The increasing demand for portable electronics, stationary storage, and electric vehicles is driving innovation in high-energy density batteries. Solid electrolytes that are strong enough to impede lithium dendrite growth may enable energy dense lithium metal anodes. Currently, the power densities of all-solid state batteries is limited because of ineffective ion transport and chemical and physical decomposition at solid|solid interfaces. Solid electrolytes consist of both intrinsic interfaces formed by grains, vacancies, and material junctions and extrinsic interfaces formed at solid|solid interfaces. The former involves transport between two ion conducting phases, and the latter involves ionic transport between an ion conducting phase and a mixed ion and electron conducting phase. The nature of ionic transport at intrinsic and extrinsic interfaces is important for mitigating chemical and structural instabilities. Extrinsic interface instabilities are responsible for high interfacial resistances. Examples of extrinsic interface instabilities include: (1) chemical decomposition and the formation of a solid electrolyte interphase at the electrode|electrolyte interface, (2) regions of excess and deficient lithium content, and (3) poor or delaminating-type contact at the interface which can contribute to non-uniform current distributions and localized degradation. In order to displace liquid electrolytes, new materials and engineering strategies need to be developed to negate these degradation pathways. New insight into the governing physics that occurs at these interfaces are critical for developing engineering strategies for the next generation of energy dense batteries [1,2]. However, buried solid|solid interfaces are notoriously difficult to observe with traditional bench-top and lab-scale experiments. In this talk I discuss opportunities for tracking phenomena and mechanisms in all solid state batteries in-situ using advanced synchrotron techniques. Synchrotron techniques that combine reciprocal and real space techniques are best equipped to track relevant phenomena with adequate spatial and temporal resolutions. [1] Shen, Fengyu, Marm B. Dixit, Xianghui Xiao, and Kelsey B. Hatzell. "Effect of pore connectivity on Li dendrite propagation within LLZO electrolytes observed with synchrotron X-ray tomography." ACS Energy Letters 3, no. 4 (2018): 1056-1061. [2] Dixit, Marm B., Matthew Regala, Fengyu Shen, Xianghui Xiao, and Kelsey B. Hatzell. "Tortuosity Effects in Garnet-Type Li7La3Zr2O12 Solid Electrolytes." ACS applied materials & interfaces 11, no. 2 (2018): 2022-2030.