Lowest Memorial Day Gas Prices Since 2003 to Kick-Start Summer Driving Season

May 18, 2020

First sub-$2/gal Memorial Day weekend since 2003 as demand for gasoline rebounds

BOSTON – Motorists hitting the road for Memorial Day weekend will be greeted by the lowest national average for the holiday weekend since 2003, rising gently in the coming days to $1.93 per gallon on Memorial Day, according to GasBuddy. It will be the first time the national average has been below $2 per gallon during the holiday weekend in 17 years, when the national average stood at $1.46 per gallon. The low prices come as demand for gasoline plummeted to the lowest levels in 50 years as COVID-19 led most states to temporarily shut down, reducing gasoline demand, pushing prices down.  

“While millions of Americans have been affected by the coronavirus, gas prices plummeted to their lowest since 2016, but what’s different this time around is that this environment is leading to the lowest-priced start to the summer driving season in over 17 years,” said Patrick DeHaan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy. “Millions of Americans are struggling with job losses and while gas prices have rebounded slightly, the low-priced start to the summer may offer some respite from the dire economic conditions many are stuck in. With Americans reluctant to get on a plane or train for the holiday weekend, which is likely to continue throughout the summer, gas prices may slowly continue to rise, but prices will remain at a steep discount to last year to account for the situation: gasoline demand hasn’t been this low to start summer in decades, and gas prices reflect that situation.” 

According to Pay with GasBuddy, a free payments card that can save motorists up to 25 cents per gallon, demand has rebounded nearly 20% from lows reached in early April but remains nearly 30% below demand levels from a year ago. As summer progresses and the economy recovers, demand will likely continue to rise, leading to gas prices likely trending higher most of the summer, which is untypical. Gas prices normally peak in May or June before declining into late summer, contingent on no disruptions from hurricane season.

“I expect gas prices to continue rising, pending economic improvement and a reduction in COVID-19 cases. While forecasting gasoline prices this summer has been the most challenging of any year in GasBuddy’s 20-year history, I’m expecting a national average of $2.15-$2.35 for Independence Day and believe by Labor Day we’ll see a national average of $2.25-$2.50 per gallon,” DeHaan said.

Historical national average price per gallon on Memorial Day: 

 2001

 2002

 2003

 2004

 2005

 2006

 2007

 2008

 2009

 2010

 $1.74

 $1.36

 $1.46

 $2.02

 $2.07

 $2.83

 $3.19

 $3.92

 $2.41

 $2.70

 2011

 2012

 2013

 2014

 2015

 2016

 2017

 2018

 2019

 2020

 $3.78

 $3.64

 $3.63

 $3.66

 $2.75

 $2.33

 $2.37

 $2.97

 $2.83

 $1.93* 


*projected

About GasBuddy

For budget-minded drivers, GasBuddy is the travel and navigation app that is used by more North American drivers to save money on gas than any other. Unlike fuel retailer apps, as well as newer apps focused on fuel savings, GasBuddy covers 150,000+ gas stations in North America, giving drivers 27 ways to save on fuel. That’s why GasBuddy has been downloaded nearly 90mm times – more than any other travel and navigation app focused on gas savings. GasBuddy’s publishing and software businesses enable the world’s leading fuel, convenience, QSR and CPG companies to shorten the distance between the North American fueling public and their brands. For more information, visit https://www.gasbuddy.com.