Diesel Monthly Price - Euro per Gallon

Data as of March 2026

Range
Jun 2006 - Mar 2026: 1.769 (107.00%)
Chart

Description: New York Harbor Ultra-Low Sulfur No 2 Diesel Spot Price

Unit: Euro per Gallon



Source: Energy Information Administration

See also: Energy production and consumption statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Diesel is a middle distillate fuel derived from crude oil refining and used primarily in compression-ignition engines. In commodity markets, it is commonly priced as a refined petroleum product in dollars per gallon, with benchmark references often tied to ultra-low sulfur diesel contracts and regional wholesale assessments. Diesel is traded as both a transportation fuel and an industrial energy input, so its price reflects refinery economics as well as end-use demand. It is widely used in freight trucking, rail, marine transport, agricultural machinery, construction equipment, backup power generation, and some heating applications. Because diesel is a refined product rather than a raw hydrocarbon, its market value depends on crude oil feedstock costs, refinery configuration, and the balance between gasoline, diesel, and residual fuel yields. Seasonal heating demand in colder regions and agricultural demand during planting and harvest periods also shape consumption patterns.

Supply Drivers

Diesel supply is determined by crude oil availability, refinery capacity, and the technical ability of refineries to maximize middle distillate output. Regions with large refining systems and access to seaborne crude, such as the United States Gulf Coast, Northwest Europe, and parts of East Asia, play central roles because diesel is produced where complex refining and distribution infrastructure are concentrated. Refinery configuration matters: hydrocracking and desulfurization units increase the share of low-sulfur diesel that meets modern fuel standards, while simpler refineries may yield more heavy products. Maintenance outages, unplanned shutdowns, pipeline constraints, and port logistics can tighten supply even when crude feedstock is ample.

Diesel production is also constrained by the yield structure of refining. A refinery cannot make unlimited diesel without affecting gasoline, jet fuel, and other products, so product slate optimization creates tradeoffs across the barrel. Seasonal demand for heating oil and agricultural fuels can draw inventories down, especially where storage and transport networks are limited. Environmental specifications, especially sulfur limits, require additional processing and can raise marginal production costs. Because diesel is stored and transported in bulk, regional supply balances often depend on shipping, pipeline, and terminal capacity rather than on local consumption alone.

Demand Drivers

Diesel demand is anchored in freight movement and industrial activity. Road haulage is the largest structural consumer in many economies because diesel engines provide high torque and fuel efficiency for heavy vehicles. Railroads, inland shipping, mining equipment, construction machinery, and farm equipment also rely heavily on diesel because of its energy density and engine durability. This makes demand closely linked to goods movement, infrastructure spending, and agricultural cycles rather than to passenger commuting alone.

Seasonality is important. In colder climates, diesel and related distillates are used for space heating and for winter operations, while agricultural demand rises during planting and harvest periods when tractors and combines run intensively. Diesel also competes with gasoline, natural gas, electricity, and fuel oil in some applications, but substitution is limited by engine design and capital stock. Over long periods, efficiency gains, electrification of light-duty transport, and fuel switching can moderate growth in some segments, yet heavy-duty transport and off-road machinery remain structurally dependent on liquid fuels. Industrial output, trade volumes, and construction activity therefore remain key demand anchors.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Diesel prices are strongly influenced by the U.S. dollar because crude oil and refined products are typically priced in dollars; a stronger dollar tends to raise local-currency costs for non-dollar buyers and can weigh on demand. Interest rates affect diesel through inventory financing and storage economics: higher carrying costs can reduce stockholding and alter the shape of the forward curve. When nearby supply is tight relative to prompt demand, diesel markets can move into backwardation; when inventories are comfortable, contango can encourage storage.

Diesel also responds to broader energy-market relationships. It often tracks crude oil, but refining margins can widen or narrow independently depending on refinery outages, product demand, and seasonal distillate balances. Because diesel is a physical fuel with storage and transport costs, its price reflects both energy fundamentals and logistics. It is not typically treated as a pure inflation hedge, but it often transmits changes in crude, freight, and industrial activity into transportation and consumer prices.

