Asus India launches dedicated battery replacement network to combat third-party part fatigue

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The battle against the ‘generic’ replacement
For years, laptop users in India have faced a frustrating dichotomy when their battery health dips: wait weeks for an official service center to source a part, or gamble on a third-party replacement from a local electronics market. While the latter is faster, the risks—ranging from erratic power delivery to the dreaded ‘bloating’ that can warp a chassis—are well-documented among the enthusiast community.
Asus is attempting to bridge this gap. The company has announced a strategic expansion of genuine battery availability, moving stock directly into its network of Asus Exclusive Stores. This isn’t just a logistics shift; it’s a targeted attempt to reclaim the after-sales experience for its most popular lines, including the VivoBook, ROG, TUF, and the creative-focused ProArt series.
The rollout currently spans 13 states, focusing on high-density urban hubs where the demand for high-performance gaming rigs—and the subsequent battery degradation that comes with them—is most acute. By decentralizing the inventory from massive regional service hubs to retail-facing exclusive stores, Asus is effectively shortening the replacement window from weeks to hours.
Solving the compatibility puzzle
One of the primary hurdles in laptop maintenance is the sheer variety of internal components. A VivoBook 15 from 2022 uses a fundamentally different power cell than a 2024 ROG Zephyrus. To prevent customers from visiting stores only to find the wrong part in stock, Asus has launched a Battery Finder microsite.
The tool requires users to input their specific model number—a move that forces users to engage with the actual hardware ID rather than generic marketing names. Once identified, the site maps out the nearest Exclusive Stores that currently have that specific SKU in inventory. It is a pragmatic solution to a problem that has long plagued the fragmented laptop repair market in India.
Beyond the hardware swap
The push for genuine parts is accompanied by a broader editorial effort from Asus to educate users on battery longevity. High-performance laptops, particularly the TUF and ROG series, are prone to thermal throttling and heat-induced battery degradation. The company is now pairing these hardware sales with guidelines on thermal management and charging habits—such as utilizing battery health software to cap charging at 80% to extend the chemical life of the cells.
Every official replacement through this network comes with professional installation and a one-year warranty. This is a critical value proposition; third-party batteries often carry vague ‘seller warranties’ that disappear the moment a fault is found. A manufacturer-backed guarantee provides the peace of mind necessary to justify the price premium over grey-market alternatives.
The broader market implication
This move signals a shift in how global OEMs are viewing the ‘Right to Repair’ conversation in emerging markets. While the industry has been slow to provide modularity, increasing the accessibility of core consumables like batteries is a step toward sustainability and device longevity.
By making genuine parts more accessible, Asus is not only protecting the integrity of its hardware but also challenging the dominance of unorganized repair shops. If a user can find a genuine battery and a certified technician in their own neighborhood via a web tool, the incentive to risk a cheap, unbranded cell vanishes.