> **Quick Answer:** When your alternator dies while driving, the battery takes over powering everything. You have roughly 15 to 30 minutes before the car dies completely, depending on battery charge and electrical load. Turn off everything you don't need, get to a safe exit or shoulder, and call a tow. Do not try to make it home.
## What's Actually Happening to Your Car
The alternator charges your battery and powers your car's electrical systems while the engine runs. When it fails, the battery becomes the only power source. It is not designed for that job long-term. It drains fast.
Your dashboard battery light (sometimes shaped like a battery, sometimes just labeled ALT or GEN) is the first sign. You may also notice dimming headlights, a slower power window, or the radio cutting out. On some cars the power steering and HVAC will start failing as voltage drops.
The engine keeps running until the battery voltage drops too low to fire the ignition system and fuel injectors. At that point, it stalls. No warning, no sputtering. It just stops.
## What To Do Right Now
1. **Don't panic, but act fast.** You have a window. Use it.
2. **Turn off every non-essential electrical load immediately.** Air conditioning, heated seats, rear defroster, radio, phone chargers. Every amp you save extends your window.
3. **Keep the headlights on if it is dark or low visibility.** Losing them while moving is more dangerous than the battery drain.
4. **Signal and move toward the nearest exit or safe pull-off.** Don't try to push for home or a familiar shop. Get off the road. A highway shoulder is a last resort. If you can reach an exit ramp, a parking lot, or a side street, that is safer. Read up on [what to do when your car dies on a highway shoulder](/car-died-on-highway-shoulder-safe-to-wait-for-tow/) before you step out.
5. **Once stopped safely, turn off the engine.** There is a myth that leaving it running helps. It doesn't. Without a working alternator, idling just drains the battery faster with no benefit.
6. **Call a tow truck.** The car is not drive-able. Jumping the battery will get you maybe five minutes before it dies again. A mechanic needs to replace the alternator before you move it under its own power.
7. **Turn on your hazard lights once stopped.** If the battery is very low, even hazards may flicker. That's your signal the window is almost gone.

*Photo: Pexels*
## Can You Jump-Start It and Drive to a Shop?
Technically yes, briefly. Practically, no. A jump-start puts charge back into a dead battery, but without an alternator charging it, that charge burns off in minutes. Stalling in traffic or on a freeway is a real outcome. It is not worth the risk to you or other drivers. If a shop is literally two blocks away, it might be worth the gamble. Otherwise, tow it.
If you are already stranded and wondering whether your breakdown situation is similar to an engine failure scenario, the same logic applies: [engine seized while driving](/engine-seized-while-driving-towing-cost/) is another case where driving the car anywhere is off the table.
## What It Might Cost
**Alternator replacement:** $350 to $900 at most shops, parts and labor combined. Luxury vehicles and European models run higher, sometimes $1,200 or more. Labor is typically one to two hours.
**Towing:** A standard local tow runs $75 to $175 for most in-city distances. Highway breakdowns can cost more depending on where you're stranded. If you're unsure what to expect from your insurance policy for the tow, check whether your [roadside assistance covers the towing distance](/geico-roadside-assistance-towing-limits-how-many-miles/) before you call out of pocket.

*Photo: Pexels*
## Stay Safe
- Pull as far off the road as possible before the car fully loses power. Losing power steering on a highway at speed is dangerous.
- Exit the vehicle on the passenger side if you are on the shoulder of a highway. Stay behind the guardrail if there is one.
- Keep your hazard lights on and set up any reflective triangles if you have them.
- Do not stand behind the car or between the car and traffic.
- If it is night, stay visible but away from the travel lanes. A bright phone flashlight pointed at oncoming traffic can help drivers see you sooner.
- [Car broke down on a freeway](/car-broke-down-on-freeway-what-to-do/) covers the full safety protocol if you need it step by step.
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*Need roadside help? Visit [Tow With The Flow](https://towwiththeflow.com/alternator-failed-while-driving-what-happens-next/) for real answers when your car breaks down.*
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