RBOB Gasoline Monthly Price - Iranian Rial per Gallon

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2016 - Jan 2019: 20,513.820 (43.66%)
Chart

Description: Los Angeles Reformulated RBOB Regular Gasoline Spot Price

Unit: Iranian Rial 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

RBOB gasoline is a refined petroleum product used as the benchmark blendstock for reformulated gasoline in the United States. It is priced on commodity markets in U.S. dollars per gallon and is commonly traded through futures contracts on the New York Mercantile Exchange. RBOB stands for “Reformulated Blendstock for Oxygenate Blending,” meaning it is designed to be mixed with ethanol or other oxygenates before retail sale. The product is closely linked to motor fuel consumption, especially in road transport, and its price reflects the economics of crude oil refining, gasoline blending, and distribution. Because gasoline is a high-volume, fungible transportation fuel, RBOB serves as a reference point for wholesale gasoline pricing and for hedging exposure to downstream fuel markets. Its market structure is shaped by refinery output, seasonal fuel specifications, regional supply constraints, and the balance between driving demand and available blending components.

Supply Drivers

RBOB supply is determined by crude oil availability, refinery configuration, and the ability of refineries to produce gasoline meeting environmental and vapor-pressure specifications. Refining centers in the United States Gulf Coast and Midwest are especially important because they process large crude streams and supply major consuming regions through pipelines, terminals, and marine transport. Gasoline output depends on refinery utilization, maintenance schedules, unplanned outages, and the yield pattern of each refinery, since some crude slates produce more gasoline than others. Seasonal formulation changes also matter: summer-grade gasoline requires lower volatility than winter-grade fuel, which can tighten supply when refineries must adjust blending and processing.

Supply is constrained by infrastructure bottlenecks, including pipeline capacity, storage availability, and regional distribution limits. Because gasoline cannot be stored indefinitely without quality management, logistics and inventory positioning influence local prices. Ethanol blending also affects RBOB availability because the blendstock must be compatible with mandated oxygenate content and regional fuel standards. Longer-term supply is shaped by refinery investment cycles, environmental compliance costs, and the geological characteristics of crude oil feedstocks, which influence refining economics and product yields.

Demand Drivers

RBOB demand is driven primarily by road transportation, especially private vehicles, light trucks, and commercial fleets. Consumption rises and falls with driving activity, commuting patterns, freight movement, and seasonal travel, with warmer months typically associated with stronger gasoline use in many consuming regions. Demand is also influenced by vehicle fleet efficiency, because higher fuel economy reduces gallons consumed per mile traveled even when travel demand remains steady. Over long periods, demographic growth, suburban commuting patterns, and the scale of highway-based transport support structural gasoline consumption.

Substitution plays an important role. Gasoline competes with diesel in some transport applications, while longer-run demand is affected by alternative propulsion technologies such as battery electric vehicles and, in some markets, compressed natural gas or biofuels. However, gasoline remains deeply embedded in existing vehicle fleets and fueling infrastructure, which gives demand inertia. Regulatory fuel specifications also shape consumption patterns because reformulated gasoline is required in certain air-quality regions. Ethanol blending is a key complement: RBOB is not sold as a finished retail fuel but as a blendstock, so demand depends on the broader gasoline-ethanol blending system and the scale of retail gasoline consumption.

Macro and Financial Drivers

RBOB prices are sensitive to the U.S. dollar because the commodity is quoted in dollars and gasoline is linked to globally traded crude oil and refined products. A weaker dollar can support dollar-denominated fuel prices by lowering the cost to non-U.S. buyers, while a stronger dollar can have the opposite effect. Interest rates matter through inventory financing and storage economics: holding refined products requires working capital, so higher financing costs can discourage stockpiling and alter forward price relationships. Like other petroleum products, RBOB can exhibit contango or backwardation depending on the balance between near-term supply tightness and storage availability. Its price also tends to move with broader energy markets because crude oil is the dominant input cost, while refinery margins and product spreads determine how much of that cost is passed through to gasoline.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 201646,980.18-
May 201646,473.66-1.08%
Jun 201650,142.377.89%
Jul 201643,622.00-13.00%
Aug 201643,123.62-1.14%
Sep 201648,679.1412.88%
Oct 201651,225.165.23%
Nov 201645,818.40-10.55%
Dec 201648,364.505.56%
Jan 201752,176.017.88%
Feb 201756,865.228.99%
Mar 201755,756.84-1.95%
Apr 201757,620.293.34%
May 201756,648.58-1.69%
Jun 201752,566.69-7.21%
Jul 201754,461.013.60%
Aug 201759,515.809.28%
Sep 201761,072.932.62%
Oct 201760,266.59-1.32%
Nov 201764,591.297.18%
Dec 201758,712.11-9.10%
Jan 201870,907.0420.77%
Feb 201869,600.37-1.84%
Mar 201878,165.1512.31%
Apr 201890,602.4315.91%
May 201896,486.266.49%
Jun 201890,578.73-6.12%
Jul 201892,930.172.60%
Aug 201888,096.81-5.20%
Sep 201893,408.006.03%
Oct 201894,668.001.35%
Nov 201873,038.00-22.85%
Dec 201867,074.00-8.17%
Jan 201967,494.000.63%

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