The 2012 Leaf is Nissan's first-generation all-electric with a 24 kWh battery that degrades predictably in hot climates. The drivetrain is simple and reliable, but battery capacity loss is the defining ownership issue, and charging system failures strand cars.
Battery Capacity Loss (HV Battery Degradation)
Common · high severityTypical onset: 60,000-100,000 mi or 6-8 years regardless of mileage
Symptoms: Range drops from original 73 miles to 50-60 miles or less, Capacity bars on dash drop from 12 to 9 or fewer, Faster degradation in hot climates (Arizona, Texas, Southern California), Reduced performance on hills and highway speeds
Fix: Battery replacement is the only real fix. Nissan offered replacement packs at $5,500 in some markets but availability is limited now. Used packs run $2,000-3,500 plus 8-12 hours labor for R&R. Aftermarket refurbished cells emerging but unproven long-term. Many owners just drive with reduced range until unviable.
Estimated cost: $4,000-8,500
Onboard Charger Failure
Occasional · high severityTypical onset: 80,000-120,000 mi
Symptoms: Car won't charge on Level 1 or Level 2 (AC charging), Charging port light blinks orange/red, DC fast charging (CHAdeMO) still works, No error codes sometimes, or P318F code for charger communication
Fix: Onboard charger module lives under hood and fails from heat cycling and component wear. R&R requires removing front fascia and disconnecting HV system safely (1.5-2 hours). Used OEM chargers run $500-1,200, new aftermarket $1,500-2,000. Critical repair since most owners rely on home AC charging.
Estimated cost: $800-2,500
12V Battery Failure (Auxiliary Battery)
Common · medium severityTypical onset: 40,000-70,000 mi or 4-6 years
Symptoms: Car won't start or enter Ready mode even with full HV battery, Dash warning lights flicker, Clicking from under hood when pushing start button, Charging system won't initialize
Fix: The 12V battery is tucked behind front-right wheel well liner and powers all computers/relays. Leaf drains it faster than gas cars because systems stay active. Battery itself is $150-250, but access requires wheel removal and liner pullback (1 hour labor). NOT a standard group-size battery, must be correct Nissan spec or equivalent.
Estimated cost: $250-400
Inverter Coolant Pump Failure
Occasional · high severityTypical onset: 90,000-140,000 mi
Symptoms: Red turtle warning light (power limited mode), Loss of power, max speed 20-30 mph, Codes for inverter/motor overtemperature, Electric motor runs hot after short drives
Fix: Electric coolant pump circulates fluid through inverter and motor. When it fails, system overheats fast and limits power to prevent damage. Pump is $300-600 OEM, 2-3 hours labor to access under car and bleed coolant system properly. Failure often caused by internal bearing seizure. Ignoring it risks inverter damage ($4,000+ repair).
Estimated cost: $600-1,200
Charging Port Issues (J1772 Connector)
Occasional · medium severityTypical onset: null
Symptoms: Charge cable won't lock into port, Intermittent charging that stops mid-session, Melted or burned pins on port or cable, Charger error lights on EVSE unit
Fix: Charging port contacts wear from repeated plug/unplug cycles, especially public chargers that don't seat well. Overheating causes pin/terminal melting. Port assembly replacement requires door panel removal and connector swap (1.5-2 hours). OEM port $400-700, aftermarket $250-400. Preventive care: wiggle test cable before walking away, avoid forcing connection.
Estimated cost: $500-1,000
Brake Actuator/ABS Module Failure
Rare · high severityTypical onset: 100,000-150,000 mi
Symptoms: Brake pedal feels spongy or goes to floor, ABS/VDC warning lights on dash, Reduced regenerative braking, Codes for brake actuator solenoid malfunction
Fix: Leaf uses electric brake booster integrated with ABS module since there's no engine vacuum. Module failure is uncommon but catastrophic for braking feel. Nissan issued TSB for some units. Replacement requires brake fluid flush, HV safety procedures, and module coding (3-4 hours). OEM part $1,200-2,000, usually dealer-only repair due to programming.
Estimated cost: $2,000-3,500
Buy only if you accept 50-60 mile real-world range, can charge at home, and find one under $6,000 with 9+ capacity bars — otherwise the economics don't work against battery replacement costs.
AI-assisted summary drawn from NHTSA recall data, our labor-times database, and platform knowledge. Not a substitute for a pre-purchase inspection on a specific vehicle.