LibShortcut

Battery Management S t L h

by StLh v5.0
iOS 16+
Requires
Utilities
Category
Jun 2026
Updated

Most battery apps want you to install something, sign in, or watch an ad before they’ll tell you anything useful. Battery Management takes the other road: it’s a single iOS shortcut that reads your battery condition and lets you act on it, all from inside the Shortcuts app you already have.

Inside the shortcut

The shortcut is built to check and manage your battery state on demand. You run it, and it pulls the current battery condition so you can decide what to do next instead of digging through Settings. Everything happens locally on your iPhone through the standard Shortcuts actions, so there’s no account and no separate app to keep updated. The author, who goes by StLh, ships it as a self-contained routine you can tweak once it’s installed.

How to install

  1. Tap Add Shortcut on this page to open it in the Shortcuts app.
  2. Scroll the preview to the bottom and confirm with Add Shortcut.
  3. The routine lands in My Shortcuts, ready to run.

If a permission prompt appears the first time, allow it so the shortcut can read battery info.

How to use it

Tap the shortcut tile in the Shortcuts app, or drop it on your Home Screen as a widget for one-tap access. It reads your battery condition and runs whatever logic the author wired in, then hands the result back to you. Because it’s an ordinary shortcut, you can also add it to a Personal Automation later, so it fires on a schedule or when you plug in, rather than only when you remember to open it. Pop it open in the editor any time you want to see exactly which actions it calls.

FAQ

Do I need to install anything besides Shortcuts?

Shortcuts is the only dependency, and it ships with iOS, so there’s nothing extra to download. As long as you’ve allowed the routine to run the first time, you’re set.

Why does it ask for permission the first time I run it?

Anything that touches battery or system info has to clear an iOS permission prompt on its first run. Tap Allow once and it won’t keep asking on every launch.

Can I change what it does?

Open it in the Shortcuts editor and you can rearrange or rewire the actions like any other shortcut. The author left it editable, so adapting it to your own routine is fair game.

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