Top 25 States with Cheapest Gasoline Prices

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In this article, we list and discuss the Top 25 States with Cheapest Gasoline Prices as of April 2024. If you would like to skip our detailed analysis of the US oil market, you can instead go to the Top 10 States with Cheapest Gasoline Prices.

Gasoline, a petrochemical product made through refining crude oil, is one of the most consumed fuels in the United States. The Energy Information Administration (EIA) reports that Americans consumed around 376 million gallons of gasoline daily as a transportation fuel in 2023. Due to such high demand for gasoline, it is also one of the major products refined in the US. oil refineries.

From the input of one 42-gallon barrel of crude oil, U.S. refineries produced 19.45 gallons or about 46% of finished motor gasoline in 2022. Overall, in the same year, the US refineries refined around 3.47 billion barrels of gasoline, making it the largest gasoline producer in the world. Since gasoline is made from crude oil, this also means that the United States has the highest crude oil production capacity; 17.77 million barrels of oil per day. (See also: 20 Biggest Oil Producers in the World). The country also accounts for 43.7% of the world's total oil consumption.

Unfortunately, despite such large levels of production, the US still does not satisfy the high demand for oil consumption in the country. Resultantly, the United States imports from 86 other countries; most prominently from the Middle East. In 2022, the US spent $204.72 billion on total oil imports, making it the country with the second-highest oil imports in the world. Moreover, in 2023, the US imported around 8.51 million barrels and exported around 10.15 million barrels of oil per day, a net of 1.64 million b/d.

So, the US is one of the leading oil importers as well as leading oil exporters in the world, while also domestically producing huge quantities of the same product — around 12.9 million barrels of crude oil per day. This is because, large oil-producing companies in the US, like Chevron Corp (NYSE:CVX), Exxon Mobil Corp (NYSE:XOM), and Phillips 66 (NYSE:PSX) export their petroleum products that mostly come from the Gulf coasts to all parts of the world, mostly to Canada and Mexico.

On the other hand, the United States imports heavy or high-viscosity crude oil from the Middle East as it’s cheaper compared to high-quality crudes that are low in viscosity. High-viscosity crude oil is denser, dirtier, and requires more advanced refineries to process and pump the oil through pipelines because of the high amount of sulfur, so it's cheaper. However, as reported via Reuters, the prices for heavy crude oil in the US and the Gulf Coast saw an increase in the past few weeks due to tightened supply. The increase in the prices of crude oil directly affects the prices of gasoline.