Heating Oil Monthly Price - Yen per Gallon

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2021 - Mar 2026: 417.990 (224.77%)
Chart

Description: New York Harbor No. 2 Heating Oil Spot Price FOB

Unit: Yen 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

Heating oil is a middle-distillate petroleum product used primarily for space heating and, in some regions, for industrial boilers and small-scale power generation. In commodity markets, it is typically priced as a refined fuel in U.S. dollars per gallon, with futures and spot references commonly tied to distillate specifications. The contract most often used as a benchmark in North American trading is the New York Harbor heating oil market, which reflects supply and demand conditions for ultra-low-sulfur distillate in the U.S. Northeast and adjacent refining and storage hubs.

Heating oil is closely related to diesel fuel because both are produced from similar refinery streams. The exact product specification matters because sulfur content, cold-flow properties, and combustion characteristics affect usability in heating systems and distribution networks. Demand is strongest in colder climates where households, commercial buildings, and institutions rely on liquid fuels rather than natural gas or electric heating. Because it is a refined product, its price reflects not only crude oil costs but also refinery margins, seasonal heating demand, transportation constraints, and regional inventory balances.

Supply Drivers

Heating oil supply is shaped by refinery output, crude oil quality, and the configuration of regional distribution systems. It is not produced directly from the ground; instead, it is a refined distillate fraction obtained from crude oil processing. Refineries that are optimized for middle distillates can shift yields between heating oil, diesel, and jet fuel, but they face physical limits imposed by crude slate, unit design, and product specifications. This makes supply sensitive to refinery maintenance schedules, unplanned outages, and the availability of pipeline, barge, rail, and terminal infrastructure.

Geography matters because heating oil is most important in colder consuming regions, especially the northeastern United States and parts of Europe. These areas depend on import flows, coastal storage, and seasonal inventory building before the heating season. Supply can tighten when transport bottlenecks limit movement from inland refineries to coastal markets or when marine logistics are constrained. Weather also affects supply indirectly: severe cold can disrupt refinery operations, freeze transport equipment, and raise delivery costs.

Because heating oil is a refined petroleum product, its supply is linked to broader crude oil economics. Higher crude costs raise feedstock expenses, while refinery complexity and distillate yield determine how much heating oil can be produced relative to gasoline and other products. Seasonal maintenance patterns and the need to meet winter fuel specifications create recurring supply adjustments.

Demand Drivers

Heating oil demand is driven mainly by space-heating needs, so it is strongly seasonal and highly sensitive to temperature. Cold winters increase consumption in households, apartment buildings, schools, hospitals, and commercial facilities that use oil-fired heating systems. Demand is also influenced by the stock of oil-heated buildings, which changes slowly because heating-system replacement is capital intensive and building infrastructure lasts for decades. This creates a persistent regional pattern: demand is concentrated where natural gas networks are limited, expensive to connect, or historically absent.

Substitution plays an important role. Heating oil competes with natural gas, electricity, propane, and district heating in residential and commercial applications. Where gas pipelines are available, many users prefer gas because it is often easier to store and distribute. In rural or off-grid areas, however, heating oil remains practical because it can be delivered by truck and stored on site. In industrial use, it can substitute with diesel, residual fuel oil, or gas depending on equipment and emissions requirements.

Demand also reflects income and building-efficiency trends. Better insulation, more efficient boilers, and fuel-switching reduce per-building consumption over time, but cold-weather exposure keeps the product relevant in specific regions. In transportation and industry, heating oil’s demand overlaps with the broader distillate complex, so freight activity and industrial output can affect consumption through shared refinery and distribution channels.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Heating oil prices are influenced by the U.S. dollar because the product is priced in dollars on global markets; a stronger dollar tends to make dollar-denominated fuels more expensive for non-U.S. buyers and can affect trade flows. Interest rates matter through inventory financing and storage economics: holding refined products requires capital, so higher financing costs can discourage stockbuilding. This interacts with seasonal demand, often producing periods when prompt supplies trade differently from later-dated supplies depending on storage availability.

As a petroleum product, heating oil also responds to broader energy-market sentiment and to crude oil price movements, since crude is the main input cost. Refining margins can widen or narrow depending on distillate demand relative to gasoline and jet fuel. In addition, heating oil is a storable commodity, so the balance between current supply and future expectations influences whether the market trades in contango or backwardation. Because it is part of the distillate complex, it often moves with diesel and gasoil markets, especially when logistics or refinery constraints affect middle-distillate availability.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 2021185.96-
May 2021200.117.61%
Jun 2021210.415.15%
Jul 2021214.491.94%
Aug 2021206.27-3.83%
Sep 2021226.289.70%
Oct 2021269.4719.09%
Nov 2021256.88-4.67%
Dec 2021240.64-6.32%
Jan 2022284.9518.41%
Feb 2022315.3310.66%
Mar 2022430.7836.61%
Apr 2022498.8415.80%
May 2022579.5716.18%
Jun 2022568.10-1.98%
Jul 2022485.62-14.52%
Aug 2022464.83-4.28%
Sep 2022466.700.40%
Oct 2022612.0231.14%
Nov 2022545.72-10.83%
Dec 2022397.74-27.12%
Jan 2023402.111.10%
Feb 2023350.69-12.79%
Mar 2023344.13-1.87%
Apr 2023323.20-6.08%
May 2023299.22-7.42%
Jun 2023321.567.47%
Jul 2023351.829.41%
Aug 2023425.4920.94%
Sep 2023468.0810.01%
Oct 2023448.88-4.10%
Nov 2023421.25-6.16%
Dec 2023367.52-12.75%
Jan 2024379.833.35%
Feb 2024403.946.35%
Mar 2024389.17-3.65%
Apr 2024389.11-0.02%
May 2024366.06-5.92%
Jun 2024371.041.36%
Jul 2024370.85-0.05%
Aug 2024316.30-14.71%
Sep 2024242.47-23.34%
Oct 2024285.0417.55%
Nov 2024329.6415.65%
Dec 2024325.47-1.26%
Jan 2025376.4815.67%
Feb 2025356.51-5.30%
Mar 2025320.43-10.12%
Apr 2025293.25-8.48%
May 2025287.44-1.98%
Jun 2025314.059.26%
Jul 2025341.198.64%
Aug 2025321.62-5.73%
Sep 2025331.903.20%
Oct 2025331.30-0.18%
Nov 2025368.2911.17%
Dec 2025329.14-10.63%
Jan 2026332.931.15%
Feb 2026365.309.72%
Mar 2026603.9665.33%

Commodities Market

  • Buyers: Request price quotes
  • Sellers: List your products
Sign up to get an email when we update our commodities data

 


Your email will never be shared, sold, nor rented. We hate SPAM as much you do.
Coming Soon