C180 (W06) 12V battery issue
However they had to deactivate all the Digital Extras and reactivate them to clear the error message in the app. Weird.
Last edited by giovane; Jun 11, 2025 at 09:02 PM.
I have been browsing the forum as a guest for quite some time and found many posts useful. I joined today to ask the community about a problem I have encountered with my C180 (W206), which has not been solved up to now.
I purchased the C180 in February 2024 (new from the local dealership), the car was built in the summer of 2023. Initially, I considered ordering a car with the additional equipment I would like to have, but due to long delivery time and a substantial discount on this already imported car, I decided to go for it.
I didn't encounter any problems up to the end of December 2024. As I use the car only for long distances, and not for driving around through the city because the size is not convenient, normally I travel about 300 km per week, these in a day or two. Then the car remains parked in a closed garage for about 6 to 7 days. At the end of December 2024, I received a message in the Mercedes app that the 12 V battery was low. This was the first time, the months before that the menu shown the battery fully charged even when I was abroad and the car was left for more than two weeks without driving it.
This behavior continued and now after five to six days the battery is at a critical level. I had the car checked at the dealership and they consider this a normal behavior. Their advice was to drive the car more frequently or to use a trickle charger.
I did use a high-end charger/trickle charger suitable for 12 V AGM batteries and it took a much longer time than expected based on charger specs to fully charge the battery (it was in moderately charge state when charging started).
Then, other problems started appearing, even though the battery appeared to be fully charged. The parking sensors lost part of their sensitivity and they operate much later than before. I noticed that because I have to maneuver the car through narrow space to park in my garage. Also, I drove the car for ~300 km and the lane keeping sensors and blind spot assist were not active at all. Then, suddenly, started working again. The car was restarted in between without any change. I contacted the dealership and they consider this to be due to not driving the car frequently (the battery was fully charged when this happened).
Now, after a day it becomes moderately charged, then with the car parked fully charged (!) without any charging, and then discharges again. I measured the voltage using a multimeter for some days and the reading were the following:
12.37 V (fully charged message, a few hours after driving the car for ~300 km)
11.97 V (moderately charged message)
12.30 V (fully charged message, with the car parked)
12.06 V (moderately charged message)
12.34 V (fully charged message)
11.71 V (moderately charged message)
Then drops further to low and critically charged state.
Next week the first service will take place and they will check the car again.
Did anyone have similar issues?
In my opinion, this is not an acceptable behavior for a new car. Any thoughts and advice would be appreciated.
A few things stand out from your description:
- Rapid voltage drop – Anything under ~12.2 V after sitting for a day suggests the battery isn’t holding charge well or there’s a parasitic drain.
- Inconsistent “fully charged” readings – The car’s battery management system may be giving false status updates, possibly due to software glitches.
- Electronics acting up – Safety systems like parking sensors and lane assist can disable themselves if the system voltage drops below a certain threshold, even briefly.
- Do a proper parasitic draw test – This will show if there’s an excessive drain when the car is off.
- Load test the battery – Even new batteries can be faulty or damaged.
- Check for software updates – Mercedes sometimes releases firmware fixes for battery management quirks.
- Inspect ground connections and charging voltage – Poor grounds or alternator regulation issues can cause partial charging.
A few things stand out from your description:
- Rapid voltage drop – Anything under ~12.2 V after sitting for a day suggests the battery isn’t holding charge well or there’s a parasitic drain.
- Inconsistent “fully charged” readings – The car’s battery management system may be giving false status updates, possibly due to software glitches.
- Electronics acting up – Safety systems like parking sensors and lane assist can disable themselves if the system voltage drops below a certain threshold, even briefly.
- Do a proper parasitic draw test – This will show if there’s an excessive drain when the car is off.
- Load test the battery – Even new batteries can be faulty or damaged.
- Check for software updates – Mercedes sometimes releases firmware fixes for battery management quirks.
- Inspect ground connections and charging voltage – Poor grounds or alternator regulation issues can cause partial charging.
They declined to perform a parasitic draw test because the car is still under warranty and they follow the standard procedure.
I would like to thank all members that responded to the topic. The suggestions were very helpful.






