Are Gasoline Prices Down-or Just Pausing Before A Move

Last Updated: Written by Sofia Mendes
are gasoline prices down as lng markets stay tight
are gasoline prices down as lng markets stay tight
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Yes, gasoline prices are down-but LNG markets remain tight through 2027

U.S. retail gasoline prices are down: the 2025 annual average was $3.10/gal, $0.21/gal lower than 2024, and the national average on May 28, 2026 was $4.42-down 12 cents from the prior week-amid falling crude oil prices and peace-talk optimism. Yet global LNG markets stay tight through 2027 due to Middle East disruptions that removed nearly 20% of supply and delayed new capacity, per the IEA's Q2 2026 gas report.

Gasoline price trend: three consecutive years of declines

According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), retail gasoline prices fell for the third straight year in 2025,着头 driven by lower crude oil prices from oversupply concerns and a weaker global economic outlook. The annual low hit $2.81/gal in late December 2025 as crack spreads declined. EIA's Short-Term Energy Outlook now forecasts retail U.S. gasoline prices will fall another 6% in 2026 before rising 1% in 2027.

are gasoline prices down as lng markets stay tight
are gasoline prices down as lng markets stay tight

Regionally, all U.S. regions saw lower average gasoline prices in 2025 versus 2024, with the East Coast-the largest gasoline-consuming region-down $0.25/gal. Crude oil remains the largest component of gasoline prices, so movements in benchmark oil directly shape pump trends.

LNG market tightness: Middle East crisis drives supply shock

Global LNG markets are in a supply shock: shipping disruptions via the Strait of Hormuz have effectively removed nearly 20% of global LNG supply since early March 2026, triggering sharp price spikes in Asia and Europe. The IEA expects tightness to persist through 2027 as new capacity is delayed and infrastructure damage in Qatar pushes back the next supply wave by at least two years.

Goldman Sachs estimated a production pause in Qatar cut near-term global LNG supply by about 19%, while Rabobank's senior energy strategist warned the market will be very tight for at least a month, possibly longer. A one-month halt in Hormuz flows could push TTF and JKM prices toward 74 euros ($85.80) per megawatt-hour, a level that previously triggered large natural gas demand responses during the 2022 European energy crisis.

Price comparison: gasoline vs. LNG benchmarks

Indicator Latest value Change vs. prior period Key driver
U.S. regular gasoline (AAA, May 28, 2026) $4.42/gal ↓ 12 cents week-over-week Lower crude on peace-talk optimism
U.S. gasoline annual average (EIA, 2025) $3.10/gal ↓ $0.21/gal vs. 2024 Lower crude oil prices
LNG annual low gasoline (EIA, Dec 2025) $2.81/gal Annual low Declining crack spreads
TTF / JKM (stress scenario, one-month Hormuz halt) 74 €/MWh ($85.80/MWh) Potential spike Supply shock from Hormuz closure
U.S. LNG rates (Henry Hub-linked) $2.58/MMBtu ↓ 5.18% Thursday Oversupply inventory report

What this means for LNG industry operators and investors

Executives and procurement teams should expect divergent trajectories: gasoline prices likely to ease further in 2026 on crude fundamentals, while LNG contracts face upward pressure from tightness and supply shortfalls through 2027. Strategic hedging, diversified supply contracts, and early locking of regasification capacity are rational responses to the IEA's outlook.

    Monitor Hormuz shipping status and Qatar infrastructure repair timelines, as these directly control near-term LNG supply.
  1. Track EIA Short-Term Energy Outlook updates for gasoline and crude oil forecasts, which shape refining margins and crack spreads.
  2. Stress-test LNG portfolios against a 74 €/MWh TTF/JKM scenario, which historically triggered large demand responses.
  • Gasoline: 3 consecutive years of nominal price declines (2023-2025), with 2025 at $3.10/gal.
  • LNG: ~20% of global supply removed since March 2026; tightness expected through 2027.
  • Qatar damage: next supply wave delayed ≥2 years, creating ~120 bcm shortfall 2026-2030.
"Ramping up production from its fields takes up to two weeks and in addition to energy flows not being able to pass, this means the LNG market will be very tight for at least a month (if not longer given the current state of attacks)." - Florence Schmit, senior energy strategist, Rabobank

Bottom line

Yes, gasoline prices are down on both annual and recent weekly bases, but this does not contradict persistently tight global LNG markets; the two markets are driven by distinct supply chains and shock exposures, with LNG facing a multiyear structural shortfall while gasoline benefits from softer crude and refining conditions.

Everything you need to know about Are Gasoline Prices Down As Lng Markets Stay Tight

What is the current national average gasoline price?

The AAA national average for regular gasoline was $4.42/gal on May 28, 2026, down 12 cents from the prior week, as crude oil prices eased on reports of peace talks with Iran.

Are gasoline prices down compared to last year?

Yes for 2025 versus 2024 (annual average down $0.21/gal), but the May 2026 weekly average is $1.38 higher than the same week last year at $4.56/gal in some reports, reflecting short-term volatility amid Middle East tensions.

Why are LNG markets tight while gasoline prices fall?

Gasoline prices track crude oil and refining margins, while LNG prices track natural gas liquefaction, shipping, and regasification fundamentals; the Middle East crisis directly disrupts LNG flows through Hormuz and Qatar infrastructure but has not yet overwhelmed global crude supply.

How long will LNG markets stay tight?

The IEA forecasts tightness through 2027 due to supply disruptions and delayed capacity; damage to liquefaction infrastructure in Qatar could create a cumulative shortfall of about 120 bcm between 2026 and 2030.

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Upstream Gas Strategist

Sofia Mendes

Sofia Mendes is a Lisbon-based upstream strategist specializing in gas supply development and LNG feedstock economics. She holds a Master's in Petroleum Geoscience from Imperial College London and spent a decade with BP and later Equinor, working on gas field development planning and reserve assessment.

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