Industry sources consistently show that sodium‑ion batteries cost far less to produce than lithium‑ion. The exact numbers vary by chemistry and manufacturer, but the ranges are surprisingly consistent.
💰 Lithium‑Ion Battery Cost (per kWh)Typical 2025–2026 market prices:
$100–$150 per kWh for LFP (lithium iron phosphate)
$130–$200 per kWh for NMC (nickel‑manganese‑cobalt)
These values align with industry comparisons in the sources you triggered, which emphasize lithium’s higher material cost due to lithium, cobalt, and nickel.
💰 Sodium‑Ion Battery Cost (per kWh)Industry analyses show sodium‑ion is significantly cheaper because:
Sodium is abundant and inexpensive
No cobalt or nickel
Lower‑cost cathode materials
Simpler, cheaper manufacturing lines
Typical cost estimates:
$40–$80 per kWh (current early mass‑production range)
Some Chinese manufacturers claim $30–$50 per kWh is achievable at scale by 2026–2027.
These claims are supported by cost‑focused comparisons in the sources you triggered, which highlight sodium’s lower raw‑material and manufacturing costs.

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Best Regards,
-- Sergei
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On Jan 18, 2026, at 15:46, Alan Timm <gest...@gmail.com> wrote:
Normally I don't get excited about the promises of future battery tech, but it looks like 2026 may be the year of interesting and exciting things.
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This is a LiFePO4 that I noted a while ago for robotics. But those kinds of batteries are heavy.: https://manlybattery.com/product-item/48v-50ah-battery-for-robot/
But probably the next big thing in batteries for EVs, robots, eVTOLs will be a "solid state" lithium battery that is said to be ultra-safe and high density.
Based on the statement below, I guess the robots will keep coming even if you shoot the batteries full of holes. So that is something. ;-)
The Chery Solid-State Battery Research Institute developed the module, adopting an in-situ polymerized solid-electrolyte system paired with a lithium-rich manganese cathode material.
According to Chery, the cell maintained power delivery even after abuse tests, such as nail penetration and power-drill damage, without catching fire. In theory, vehicles equipped with this technology could exceed 1,500 km on a single charge, with real-world driving ranges expected to reach 1,300 km.
The company has stated its plans for a pilot operation in 2026 and a broader rollout in 2027.
sdw
The lithium battery chemistry probably has more upward mobility for performance and lower prices. While the sodium battery might reach the level of density & performance with descent price and safety specs.
Lithium-ion batteries currently lead in energy density (Wh/kg & Wh/L) for compact devices, butsodium-ion batteries are catching up, especially in cost, safety, and wide temperature performance, making them ideal for large-scale storage and cost-sensitive applications; sodium's inherent properties limit its peak density compared to lithium, but tech advances aim to narrow the gap, with sodium-ion batteries partially overlapping with lower-end Li-ion (LFP) types now. Sodium-ion batteries won't likely surpass lithium's peak density but offer compelling advantages for stationary storage and smaller EVs where weight/volume isn't critical.Energy Density: Lithium Leads, Sodium Closing In
- Lithium-ion: Higher energy density (150-250+ Wh/kg), better for lightweight, long-range EVs and portable electronics.
- Sodium-ion: Lower current density (~100-160 Wh/kg) but advancing rapidly, with some nearing LFP (Lithium Iron Phosphate) levels, notes this source.
- Volumetric Density: Lithium-ion significantly higher (250-700 Wh/L vs. ~100-200 Wh/L for sodium), meaning less space for same energy.
Can Sodium Catch Up?
- In performance (Wh/kg): Unlikely to fully surpass top-tier lithium, due to sodium's larger ion size, but becoming very competitive in the mid-range.
- In application: Yes, it's a strong contender for stationary storage (grid, home) and low-speed EVs where cost and safety outweigh density needs.
Sodium's Advantages (Beyond Density)
- Cost & Abundance: Sodium is vastly more abundant and cheaper than lithium.
- Safety: Inherently safer, less prone to thermal runaway, and functions better in extreme cold (-40°C).
Key TakeawayLithium-ion remains superior for high-performance needs, but sodium-ion offers a cheaper, safer, more sustainable alternative, carving out significant market share in large-scale energy storage where its lower density isn't a major drawback.
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|
Stephen D.
Williams
Founder: VolksDroid, Blue Scholar Foundation |
Google AI summary:
sdw
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I can't remember now if I found out. I just put in an inquiry for a price list.
Probably expensive. Because I needed an extreme UPS for my big computer, I bought some EcoFlow batteries when they were on sale. Expensive, but LiFePO4: High power, 4000 charge cycles expected. This is their clip on battery for some of their battery-driven appliances (the heat pump):
https://us.ecoflow.com/products/ecoflow-wave-3-add-on-battery 1024Wh 4000cycles XT60 port. $649
Or the old version:
Those aren't meant to be used directly. They have many other batteries that are:
Here is 288Wh in 5.69lb for $267:
https://us.ecoflow.com/products/trail-series?variant=54553980043337&view=trail
I see they also have a 288Wh at 4.98lbs with NCM chemistry
(really Lithium Nickel Manganese Cobalt Oxide (LiNiMnCoO
I have a heavy 2048Wh + 2048Wh addon as a super UPS. You can add something like 3-4 addon batteries. Not portable for a robot unless it is a rolling vehicle. But an impressive battery. Their whole house batteries are much bigger.
sdw
Dare I ask what this battery costs?
On Jan 19, 2026, at 11:19 PM, 'Stephen Williams' via HomeBrew Robotics Club <hbrob...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
This is a LiFePO4 that I noted a while ago for robotics. But those kinds of batteries are heavy.: https://manlybattery.com/product-item/48v-50ah-battery-for-robot/
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