- The national average for regular unleaded gasoline rose to $4.54 per gallon Tuesday — the highest since July 2022 and just 47 cents below the all-time record of $5.01 set in June 2022; on a seasonal basis, prices are already at an all-time high for this time of year.
- Gasoline has risen more than $1.50 per gallon since the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran began in late February, and never fell below the $4-a-gallon level even during the brief April cease-fire period.
- California has crossed $6 per gallon; Midwest states are approaching $5; Morgan Stanley warns that U.S. gasoline stockpiles are at their lowest level for this time of year since 2014 and expects further tightening into summer.
- The $5-a-gallon threshold is considered a “shock and awe” demand-destruction level, though GasBuddy’s head of petroleum analysis notes that U.S. consumption remains strong despite elevated prices.
What Happened?
U.S. gasoline prices crossed $4.50 per gallon for the first time since July 2022 on Tuesday, with the AAA national average reaching $4.54. The move puts pump prices roughly 47 cents below the all-time record of $5.01 set in June 2022 — and already at a seasonal record for this point in the year. The Iran war has been the primary driver: prices have climbed more than $1.50 per gallon since hostilities began in late February and never meaningfully retreated even during the April cease-fire. California has crossed $6 per gallon. Benchmark gasoline futures, which held near $3 for much of the conflict, surged in the final week of April to their highest since June 2022. Morgan Stanley expects national stockpiles — already at 12-year lows for this time of year — to tighten further through the summer driving season.
Why It Matters?
Gasoline prices are one of the most politically salient economic indicators in the U.S., and at $4.54 they are becoming a significant liability for the Republican Party heading into November midterm elections. Trump has repeatedly promised prices will fall after the Iran war ends, but the longer the conflict persists, the harder that promise becomes to keep. The pain is also lopsided geographically: California’s $6+ prices carry particular political weight given Gov. Gavin Newsom’s expected 2028 presidential bid. The demand side remains a wild card — $5 per gallon has historically triggered demand destruction, but current consumption remains robust, meaning the market hasn’t yet reached the self-correcting threshold.
What’s Next?
Trump’s pause of Project Freedom and signals of “Great Progress” in Iran deal talks were the first genuine de-escalation signals in weeks — a credible cease-fire or peace agreement that reopens the Strait of Hormuz would be the primary catalyst for a meaningful price decline. Watch the weekly EIA inventory report for any sign that stockpile drawdowns are accelerating heading into summer peak demand. If prices approach $5 nationally — potentially within weeks at the current trajectory — the political pressure on the administration to reach a deal or find alternative supply will intensify sharply.
Source: Bloomberg












