Calculate fuel cost for any trip based on distance, fuel efficiency, and gas price. Compare vehicles, estimate annual fuel spending, and analyze cost per mile.
The Fuel Cost Calculator estimates how much you'll spend on fuel for any trip or over any time period. Enter your distance, vehicle fuel efficiency (MPG or L/100km), and current fuel price to get an instant cost estimate. It also calculates cost per mile, annual fuel expense, and lets you compare different vehicles side-by-side. That makes it easier to budget for commuting, road trips, or ownership costs before you drive. It is also useful when you want to compare route choices or vehicle options on the same fuel assumptions.
Understanding your true fuel costs helps with trip budgeting, vehicle purchase decisions, and daily commute planning. A vehicle that gets 35 MPG instead of 25 MPG saves roughly $600-$900 per year at average driving distances — knowledge that can influence whether a hybrid or fuel-efficient vehicle pays for itself.
Enter your driving parameters to calculate trip cost, monthly cost, and annual expense. Use the comparison table to see how fuel efficiency improvements translate to real dollar savings.
Use this calculator when you want a quick fuel budget for a trip, a commute, or a year of driving without building the math from scratch. It is also useful for comparing vehicles with different MPG ratings against the same distance and fuel price assumptions. That gives you a simple way to see which option costs less to run over time.
Fuel Cost = (Distance / MPG) × Price per Gallon. Gallons Used = Distance / MPG. Cost per Mile = Price / MPG. Annual Cost = (Annual Miles / MPG) × Price. L/100km = 235.21 / MPG.
Result: $37.50
Gallons used: 300 / 28 = 10.71 gallons. Cost: 10.71 × $3.50 = $37.50. Cost per mile: $3.50 / 28 = $0.125/mile. If this is a weekly commute, annual fuel cost: $37.50 × 52 = $1,950.
The total cost of vehicle ownership includes fuel, insurance, maintenance, depreciation, and financing. For average drivers (12,000-15,000 miles/year), fuel is the second-largest cost after depreciation. A vehicle averaging 25 MPG at $3.50/gal costs about $1,680-$2,100/year in fuel. At 35 MPG, that drops to $1,200-$1,500. The savings compound over vehicle ownership, making fuel efficiency a key economic factor.
US average gasoline prices have ranged from under $2.00 to over $5.00 per gallon in recent decades. A 50% price increase ($3.00 to $4.50) adds $600-$900/year to the average driver's fuel bill. Diesel typically costs 10-20% more than regular gasoline but diesel engines are 20-35% more fuel-efficient. Natural gas and propane offer lower per-gallon costs but require dedicated refueling infrastructure.
Electric vehicles use kWh instead of gallons. At $0.13/kWh and 3.5 miles/kWh efficiency, an EV costs about $0.037/mile — equivalent to a gasoline car getting 95 MPG at $3.50/gal. Home charging (off-peak) can be even cheaper. However, fast DC charging costs $0.30-$0.60/kWh, raising the cost to $0.09-$0.17/mile — still cheaper than most gasoline vehicles.
Fill your tank completely, reset your trip odometer, drive normally, then refill. Divide miles driven by gallons added. Do this 3-4 times for an accurate average. EPA MPG ratings on the window sticker are a useful starting point but real-world MPG varies.
EPA tests use standardized driving cycles that may not match your conditions. Aggressive driving, cold weather, short trips, heavy cargo, roof racks, and high speeds (above 55 mph) all reduce real-world MPG. Highway MPG is typically 10-20% higher than city.
L/100km = 235.215 / MPG. So 30 MPG = 7.84 L/100km. Conversely, MPG = 235.215 / L/100km. Lower L/100km means better efficiency (opposite of MPG). European and Canadian fuel ratings use L/100km.
Every 5 mph above 50 mph costs roughly 7-14% more fuel (like paying an extra $0.25-$0.50 per gallon). At 70 mph, aerodynamic drag is roughly double what it is at 50 mph. Cruise control helps maintain steady speed and improve highway efficiency.
For solo travel over 500+ miles, flying is often comparable or cheaper in fuel cost alone. For 2-4 passengers, driving almost always wins on fuel cost. However, add tolls, parking, hotels, wear, and time value for a true comparison.
Going from 25 to 35 MPG at 12,000 miles/year and $3.50/gal saves $480/year. Going from 25 to 50 MPG (hybrid) saves $840/year. Over 5 years, that's $2,400-$4,200 — often enough to offset the hybrid premium on smaller cars.