Just how many spare camera batteries do you need?
There are two kinds of filmmakers:
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The ones who carry one battery and “trust the universe”.
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The ones who carry eight, plus a spreadsheet, plus a small solar farm.
I have been both. Usually on the same day.
Because here’s the truth: the number of spare batteries you need isn’t “a number”. It’s a relationship between (a) how long you’re filming, (b) what you’re filming with, and (c) how likely it is that the universe will choose today to teach you humility.
The simple rule (that actually works)
Bring enough battery for your expected filming time… then add one extra battery “for chaos”.
Chaos is: wind, cold, 4K/8K, image stabilisation, autofocus, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, a mic receiver you forgot was powered, and that moment when someone says:
“Could you just do that again, but… better?”
Start with a quick battery reality check
Ask yourself:
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How long will I be rolling for real? (Not “how long will I be out”.)
A two-hour sailing session can become 30 minutes of actual recording… or two hours if you’re capturing everything “just in case”. -
What are you filming on?
Phones sip power until they don’t. Mirrorless cameras can be efficient… until you add external monitors, IBIS, high frame rates, and continuous AF. 360 cameras have their own special talent for eating batteries while you’re distracted by “how cool this looks”. -
Can you charge during the day?
Car charger? USB-C PD? Power bank? Solar? If yes, you can carry fewer batteries and more charging capability.
A practical “how many spares?” guide
Use this as a starting point (then adjust for your own kit and habits):
A) Short shoot (up to ~1 hour of actual recording)
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Minimum: 1 spare
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Comfortable: 2 spares
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If it’s cold / you’re filming 4K/slow-mo: add 1
B) Half-day shoot (2–4 hours of mixed filming)
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Minimum: 2 spares
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Comfortable: 3–4 spares
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If you’re using an external monitor or lots of AF: lean to 4
C) Full day / event coverage
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Minimum: 4 spares
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Comfortable: 6+ spares or a power solution (USB-C PD / dummy battery / V-mount style setup)
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If you cannot charge at all: assume you’ll need more than you think
D) Boats, sailing, outdoor winter filming
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Minimum: take your normal number and add one more
Cold weather can make a perfectly good battery behave like it’s nearing retirement.
The hidden battery killers (a short list of villains)
If your battery life feels “mysteriously short”, it’s usually one of these:
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High resolution / high bitrate recording
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High frame rate (50/60/120fps)
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Image stabilisation working hard
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Continuous autofocus and face tracking
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Bright screens (especially external monitors)
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Wireless features (Wi-Fi/Bluetooth)
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Long “camera on, not recording” time (the silent assassin)
A smarter approach than hoarding batteries
Sometimes the answer isn’t more batteries. It’s a plan.
1) Power bank + USB-C PD charging
Great for breaks between takes (and for phones/360 cameras). Even better if your camera can run/charge via USB-C while operating.
2) In-car charging
If you’re travelling between locations, that car becomes your mobile power station.
3) One “big battery” option
Depending on your setup: dummy battery to power bank, or a larger external pack for longer stints (especially for video).
4) Label and rotate
Number your batteries. Rotate use. Retire the “problem child” that always dies early.
My “leave-the-house” battery checklist
Before you go:
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Batteries charged ✅
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Spares packed ✅
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Charger packed ✅
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Cable(s) packed ✅
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Power bank / car adapter ✅
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Batteries stored safely (caps/case, no loose batteries rolling around) ✅
Because nothing says “professional video workflow” quite like rummaging in a bag for a battery while your subject drifts away downriver.
So… how many do you need?
If you want a one-line answer:
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Casual filming: 1–2 spares
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Serious filming: 3–4 spares
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All-day / mission-critical / cold / boat day: 4–6 spares or spares + a proper charging/power strategy
And always, always pack one extra battery for chaos.


