A dead 12V battery kills a Mercedes EQS completely, Hyperscreen dark, doors unresponsive, no “Ready” mode, sometimes just the message “vehicle being prepared, please wait” frozen on the display. The main high-voltage pack can show 80% charge and the car still won’t move. Jump the dedicated underhood terminals (positive under the red cap near the fuse block, negative to chassis ground), let the 12V recover for two minutes, and the car reboots normally. If you’re stranded in San Diego, call Charge Pro SD at (858) 400-4465.
The EQS, and its platform siblings the EQE, EQB, and EQA, all share this vulnerability. This guide covers where the battery and jump points live, the known drain patterns, what San Diego-specific conditions make it worse, and exactly what to do when it happens.
Why the EQS 12V battery fails
The EQS runs an AGM lead-acid 12V battery (typically in the 90 to 95 Ah range depending on model year and spec level) that feeds the car’s entire low-voltage network: door handles that power-extend, the triple-screen Hyperscreen, the air suspension compressor, the digital mirrors, all the comfort pre-conditioning, and critically, the control units that bridge the main high-voltage battery to the drivetrain.
The problem is parasitic draw. The EQS has an unusually large number of always-on modules, radar sensors, the connectivity gateway, the MBUX ambient system, and OTA update modules that can poll the network overnight. Mercedes acknowledged an elevated self-discharge rate in early EQS build years (2022 to 2023 MY), and dealers have issued software updates to reduce background module activity. But even on patched cars, leaving the vehicle parked for two or more weeks without driving can drain the 12V enough to prevent startup.
Coastal San Diego’s mild climate is actually less forgiving here than it looks. The EQS is designed for climate-controlled environments, and hot coastal parking in Del Mar or La Jolla in June, with the cabin pre-conditioning cycling on standby, increases the draw on the 12V. A battery that’s three or more years old and has never been load-tested is a real risk every summer.
The failure signature is usually one of three things:
- Complete silence, no lights, no door lock response, key fob doesn’t open the car
- The infamous “vehicle being prepared, please wait” loop, the car boots partially then stalls
- Hyperscreen powers on, shows a 12V fault warning, then goes dark before the car enters Ready mode
All three mean the same thing: the 12V battery can’t deliver enough voltage to complete the system handshake.
Where the 12V battery and jump terminals are
This is where the EQS differs from most other EVs. The actual 12V battery is located in the trunk, under the floor panel on the driver’s side. It’s not accessible from the engine bay. Replacing the battery requires removing the trunk liner and floor board, this is a workshop job, not a parking-lot job.
For a jump start, however, you don’t go to the battery. Mercedes provides dedicated jump-start terminals under the hood specifically for this situation. Here’s what to look for:
- Pull the hood release (it’s inside the car near the driver’s door sill, if the 12V is dead and the doors won’t open electronically, use the mechanical key inside the key fob to open the driver’s door manually).
- Open the hood. On the driver’s side front, you’ll see a black plastic fuse and relay box.
- Lift the cover of that fuse box. There’s a clearly marked red positive (+) terminal stud with a protective red cap, this is the jump positive.
- For the negative (-) connection, find an unpainted metal bolt or bracket on the chassis or engine bay structure. There are several suitable grounding points near the strut towers. Don’t connect to the trunk battery’s negative terminal, use chassis ground.
Connect cables in the standard order: positive to the EQS jump stud, positive to the donor source, negative to the donor, negative to EQS chassis ground. Wait two full minutes. Then attempt startup. The Hyperscreen should come alive, run through its boot sequence, and the car should enter Ready mode normally.
| Battery detail | Mercedes EQS |
|---|---|
| 12V battery location | Trunk, driver’s side under floor panel |
| Jump terminal location | Engine bay, fuse box cover (driver’s side) |
| Battery spec (typical) | 12V AGM, 90 to 95 Ah |
| Known failure pattern | Parasitic draw from MBUX/OTA modules; accelerated in warm/coastal climates |
| ”Vehicle being prepared” message | Indicates 12V fault, not main pack issue |
| Replacement | Workshop required (trunk disassembly) |
San Diego scenarios: where this happens most
EQS density in San Diego County is concentrated in a handful of zip codes. La Jolla, Del Mar, Rancho Santa Fe, Carmel Valley, and Coronado see the highest concentration of EQS, EQE, and AMG EQ models. That’s also where the car tends to sit for extended stretches, second home, airport trips, vacation parking.
