A battery that's dead again after a jump or a new replacement means something is draining it or failing to charge it. Replacing batteries repeatedly treats the symptom, not the cause.
Ask for a charging system and parasitic draw test rather than just a battery swap — it identifies whether the battery, alternator, or a hidden drain is the actual problem.
Related services in Florida typically run $90–$900 depending on what the diagnosis finds:
| Electrical diagnostic | $90–$200 |
| Battery replacement | $150–$400 |
| Alternator replacement | $400–$900 |
| Starter replacement | $350–$750 |
| Wiring / harness repair | $150–$800 |
See the full auto electric cost guide →
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Almost certainly a drain or charging problem — a healthy system doesn't kill new batteries.
The shop measures current flowing with the car off, then isolates which circuit is drinking the battery.
Chronically low batteries force the alternator to work at maximum constantly, which can shorten its life — the two failures often travel together.