MonthPriceChange
Jun 20061.65-
Jul 20061.755.74%
Aug 20061.750.34%
Sep 20061.42-18.92%
Oct 20061.420.03%
Nov 20061.41-1.16%
Dec 20061.39-1.33%
Jan 20071.25-9.61%
Feb 20071.357.29%
Mar 20071.436.14%
Apr 20071.526.36%
May 20071.51-0.41%
Jun 20071.584.44%
Jul 20071.56-0.96%
Aug 20071.55-1.19%
Sep 20071.678.00%
Oct 20071.701.74%
Nov 20071.848.24%
Dec 20071.81-1.80%
Jan 20081.76-2.55%
Feb 20081.886.89%
Mar 20082.1011.39%
Apr 20082.194.32%
May 20082.4612.36%
Jun 20082.501.75%
Jul 20082.44-2.44%
Aug 20082.19-10.32%
Sep 20082.12-3.19%
Oct 20081.80-14.89%
Nov 20081.51-16.16%
Dec 20081.07-29.15%
Jan 20091.135.65%
Feb 20091.02-9.64%
Mar 20091.030.45%
Apr 20091.107.06%
May 20091.111.38%
Jun 20091.3016.58%
Jul 20091.22-5.86%
Aug 20091.3510.49%
Sep 20091.23-8.72%
Oct 20091.348.51%
Nov 20091.340.14%
Dec 20091.361.17%
Jan 20101.456.82%
Feb 20101.492.71%
Mar 20101.597.01%
Apr 20101.707.07%
May 20101.70-0.28%
Jun 20101.731.64%
Jul 20101.62-6.28%
Aug 20101.651.72%
Sep 20101.661.10%
Oct 20101.66-0.50%
Nov 20101.734.53%
Dec 20101.899.26%
Jan 20111.984.59%
Feb 20112.085.21%
Mar 20112.247.48%
Apr 20112.271.28%
May 20112.12-6.62%
Jun 20112.120.35%
Jul 20112.224.79%
Aug 20112.10-5.65%
Sep 20112.173.28%
Oct 20112.191.25%
Nov 20112.283.86%
Dec 20112.23-2.20%
Jan 20122.397.00%
Feb 20122.442.21%
Mar 20122.502.61%
Apr 20122.46-1.53%
May 20122.33-5.23%
Jun 20122.16-7.32%
Jul 20122.389.99%
Aug 20122.567.74%
Sep 20122.51-2.14%
Oct 20122.49-0.60%
Nov 20122.48-0.54%
Dec 20122.34-5.59%
Jan 20132.34-0.27%
Feb 20132.423.75%
Mar 20132.34-3.32%
Apr 20132.23-4.97%
May 20132.22-0.09%
Jun 20132.19-1.45%
Jul 20132.315.23%
Aug 20132.31-0.07%
Sep 20132.28-0.98%
Oct 20132.20-3.79%
Nov 20132.18-0.77%
Dec 20132.222.00%
Jan 20142.293.01%
Feb 20142.363.20%
Mar 20142.17-8.37%
Apr 20142.14-1.10%
May 20142.14-0.19%
Jun 20142.181.95%
Jul 20142.13-2.43%
Aug 20142.140.67%
Sep 20142.13-0.68%
Oct 20142.00-6.01%
Nov 20141.95-2.48%
Dec 20141.65-15.34%
Jan 20151.45-12.27%
Feb 20151.7521.26%
Mar 20151.71-2.37%
Apr 20151.71-0.18%
May 20151.762.99%
Jun 20151.68-4.40%
Jul 20151.53-9.01%
Aug 20151.36-11.15%
Sep 20151.35-0.79%
Oct 20151.31-2.92%
Nov 20151.310.25%
Dec 20151.05-20.40%
Jan 2016.90-13.83%
Feb 2016.933.63%
Mar 20161.0714.76%
Apr 20161.102.56%
May 20161.2614.33%
