Updated April 5, 2026 — Prices updated regularly from EIA data
$3.27
Average Regular Unleaded — Jersey City, New Jersey
Current Gas Prices in Jersey City
Gas in Jersey City, New Jersey is averaging $$3.27 per gallon as of {month} {year}. Whether you drive a truck, sedan, or SUV, finding the best Jersey City gas prices can save you hundreds annually.
Fuel Type
Price / Gallon
Grade
Trend
Regular Unleaded
$3.27
87 octane
▲ Rising
Mid-Grade
$3.78
89 octane
▲ Rising
Premium
$4.08
91-93 octane
▲ Rising
Diesel
$4.43
N/A
▲ Rising
Price Comparison
Jersey City Average
$3.27
Regular Unleaded
New Jersey State Average
$3.36
$0.09 below the New Jersey average
National Average
$3.99
$0.72 below the national average
About Gas Prices in Jersey City
Jersey City's competitive fuel landscape includes stations from virtually every major brand. National chains operate alongside local independents, creating genuine price competition. Use GasBuddy or a similar app to see real-time Jersey City prices — the map view typically reveals clusters of low-priced stations that aren't obvious from the road.
Gas Prices by Brand in This City
Estimated prices based on brand modifiers. Sorted cheapest to most expensive.
At today's Jersey City average of $$3.27 per gallon, a standard 13-gallon sedan tank costs ${fillCost} to fill. A larger 20-gallon SUV or truck tank runs ${truckFill}. Choosing the cheapest local station can save $3-5 on each fill-up.
Monday and Tuesday are statistically the cheapest days to buy gas in most US cities including Jersey City. Prices rise Thursday through Sunday as weekend driving demand increases. Filling up Tuesday afternoon before price adjustments is a reliable strategy.
Jersey City and surrounding cities typically track similar fuel prices given shared supply infrastructure. Differences of 5-15 cents between nearby cities are common depending on local tax differences and competition levels.
A 10-cent savings on 15 gallons equals $1.50. If the cheaper station is 5 miles away and your car gets 25 MPG, the detour costs about 0.4 gallons. Savings above 15 cents per gallon are consistently worth moderate detours.
Most states have price gouging statutes that activate during declared emergencies. Outside of emergency declarations, gas stations set prices based on market conditions. Normal price variation between stations is competition, not gouging.