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Car Battery CCA Calculator

Find the minimum Cold Cranking Amps your battery needs based on engine size, fuel type, and climate.

Vehicle Details
20°F
CCA Requirements
Minimum CCA
Recommended CCA
Cold Multiplier
Battery Group Size Reference
GroupCCA RangeCommon Fitments
51R410–500 CCAHonda CR-V, Fit, Accord (some)
35550–640 CCAHonda Civic/Accord, Toyota Camry/Corolla, Subaru
75550–625 CCAGM compact cars
24/24F550–750 CCAHonda, Acura, Lexus, Toyota trucks
34600–800 CCADodge Ram, Chrysler 300, Jeep
H6 (48)650–800 CCAChevy, GMC, Chrysler
65650–850 CCAFord F-150, Mustang, Mercury
94R (H7)730–900 CCABMW, Audi, VW, Mercedes

Highlighted rows indicate groups whose CCA range covers your recommended value. Always verify fitment in your owner's manual.

What is CCA?

Cold Cranking Amps (CCA) is the number of amps a 12-volt battery can deliver at 0°F (-18°C) for 30 seconds while maintaining at least 7.2 volts. It measures how well a battery performs in cold conditions — exactly when an engine needs maximum current to turn over. A higher CCA rating means more starting power in cold weather.

Why Diesel Engines Need More CCA

Diesel engines have much higher compression ratios (16:1 to 23:1 versus 8:1 to 12:1 for gasoline engines). This means the starter motor must work significantly harder to turn the engine over. Additionally, diesel engines rely entirely on compression heat for ignition — there are no spark plugs — so the engine must be cranked long enough for the cylinders to reach ignition temperature. Both factors demand roughly twice the CCA of a comparable gasoline engine.

How to Read a Battery Label

Battery labels show several ratings: CCA (cold cranking amps at 0°F), CA or MCA (cranking amps at 32°F — always higher than CCA, which can be misleading), RC (reserve capacity in minutes), and Ah (amp-hours). Always compare CCA to CCA when shopping. The group number (like "Group 35") refers to the physical size and terminal placement — it must match your vehicle's battery tray and hold-down.

Reserve Capacity (RC) Explained

Reserve Capacity is the number of minutes a fully charged battery at 80°F can deliver 25 amps before dropping below 10.5 volts. A higher RC means you can run accessories (radio, lights, phone charger) longer if the alternator fails, or recover better from an accidental overnight parasitic drain. For overlanding or off-grid driving, prioritize RC alongside CCA.