Gasoline Monthly Price - Algerian Dinar per Gallon

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2020 - Mar 2026: 313.684 (414.77%)
Chart

Description: New York Harbor Conventional Gasoline Regular Spot Price FOB

Unit: Algerian Dinar 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

Gasoline is a refined petroleum product used primarily as a motor fuel in spark-ignition engines. In commodity markets, it is commonly priced as a wholesale refined product, with benchmark contracts tied to regional blending and distribution hubs such as the New York Harbor market in the United States. The standard unit in retail and many market references is the gallon, though wholesale trading may also be quoted in barrels or metric tons. Gasoline is not a single chemical but a blend of hydrocarbons adjusted to meet volatility, octane, and emissions specifications that vary by season and jurisdiction.

Its principal use is transportation, especially passenger vehicles, light trucks, motorcycles, and small engines. Gasoline demand is also linked to commuting patterns, freight movement in light-duty fleets, and seasonal travel. Because it is a refined product, its price reflects both crude oil input costs and refinery economics, including conversion margins, blending components, and distribution constraints. Gasoline also competes with other transport fuels, especially diesel, compressed natural gas in some fleets, and electricity in certain vehicle segments.

Supply Drivers

Gasoline supply depends on crude oil availability, refinery capacity, and the ability to blend finished fuel to meet local specifications. Major refining centers are located near large consuming regions and port infrastructure, including the United States Gulf Coast, Northwest Europe, and parts of East Asia. These regions combine access to crude supply, pipeline networks, storage terminals, and export facilities. Refinery configuration matters because gasoline output depends on the type of crude processed and the complexity of the refinery’s conversion units.

Supply is shaped by maintenance schedules, unplanned outages, and the balance between gasoline and other refined products such as diesel and jet fuel. Refineries cannot instantly shift output because processing units have physical limits and product yields are constrained by chemistry. Seasonal fuel formulations also affect supply: summer-grade gasoline requires lower volatility, which can tighten blending requirements and reduce flexibility. Transport bottlenecks in pipelines, barges, and terminals can create regional price differences even when national supply is adequate.

Crude quality also matters. Light, sweet crude generally yields more gasoline than heavier, sulfur-rich crude, while complex refineries can process a wider range of feedstocks. Storage helps smooth short-term disruptions, but inventories are costly to hold and cannot fully offset refinery outages or logistical constraints. Weather can disrupt both offshore production and refining, especially in coastal refining hubs exposed to storms.

Demand Drivers

Gasoline demand is driven mainly by road transportation, especially private vehicle use and light-duty commercial fleets. Consumption is closely tied to vehicle miles traveled, commuting patterns, suburban land use, and freight activity that relies on gasoline-powered vehicles. Seasonal travel patterns matter as well, with road fuel use often rising during holiday and vacation periods. In many markets, gasoline demand also shows a recurring seasonal pattern linked to warmer-weather driving and the switch to summer fuel blends.

Long-run demand is influenced by vehicle efficiency standards, engine technology, and the gradual substitution of alternative drivetrains. Hybrid vehicles reduce fuel intensity, while battery electric vehicles displace gasoline demand where charging infrastructure and consumer adoption are established. In some applications, gasoline competes with diesel, especially in light commercial transport, but diesel remains more common in heavy-duty freight and industrial uses. Gasoline demand is generally less income-sensitive than discretionary consumer goods, but it still responds to economic activity because travel and freight volumes expand and contract with broader growth.

Population density, urban form, and road infrastructure shape consumption patterns. Countries with extensive highway networks and high car ownership tend to use more gasoline per capita than regions with dense transit systems. Regulatory requirements for fuel quality, emissions, and blending components also affect demand for specific gasoline grades and additives.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Gasoline prices are strongly linked to crude oil benchmarks because crude is the main input cost. They also respond to refinery margins, which widen or narrow depending on product demand, outages, and seasonal blending requirements. Because gasoline is traded and stored in physical markets, inventory levels and transport constraints influence prompt pricing relative to later delivery months. This creates periods of contango or backwardation depending on whether near-term supply is tight or inventories are ample.

The U.S. dollar matters because gasoline and crude-linked products are commonly priced in dollars; a stronger dollar can make dollar-denominated fuel more expensive for non-dollar buyers. Interest rates affect storage and financing costs, which influence the economics of holding inventories. Gasoline can also behave as an inflation-sensitive energy product because transport fuel is a visible household expense and a broad input into logistics and distribution. Its price often correlates with other petroleum products, especially crude oil and distillate fuels, through shared feedstock and refining economics.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 202075.63-
May 2020112.7549.08%
Jun 2020144.3228.00%
Jul 2020156.638.53%
Aug 2020160.152.25%
Sep 2020158.06-1.30%
Oct 2020154.81-2.06%
Nov 2020153.17-1.06%
Dec 2020178.4316.49%
Jan 2021207.3216.19%
Feb 2021234.0612.90%
Mar 2021265.6113.48%
Apr 2021264.26-0.51%
May 2021282.566.93%
Jun 2021290.132.68%
Jul 2021304.454.93%
Aug 2021302.39-0.68%
Sep 2021311.833.12%
Oct 2021342.809.93%
Nov 2021330.27-3.66%
Dec 2021306.11-7.31%
Jan 2022341.6411.61%
Feb 2022384.9812.69%
Mar 2022453.6817.85%
Apr 2022458.341.03%
May 2022557.3421.60%
Jun 2022595.166.79%
Jul 2022509.63-14.37%
Aug 2022431.00-15.43%
Sep 2022371.49-13.81%
Oct 2022422.6013.76%
Nov 2022397.31-5.98%
Dec 2022325.71-18.02%
Jan 2023353.228.45%
Feb 2023345.39-2.22%
Mar 2023342.07-0.96%
Apr 2023374.479.47%
May 2023349.38-6.70%
Jun 2023361.563.49%
Jul 2023364.320.76%
Aug 2023390.997.32%
Sep 2023396.571.43%
Oct 2023346.17-12.71%
Nov 2023310.24-10.38%
Dec 2023299.16-3.57%
Jan 2024301.650.83%
Feb 2024312.753.68%
Mar 2024333.436.61%
Apr 2024369.6710.87%
May 2024340.18-7.98%
Jun 2024328.71-3.37%
Jul 2024334.581.79%
Aug 2024312.56-6.58%
Sep 2024272.39-12.85%
Oct 2024286.615.22%
Nov 2024282.01-1.60%
Dec 2024273.06-3.17%
Jan 2025291.556.77%
Feb 2025285.21-2.17%
Mar 2025265.54-6.90%
Apr 2025252.74-4.82%
May 2025260.733.16%
Jun 2025274.205.16%
Jul 2025281.672.73%
Aug 2025276.23-1.93%
Sep 2025260.01-5.87%
Oct 2025245.81-5.46%
Nov 2025252.872.87%
Dec 2025230.11-9.00%
Jan 2026267.9216.43%
Feb 2026269.910.74%
Mar 2026389.3144.24%

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