Seasonal & Holidays

Labor Day Weekend Gas Prices Vary Greatly By Region

Will current prices hold through the weekend? Typically, gas costs go down with demand as summer winds down. That didn't happen this year.

ACROSS AMERCA — Labor Day travelers will pay an average of $3.83 for a gallon of regular gas as prices nationwide approach record highs for this time of year.

The last time gas prices were this high in the week leading up to Labor Day was in 2012, when gas was averaging $3.84 a gallon. That was a record high for the end-of-summer holiday, CNN reported, citing federal data dating back to 1990.

The average price is below the national average of $5.02 a gallon in June 2022, a record driven by the reopening of the economy from the pandemic and supply shortages stemming from the war in Ukraine. In California, some stations were selling gas for $10 a gallon at that time; current prices are about half that.

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Gas prices should remain stable through the Labor Day travel period, AAA spokesperson Andrew Gross said in a news release.

Hurricane Idalia may cause some regional price jumps due to damage to gas stations, flooded roads and power outages, Gross said, “but as in past years, these things are usually fixed in a few weeks.”

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Normally, gas prices decrease with demand as summer vacation and other travel tapers off. This year, that has happened, in part because of production cuts by OPEC leader Saudi Arabia and the effect of extreme heat on refineries, CNN said.

“This is abnormal,” John LaForge, head of real asset strategy at the Wells Fargo Investment Institute, told the news outlet. “Prices normally fade toward the end of the summer.”

According to AAA, gas prices in the past week have averaged anywhere from $4.06 to $5.30 a gallon in 10 western states and Illinois. Motorists in 11 states, mainly in the South and Tennessee Valley, have been able to buy gas for $3.31 a gallon or less.

In Indiana, Maryland and Delaware, gas prices went down 10 cents or more in the past week, while motorists in Ohio and Utah paid a time more. They were among 10 states seeing large changes in gas prices. Motorists in South Carolina, Arizona and Alaska paid six- to seven cents more, while prices went down seven cents and six cents, respectively, in Michigan and Florida.

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