In 1965, you could buy a gallon of gas with a few dimes. So, it was entirely possible to find what you needed for your evening commute by digging around in the bench seat of your sedan. Compared to today's fuel prices, that may seem like a fantasy.
But it's not the whole picture, as we've seen fuel prices jump up and down during pivotal moments in the U.S. and global economies. You also have to account for recessions and inflation, with some years comparatively more expensive than others.
Curious about what the cost of gas was on your birthday? Scroll to the decade you were born in to compare what your parents might have paid to today's prices, and see how past generations withstood economic downturns when costs rose.
How we calculated "your" gas price
Rather than using anecdotes like "I remember when a whole tank of gas cost a penny," we're sharing actual data from the U.S. Government's Department of Energy and U.S. Energy Information Association (EIA). These prices are the national annual average, so they blend prices from California and Nebraska.
We also adjusted for inflation, which can play a key role in how you perceive "cheap" or "bad" fuel costs. These nominal prices also include state and local fuel taxes, which vary widely by location.
If you were born in the 60s to early 70s
Cost per gallon: $0.30-$0.39
Adjusted for inflation: $2.87-$3.20
During this time, cars often didn't have seatbelts, and mandatory car seats were a thing of the future. The U.S. domestic production was higher, and global demand was lower. The nation had not yet experienced a modern oil supply crisis.
As a result, fuel hovered around the same price until the mid-1970s, making it relatively affordable to fuel up even those big luxury sedans. This time also marked one of the most stable price periods in history. There was little fluctuation.
Born in the mid-70s to early 80s
Cost per gallon: $0.53-$1.35
Adjusted for inflation: $3.51-$4.85
This period marked a big shift in economic pressure, including the 1973-74 oil embargo. Major exporters cut supplies to the U.S., pushing gas prices higher very quickly. Add in the Iran crisis and the 1979 revolution, and you had a second spike doubling prices again compared to the early 1970s.
Fuel prices climbed to over $1 a gallon by 1980. If you were born around 1979 or 1980, your parents may remember waiting in fuel lines to fuel up their wood-paneled station wagon. They saw signs flip past $1.00 a gallon for the first time ever.
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Born in the late 80s and 90s
Cost per gallon: $0.96-$1.19
Adjusted for inflation: $2.42-$2.76
After the early 1980s peak, oil markets loosened, and production rose. That caused prices to come down in real terms, to bounce around a $1.00 a gallon through much of the 80s and 90s. Adjusted to today's dollars, this shows up as some of the cheapest gas on record, with real prices below today's levels.
Nostalgic adults remember this as the "buck and some change" era for fuel prices. It felt cheap because, compared to other products, it was.
Born in the 2000s and 2010s
Cost per gallon: $1.31-$3.55
Adjusted for inflation: $2.38-$5.06
This era marked the end of cheap gas, with prices beginning a sustained climb around the early 2000s. Global demand from emerging economies rose faster than supply, and some geopolitical tensions added more uncertainty to the mix.
We also saw repeated hurricanes, Middle East tensions, and the 2008 oil run-up, which pushed gas over $3 a gallon at various points.
Converting these costs to today's prices, gas looked fairly expensive for the time. But if you were born between 2000 and 2015, you entered the world during its "multi-dollar" era, so you never knew what gas under $1 looked like.
Born in the 2020s
Cost per gallon: $2.07-$3.80
Adjusted for inflation: $2.61-$4.25
In 2020, we had the pandemic lockdowns, with many people staying home from work and travel. This collapse in demand for fuel pushed prices to some of the lowest levels in years (even after inflation adjustment).
When the economy reopened, demand surged, and the Russia-Ukraine conflict disrupted the global energy market. These factors caused gas prices to surge to over $5 a gallon nationwide in 2022, one of the highest real prices on record.
Bottom line
Today, we see EIA and CPI-based estimates averaging $3.50 per gallon for 2026 so far. It's lower than the 2022 spike, making it feel almost reasonable for many.
You may feel a bit tense when filling up at the pump, and for good reason. Fuel is a significant household expense, and pricing fluctuations can affect our budgets in unpredictable ways.
Beyond adding a little extra to the budget for "just in case" scenarios, it may help to look at other areas to cut costs. Whether you shop around to save on car insurance, carpool with a friend, or consolidate those trips to the grocery store, there's usually more than a few ways to trim during those high-fuel cost months.
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