US national average gas price has jumped to $4.30, according to AAA, the highest level since July 2022
On Thursday morning, the American Automobile Association (AAA) reported that the national average gas price in the US had risen to $4.30 per gallon — the highest level seen since July 2022 — as the global energy crisis continues to trickle down to consumers.
The fresh pain at the pump comes as more oil supply disruptions in the Middle East continue to drive up Brent crude prices, where front-month futures contracts just hit a four-year high, with the international benchmark briefly topping $126 a barrel. Unsurprisingly, if that level holds, it'd be hard to foresee gas prices going anywhere but further up, given the two are so intrinsically linked.
With the Strait of Hormuz likely to remain blockaded as a result of the ongoing conflict, analysts are predicting that the national average gas price could hit $4.50 per gallon in the next week or two. Indeed, Gas Buddy's Patrick De Haan forecast prices reaching as high as $5 a gallon by Memorial Day, and up to $6 a gallon by later in the summer, saying: “Nothing's impossible at this point.”
However, according to AAA data, gasoline prices have already topped $6 a gallon in California, marking the highest level since October 2023. For context, no other state has ever surpassed the $6-a-gallon mark, with Bloomberg reporting that the price in the state was $4.64 a gallon at the outset of the war.