That’s right, it’s not easy to find reliable figures for battery degradation, and there’s no straightforward way to measure it properly. The issue is that my Trek Powerly FS is now about three and a half years old. I’ve used it extensively during some periods, like now, but left it unused for others...
Good, I've confirmed what I need. The 2022 Trek Powerfly FS 7 runs a Bosch Performance Line CX with a 625Wh Powertube. Now I have enough to give
@pagheca a properly grounded answer.
Right, so to summarise where you actually stand: your 2022 Powerfly FS 7 runs a Bosch Performance Line CX with a 625Wh battery, which is confirmed. That's the baseline.
On the degradation question, here's the honest picture. Bosch battery lifespan typically ranges from 3 to 8 years, or between 500 and 1,500 charge cycles. The 800-cycle figure you've read is plausible but sits in the middle of that range. Critically, many people assume a part-charge counts as a full cycle in Bosch's terms. It doesn't. If you top up a small amount, only that fraction is recorded and won't count as a full cycle until enough partial charges accumulate to equal one.
Given your habit of topping up 20-30%, your actual cycle count is almost certainly far lower than you'd estimate from the number of charging sessions.
Your cold garage is working in your favour. The key factors that accelerate degradation are excessively high temperatures in use or storage, frequent fast charging, and extended storage at very low or very high charge levels.
You're avoiding all three. The contrast case is instructive: a 2015 Haibike with only around 50 charge cycles lost close to half its range because it was frequently stored fully charged for weeks on end.