Google Pixel battery drain bug hits Pixel 10, Pixel 9 and older phones as April patch misses fix

Google Pixel battery drain bug hits Pixel 10, Pixel 9 and older phones as April patch misses fix

April 15, 2026

MOUNTAIN VIEW, California, April 15, 2026, 13:04 PDT

Alphabet’s Google is getting hit with another round of Pixel battery complaints. Users say March’s software update tanked battery life, and the April patch hasn’t helped. Over the last two days, reports have surfaced describing Pixel 7 through Pixel 10 handsets draining fast—sometimes just sitting idle.

The update’s timing is notable. Google announced that every supported Pixel is getting April’s patch and told users to install it. According to the Android security bulletin, the release addresses a high-severity Framework bug, CVE-2026-0049, which can cause the device to freeze on its own — no user input needed. The official April changelog for Pixel skips any mention of battery life.

Battery life is anything but trivial in a cooling handset market. XJ Wang, an analyst and director with Recon Analytics, noted Wednesday that “performance and battery life combined accounted for 27 to 30 percent of feature selections” in a U.S. device-purchase study—underscoring just how quickly a glitch in an update can erode a phone’s desirability. Light Reading

Most of the recent complaints are coming from Pixel 9 and Pixel 10 users, though Pixel 7 and Pixel 8 owners say they’re seeing similar issues too. Shorter battery life, heavier drain while the phone is idle—some users who could previously get through the day now have to plug in much sooner.

Some focus has shifted to Deep Doze, Android’s more aggressive low-power mode, with speculation mounting that it’s failing to activate since the March update. A user raised this on Google’s Issue Tracker, suggesting the modem and GNSS—the hardware responsible for GPS and similar location tracking—might be locked in a polling loop that repeatedly wakes the chip. The related tracker got an “assigned” label on April 14. Android Authority

Google’s April Pixel update addresses a handful of issues: the Backup menu not showing up, banking and some third-party apps crashing, games freezing on certain Pixel 10s, Quick Share transfers failing for some Pixel 9 owners, and the home-screen search bar vanishing. Notably absent? Any mention of battery drain.

Google’s challenge comes as the phone landscape shifts. Apple posted 5% growth in global smartphone shipments in the first quarter, holding a 21% market share; Samsung sat close behind at 20%. Shilpi Jain at Counterpoint pointed to memory suppliers steering capacity to AI data centers instead of gadgets, driving the industry downturn. Still, Counterpoint numbers (via 9to5Google) showed Pixel shipments climbing 14% from a year earlier.

Battery gripes are just the latest headache for the March Pixel Drop, which has already come under fire over boot-loop issues affecting certain devices, according to recent reports.

Google rolled out a Play services update separately from its regular monthly phone patch. The v26.14 release notes, published April 13, highlight “more accurate location results.” There’s no reference to battery fixes or power management tweaks. Google Help

Google maintains that a slight uptick in Pixel battery drain is expected for a few days after a software update, chalking it up to background app optimization. The company does recommend contacting support if the heavier drain doesn’t resolve after several days. Still, as of Wednesday, issue trackers reported no solution had been rolled out.

Marcin Frąckiewicz

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the CEO of TS2 Space and a longtime technology entrepreneur focused on telecommunications, satellite communications and digital innovation. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he writes about space technology, artificial intelligence and publicly traded technology companies. His analysis covers major market trends, emerging technologies and the businesses shaping the future of the global economy.

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