Gas in the U.S. right now is roughly in the low‑to‑mid 3‑dollars‑per‑gallon range on average, but it varies a lot by state and can be much higher in places like California.

Quick Scoop

  • As of early March 2026, the national average price for regular gasoline is around 3.10–3.45 dollars per gallon.
  • That’s a bit higher than a year ago and has been creeping up in recent weeks.
  • Futures and analysts are warning prices could climb toward 4.50 dollars or more later in March if oil markets stay tight.

Why it’s moving now

  • Rising oil prices driven by tensions around major shipping routes (like the Strait of Hormuz) are putting upward pressure on gas.
  • Wholesale gasoline (the commodity traded in markets) is about 2.90 dollars per gallon as of March 12, 2026, up more than 50% over the past month.
  • Natural gas and European gas benchmarks are also up sharply, showing broader energy market stress.

What you might actually see at the pump

Think of three rough “tiers”:

  • Cheaper states (often Gulf Coast, some South/Midwest): commonly just above 3 dollars per gallon, sometimes a bit lower.
  • Middle‑of‑the‑pack states: mid‑3‑dollar range, something like 3.20–3.60 per gallon.
  • High‑price states (California, parts of the West and Northeast): 4 to 5‑plus per gallon is already common in early March.

A simple mental example:
If your tank holds 14 gallons and local gas is 3.40 per gallon, a fill‑up is roughly 48 dollars; at 4.80 per gallon, the same fill‑up jumps to about 67 dollars.

How to get your real local price

Because prices swing a lot by city and even by station, the best way to know “how much is gas” for you right now is:

  1. Check a local price‑tracking app or map (GasBuddy‑style, map apps with fuel layers).
  2. Look at stations within a small radius; urban vs. highway stations can differ by 20–40 cents per gallon.
  3. Re‑check weekly this month; volatility is high and prices may move quickly.

TL;DR: U.S. gas is roughly low‑to‑mid 3 dollars per gallon on average in March 2026, with cheaper states closer to 3 and high‑cost states already well over 4—and there’s a real risk of further increases this month.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.