Fuel Cost Trip Calculator

Calculate the fuel cost for your road trip including gas, tolls, and parking split among passengers.

Trip Cost Estimate

$93.33

Total Trip Cost

Cost Per Person: $93.33

16.7 gallons needed

Cost Breakdown

Solo vs Carpool

Trip Cost Estimate

CategoryAmountDetails
Fuel$58.3316.7 gal × $3.50
Tolls$20.00Round-trip estimate
Parking$15.00Estimated daily
TOTAL$93.33$93.33 per person

Planning Your Trip Fuel Costs

Fuel is typically the largest variable expense on a road trip. The key factors are distance, your vehicle's fuel efficiency (MPG), and current gas prices. A car getting 30 MPG on a 500-mile trip at $3.50/gallon uses about 16.7 gallons costing $58. At 20 MPG, that doubles. Highway driving is typically 15-20% more efficient than city driving due to consistent speeds. Using cruise control on flat terrain can improve MPG by 5-10%. Carrying heavy loads or using roof cargo boxes reduces efficiency by 5-25%. Apps like GasBuddy help find the cheapest stations along your route. Don't forget tolls — some highways (like the PA Turnpike or Florida Turnpike) charge $20-50+ for long distances. Splitting gas among passengers is the most effective way to reduce per-person costs.

Practical Example

Scenario: 500-mile trip, 30 MPG, $3.50/gal, 3 passengers, $20 tolls, $15 parking.

Fuel: 16.7 gal × $3.50 = $58.33

Total: $93.33 | Per person: $31.11

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How do I calculate fuel cost for a trip?

Divide trip distance by your car's MPG to get gallons needed, then multiply by the fuel price per gallon. Example: 500 miles ÷ 30 MPG × $3.50 = $58.33.

How much does a 500-mile road trip cost in gas?

At 30 MPG and $3.50/gal, approximately $58. A less efficient vehicle (20 MPG) would cost about $88. Add tolls and parking for the full picture.

Is it cheaper to fly or drive?

For trips under 400 miles with multiple passengers, driving is almost always cheaper. For solo travelers on trips over 600 miles, flying is often competitive when you factor in time value.

How can I improve fuel efficiency on a road trip?

Use cruise control on highways, maintain proper tire pressure, remove roof cargo when possible, avoid aggressive acceleration, and keep your speed at or below 65 MPH — every 5 MPH above 50 reduces MPG by about 7%.

Should I split gas costs evenly among passengers?

Yes, splitting evenly is the most common and fair approach. The driver provides the vehicle, maintenance, and insurance, so passengers splitting gas and tolls is a reasonable arrangement.

Disclaimer: This calculator provides estimates. Actual fuel consumption varies with driving conditions, traffic, weather, and vehicle condition.

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