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Planning Fuel Cost for a Trip
Before a road trip, the first question is usually how much gas will cost. The answer comes from three numbers: how far you are going, how many miles per gallon your vehicle returns, and what fuel costs along the way. This tool combines them into a clear trip cost, plus the cost per mile so you can compare routes or vehicles.
Why Real Mileage Runs Lower
The mpg on the window sticker is measured under ideal conditions. On a real trip, mountain grades, headwinds, roof racks, a full load of passengers and luggage, and running the air conditioning all pull your economy down. For a long drive it is wise to plan with a slightly lower mpg than the rating to avoid an underestimate.
Splitting Gas Fairly
On a shared road trip, splitting fuel evenly is the friendly thing to do. The helper takes the round-trip cost and divides it among everyone, so each person knows exactly what they owe without anyone doing mental math at the pump.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I use city or highway mpg?
Use the figure that matches your route. Mostly-highway trips can use the highway rating, but mixed driving or heavy loads fall closer to the combined or city number.
How do I account for price changes en route?
Use an average expected price, or check the price table to see how the total shifts if fuel is more expensive than planned along the way.
Does a roof box really matter?
Yes. A loaded roof box can cut highway economy noticeably from aerodynamic drag, sometimes by ten percent or more at speed.