Jun 20161.335.62%
Jul 20161.24-6.76%
Aug 20161.250.78%
Sep 20161.261.33%
Oct 20161.4111.90%
Nov 20161.35-4.42%
Dec 20161.5615.18%
Jan 20171.53-1.90%
Feb 20171.53-0.15%
Mar 20171.43-6.26%
Apr 20171.483.48%
May 20171.37-7.42%
Jun 20171.26-7.90%
Jul 20171.324.65%
Aug 20171.384.61%
Sep 20171.508.81%
Oct 20171.531.80%
Nov 20171.636.79%
Dec 20171.640.51%
Jan 20181.703.56%
Feb 20181.57-7.74%
Mar 20181.56-0.30%
Apr 20181.698.25%
May 20181.8911.41%
Jun 20181.84-2.60%
Jul 20181.83-0.36%
Aug 20181.861.83%
Sep 20181.933.58%
Oct 20182.035.15%
Nov 20181.80-11.26%
Dec 20181.58-12.16%
Jan 20191.622.14%
Feb 20191.736.91%
Mar 20191.761.77%
Apr 20191.834.32%
May 20191.82-1.03%
Jun 20191.63-9.99%
Jul 20191.714.73%
Aug 20191.64-4.24%
Sep 20191.767.52%
Oct 20191.75-0.58%
Nov 20191.75-0.24%
Dec 20191.792.37%
Jan 20201.67-6.58%
Feb 20201.49-11.06%
Mar 20201.08-27.64%
Apr 2020.81-24.73%
May 2020.810.47%
Jun 20201.0022.74%
Jul 20201.088.17%
Aug 20201.04-4.05%
Sep 2020.95-8.17%
Oct 2020.982.97%
Nov 20201.057.03%
Dec 20201.1913.32%
Jan 20211.298.81%
Feb 20211.4814.28%
Mar 20211.565.36%
Apr 20211.55-0.24%
May 20211.677.29%
Jun 20211.765.64%
Jul 20211.802.20%
Aug 20211.76-2.38%
Sep 20211.876.58%
Oct 20212.1716.14%
Nov 20212.09-3.78%
Dec 20211.99-4.77%
Jan 20222.3116.10%
Feb 20222.539.48%
Mar 20223.4335.47%
Apr 20223.748.90%
May 20224.4017.67%
Jun 20224.13-6.10%
Jul 20223.64-11.91%
Aug 20223.55-2.35%
Sep 20223.47-2.29%
Oct 20224.4227.38%
Nov 20223.99-9.67%
Dec 20222.95-26.17%
Jan 20233.032.92%
Feb 20232.64-12.88%
Mar 20232.57-2.90%
Apr 20232.36-7.87%
May 20232.16-8.74%
Jun 20232.244.03%
Jul 20232.417.46%
Aug 20232.8618.47%
Sep 20233.118.98%
Oct 20232.95-5.34%
Nov 20232.69-8.77%
Dec 20232.42-9.96%
Jan 20242.461.55%
Feb 20242.574.39%
Mar 20242.46-4.18%
Apr 20242.44-0.70%
May 20242.25-7.97%
Jun 20242.250.31%
Jul 20242.281.11%
Aug 20242.07-9.18%
Sep 20241.90-8.26%
Oct 20242.037.05%
Nov 20242.092.92%
Dec 20242.100.26%
Jan 20252.4014.30%
Feb 20252.37-1.02%
Mar 20252.08-12.44%
Apr 20251.90-8.54%
May 20251.85-2.84%
Jun 20251.987.23%
Jul 20252.106.11%
Aug 20252.00-4.88%
Sep 20252.041.90%
Oct 20252.01-1.34%
Nov 20252.188.61%
Dec 20251.93-11.57%
Jan 20261.930.18%
Feb 20262.129.40%
Mar 20263.4261.75%

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