A common Charge Pro SD call pattern: an EQS parked at SAN or McClellan-Palomar for five-plus days, owner returns to a completely dark car. Another: a Del Mar home where the car lives in a detached garage with no Level 2 charger, so the OBC isn’t maintaining the 12V, and a two-week stretch without driving kills it.
The I-5 corridor and SR-56 interchange near Carmel Valley is another spot, someone driving from Rancho Santa Fe toward downtown finds the car won’t restart after a quick coffee stop. No tow needed. A jump, two minutes of 12V recovery, and the car is moving again.
Charge Pro SD responds across all of San Diego County. For La Jolla specifically, see our EV roadside assistance in La Jolla coverage area page. For Rancho Santa Fe and the North County corridor, see EV roadside assistance in Rancho Santa Fe.
Our non-Tesla EV rescue service covers the full EQ lineup, EQS, EQE, EQB, EQA, and AMG EQ variants.
What to do when you’re stranded
Here’s the short version if you’re reading this from a parking lot:
- Check whether doors respond. If not, use the mechanical key (inside the key fob) to open the driver’s door manually.
- Look for any sign of 12V power, dome light, hazards, anything. If there’s nothing, you need a jump.
- Pop the hood (interior release cable is still mechanical even with no 12V).
- Locate the red-capped positive stud on the fuse box, driver’s side engine bay.
- Use a jump pack or a donor vehicle. Wait two full minutes after connecting before trying to start.
- If the car shows a 12V fault code after jumping and won’t clear it, the battery needs replacement, a workshop job.
If you don’t have a jump pack and you’re in San Diego County, call us. Dispatch is typically 25 to 60 minutes depending on your location. We carry the equipment to jump the EQS’s dedicated terminals safely.
For the jump process on any EV, our guide on how to jump start an EV safely walks through the sequence in detail. And if you want to understand why the 12V system matters so much to an EV that has a 107.8 kWh main pack, read what happens when an EV 12V battery dies.
Once you’re moving, the 12V battery should recharge from the main pack’s DC-DC converter while driving. But if the battery is old or failed internally, it won’t hold the charge, and you’ll be back to square one within days. Read our EV 12V battery replacement guide to understand replacement cost and options.
Frequently asked questions
How do you jump start a Mercedes EQS?
Jump the EQS at the dedicated positive terminal stud under the hood, it’s inside the fuse box cover on the driver’s side. Connect the positive jumper cable there, connect the negative to a chassis ground point (not the trunk battery’s negative terminal). Wait two minutes, then start the car. The actual 12V battery is in the trunk and is not accessible for a parking-lot jump.
What does “vehicle being prepared, please wait” mean on a Mercedes EQS?
It means the car’s control units can’t complete their startup handshake, almost always because the 12V battery voltage is too low. The message appears when the car has just enough 12V power to start booting but not enough to finish the sequence. Jumping the underhood terminals usually clears it immediately.
Does Charge Pro SD respond to Mercedes EQS calls in San Diego?
Yes. We cover all of San Diego County for non-Tesla EV rescue, including the full Mercedes EQ lineup (EQS, EQE, EQB, EQA, AMG EQ). Typical dispatch is 25 to 60 minutes. Call (858) 400-4465 and give us your location.
Why does the Hyperscreen go dark when the 12V battery dies?
The Hyperscreen runs off the 12V system, not the main high-voltage pack. When 12V voltage drops below the threshold the control units need, the entire low-voltage network shuts down, including the Hyperscreen, the powered door handles, the exterior lighting, and the startup sequence. The main battery is untouched, but the car won’t function without the 12V system operating normally.
How long does a Mercedes EQS 12V battery last?
Most EQS owners report 3 to 5 years before the 12V AGM battery needs replacement, though high-parasitic-draw vehicles like the EQS can see shorter life spans, especially if the car sits for extended periods without driving. In San Diego’s warm coastal climate, the 12V battery faces extra stress from standby electronics running in ambient heat. Get it load-tested at your service interval, especially after year three.
Can I replace the EQS 12V battery myself?
It’s not a roadside job. The battery is in the trunk under the floor panel and requires removing the trunk liner and load floor. Mercedes dealers and independent EV specialists do this replacement, and in most cases the new battery needs to be registered to the car’s battery management system with a compatible diagnostic tool. Get the jump done first to get the car mobile, then book a replacement appointment.
Stranded with a dead Mercedes EQS somewhere in San Diego County? Call Charge Pro SD at (858) 400-4465. We dispatch to La Jolla, Del Mar, Rancho Santa Fe, Carmel Valley, Coronado, and every other part of the county, no tow needed for a 12V failure.