A display that reads the wrong charge is usually caused by one of a few practical issues: battery gauge calibration, the load being active while charging, a loose connection, or the battery management system estimating state of charge from voltage instead of a true fuel gauge. The good news is that it is often not a sign that the battery is bad. A lot of solar generators can look “wrong” when they are under load, just finished charging, or have been sitting unused for a while.
Start by checking the basics. Make sure the unit is fully charged with a known good charger, then let it rest unplugged with no devices connected for a while. Some displays update more accurately after the battery voltage stabilizes. If the reading changes a lot right after charging stops, that can be normal. Batteries often show a higher number immediately after charge, then settle down once surface charge disappears.
Next, look at what is connected. If you are running a fridge, fan, inverter, or anything with a startup surge, the displayed percentage can dip quickly and then recover when the load drops. That does not always mean the battery suddenly lost charge. Try checking the screen with everything turned off. If the reading becomes more stable, the issue may be the load affecting the estimate rather than a bad display.
If your model has a reset or battery calibration process, use it exactly as the manufacturer recommends. In many cases this means charging to 100 percent, then discharging to a low cutoff once or twice so the system can relearn the battery range. Do not do repeated deep discharges unless the manual says it is safe, especially with lithium batteries. One calibration cycle is usually enough if the gauge has drifted.
Also inspect the input and output cables. A loose solar connector, dirty port, or undersized cable can cause the unit to think it is charging when the actual current is weak. If the display jumps when you move the cable or tilt the connector, that is a clue. Try a different cable or charger if you have one.
If the percentage is way off even after a full charge and calibration, compare the screen to the actual battery voltage and runtime. For example, if the display says 70 percent but the unit dies after only a short use, the battery pack or the battery monitoring circuit may need service. On the other hand, if the runtime matches what the manual suggests, the display may just be imprecise.
The most useful habit is to judge the generator by a combination of charge time, runtime, and load behavior instead of the percentage alone. If you share your exact model, battery type, and what chargers or panels you are using, people with experience can usually narrow it down fast.