Average gasoline prices in Pennsylvania have fallen 4.5 cents per gallon in the last week, averaging $4.26/gallon Monday, according to GasBuddy’s survey of 5,269 stations in Pennsylvania.
Prices in Pennsylvania are 18.1 cents per gallon higher than a month ago and stand $1.28/gallon higher than a year ago.
According to GasBuddy price reports, the cheapest station in Pennsylvania was priced at $3.69/gallon while the most expensive was $5.07/gallon, a difference of $1.38/gallon.
The national average price of gasoline has fallen 5.4 cents per gallon in the last week, averaging $4.17/gallon on Monday.
The national average is up 25.5 cents per gallon from a month ago and stands $1.31/gallon higher than a year ago, according to GasBuddy data compiled from more than 11 million weekly price reports covering over 150,000 gas stations across the country.
Historical gasoline prices in Pennsylvania and the national average going back 10 years:
April 4, 2021: $2.98/g (U.S. Average: $2.86/g)
- April 4, 2020: $2.12/g (U.S. Average: $1.90/g)
- April 4, 2019: $2.87/g (U.S. Average: $2.73/g)
- April 4, 2018: $2.87/g (U.S. Average: $2.66/g)
- April 4, 2017: $2.53/g (U.S. Average: $2.35/g)
- April 4, 2016: $2.18/g (U.S. Average: $2.06/g)
- April 4, 2015: $2.52/g (U.S. Average: $2.39/g)
- April 4, 2014: $3.62/g (U.S. Average: $3.57/g)
- April 4, 2013: $3.64/g (U.S. Average: $3.63/g)
- April 4, 2012: $3.94/g (U.S. Average: $3.93/g)
Neighboring areas and their current gas prices:
- Harrisburg – $4.27/g, down 4.0 cents per gallon from last week’s $4.31/g.
- Hagerstown – $3.69/g, down 1.5 cents per gallon from last week’s $3.70/g.
- York – $4.28/g, down 1.1 cents per gallon from last week’s $4.29/g.
“Oil prices fell last week as Covid cases in China surged, prompting restrictions on movements and hurting oil demand. Meanwhile, President Biden’s announcement that the U.S. would be releasing 180 million barrels from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve caused an even further decline in oil, leading gas prices in nearly all areas of the country to fall over the last week,” said Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy.
“So long as oil prices remain under $100 per barrel and there’s no escalations in Russia’s war on Ukraine, we may be poised to see gas prices decline again this week as the U.S. and other countries try to raise oil supply to tip prices lower.”
GasBuddy is the authoritative voice for gas prices and the only source for station-level data spanning nearly two decades.
Unlike AAA’s once daily survey and the Lundberg Survey, updated once every two weeks based on a small fraction of U.S. gasoline stations, GasBuddy’s survey updates 288 times every day from the most diverse list of sources covering nearly 150,000 stations nationwide, the most comprehensive and up-to-date in the country.
GasBuddy data is accessible at http://prices.GasBuddy.com.