I am sure your battery is going to be fine. You have the absolute advantage of warm temperature(or modestly cool during winter) where even a little remaining battery capacity will still keep you going.
Further to my to claim how adversely cold has an effect on our 12v batteries I have distinctly noticed a drop in SOC as claimed by my CTEK monitor that correlates to longer drives( more than 50km duration trips) with heating on. This may include window defrost, heated steering wheel and seat warmers. Despite the DC to DC charger providing voltage to recharge the 12V battery I suspect its not quite long enough, I have also heard the DC to DC charges stops topping up the battery after 20 minutes of drive time. I have not been able to confirm this. It also does not help that during severe cold, cars that are equipped with a battery heater will have it turn on seemingly randomly while the car is parked to protect the traction battery. Despite the heater being directly powered by the traction battery I suspect the two coolant circulations pumps are 12v powered. I think Hyundai is addressing the increased frequency of 12v recharging well with the BMS update earlier in the year but my sneaking suspicion is that cars with a battery heater that experience very cold winters need a higher capacity 12v battery.