage on Windows 10 and 11

Windows still does not show the battery percentage in the taskbar by default — even in Windows 11. Here are three ways to see it: one zero-install, one one-click, and one that puts it in the taskbar permanently.

Method 1 — hover the battery icon (zero install)

Move your cursor over the battery icon in the taskbar (bottom-right corner). A tooltip appears with the exact percentage and the estimated time remaining.

Annoying because you have to actively hover, but it works on every Windows 10 and Windows 11 install with no setup.

Method 2 — Settings > Power & battery (one click)

Click the battery icon in the taskbar. In Windows 11, this opens Quick Settings — the percentage shows next to the battery slider. In Windows 10, click the battery icon then click "Battery settings".

Or use the keyboard shortcut: Win + X, then U, then B on Windows 11 (Win+X, U, Y on Windows 10) — opens the power settings page directly.

To make this permanently one click away, right-click an empty area of the taskbar, choose Taskbar settings, and pin Settings to the taskbar.

Method 3 — install BatteryBar (always-on, free)

BatteryBar is a free taskbar utility that shows the battery percentage permanently next to the system tray. It also tracks charge cycles and tells you the actual capacity vs. the design capacity (useful for spotting a tired battery).

Download from the official site — search "BatteryBar download" rather than clicking the first ad result, which is often a fake. The free version covers the percentage display; the paid Pro version adds graphs.

Alternatives if you do not want third-party software:

Method 4 — Windows 11 lock screen widget

If you want the percentage visible without unlocking, Windows 11 lets you add a battery widget to the lock screen. Go to Settings → Personalisation → Lock screen → Lock screen status. Pick "Battery" from the dropdown.

This works only on the lock screen, not the desktop — but for many people, glancing at the lock screen before unlocking is faster than waking the cursor and hovering.

Why this is so much harder than it should be

Microsoft has had multiple chances to add a "show percentage in taskbar" toggle to Settings — and has consistently chosen not to. The official line is that the percentage is "noisy" and not aligned with Fluent Design. The actual reason is probably that it would highlight how aggressively Windows estimates remaining battery time (often badly).

Both major Windows alternatives — macOS and most Linux distributions — show the battery percentage by default. Windows is the outlier here.

Frequently asked

How do I show the battery percentage on Windows 10 in the taskbar? +
Windows 10 does not show the percentage in the taskbar by default — only the battery shape. Hover the cursor over the battery icon to see the percentage in a tooltip. To make it always visible, install one of the third-party tools listed below, or read the percentage from the Settings app under System > Power & battery.
Why does Windows 10 not show battery percentage like phones do? +
A long-standing design choice from Microsoft. The taskbar battery icon is meant to be at-a-glance — full, getting low, charging — and the percentage is one click or hover away. Windows 11 partially addresses this by showing the percentage in the quick settings panel and in some lock-screen layouts, but neither version shows it permanently in the taskbar without a third-party tool.
Will showing battery percentage drain the battery faster? +
No. The percentage is information your laptop already calculates continuously to decide when to warn you about low battery. Displaying it costs nothing.
Is there a way without installing software? +
Yes — open Settings > System > Power & battery, and the percentage is at the top of the page. You can pin Settings to the taskbar so this is always one click away. Or use the keyboard shortcut Win+X then U then Y on Windows 10 to jump there in two seconds.

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Tested on: Windows 11 Pro 23H2, Windows 10 Pro 22H2. Published 2026-05-10.