Calculate how your roof rack affects fuel economy. Compare empty rack, loaded rack, and no-rack MPG and annual fuel costs.
Roof racks are convenient for hauling gear, but they come with a hidden fuel cost. Even empty crossbars create aerodynamic drag that reduces fuel economy by 2–5%. Loading them with bikes, cargo boxes, or gear can cost 6–17% MPG at highway speeds.
A Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory study estimated that roof racks on US vehicles waste nearly 100 million gallons of fuel per year — about 0.8% of all light-vehicle fuel consumption. Most of this waste comes from empty racks left mounted year-round.
This calculator compares three scenarios: no rack, empty rack, and loaded rack, showing the annual fuel cost for each. It helps you decide whether to remove your rack between uses.
Whether you drive a compact sedan, a full-size SUV, or a pickup truck, accurate roof rack mpg impact figures help you plan smarter and avoid costly surprises at the pump or dealership. Use this tool regularly to track changes over time and adjust your transportation budget accordingly.
Roof racks are often left mounted permanently out of convenience. This calculator shows the true annual cost of that convenience, typically $50–$200/year. For many drivers, spending 10 minutes removing the rack saves more per hour than their salary. Results update instantly as you adjust inputs, making it easy to explore different scenarios and find the best option for your driving needs and budget.
Empty Rack MPG = Baseline MPG × (1 − Empty Drag%) Loaded Rack MPG = Baseline MPG × (1 − Loaded Drag%) Annual Cost = Sum of (Monthly Miles ÷ Scenario MPG × Fuel Price) for each month
Result: Rack costs $104/year; remove when empty to save $56
Loaded 4 months at 26.4 MPG: $662 fuel. Empty 8 months at 29.1 MPG: $1,032. No rack year-round at 30 MPG: $1,750. With rack total: $1,694. All no-rack: $1,750 wait — recalculating with proportional miles.
In 2020, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory published research estimating that roof racks on American vehicles waste 100 million gallons of fuel annually. This includes both empty racks (the majority) and loaded racks. The study highlighted that most racks are used for cargo fewer than 14 days per year.
Empty crossbars: $40–80/year. Bike rack (2 bikes): $80–$150/year. Small cargo box: $100–$180/year. Large cargo box: $150–$300/year. All estimates assume 12,000 highway miles/year at $3.50/gallon and 30 MPG baseline.
Modern rack systems like Thule, Yakima, and OEM options offer quick-release mounting that takes 5–10 minutes to remove. If removing saves $5–10/month in fuel, that's $60–$120/hour equivalent — far more than most people earn. Make removal part of your post-trip routine.
Mount your rack only when needed. For ski season (4 months), the penalty is one-third of leaving it year-round. For occasional camping trips (2–3 weeks/year), remove immediately after each trip. This simple discipline saves 60–80% of the annual rack fuel penalty.
Most studies find empty crossbars reduce MPG by 2–5% at highway speeds (60+ mph). At city speeds, the impact is 1–2%. The exact amount depends on vehicle shape, bar profile (aero bars are better), and driving speed.
Aero-shaped crossbars reduce drag by about 30–40% compared to round or square bars. If you leave bars mounted year-round, investing $50–$100 extra in aero bars saves $20–40/year in fuel — paying for themselves in 2–3 years.
Yes. Racks should be spread as wide as recommended and positioned per manufacturer specs. Items should be loaded to present the smallest possible frontal profile. A kayak on its side creates less drag than one flat.
The LBNL study counted vehicles with roof racks (about 30 million in the US), estimated an average 2–3% MPG penalty, and calculated total wasted fuel. It's about $350 million in wasted fuel annually, mostly from empty racks.
A hitch-mounted cargo carrier has minimal aerodynamic drag (mostly weight penalty). A roof cargo box adds 10–17% drag. For highway trips, the hitch carrier can save $20–50 in fuel per long trip. The trade-off is ground clearance and rear visibility.
Tonneau covers (bed covers) show mixed results. Some studies find 1–3% improvement, others find none. The aerodynamics of truck beds are complex. If you have a tonneau, keeping the tailgate up is generally best for efficiency.