The US has an enormous, varied fuel network. Common brands include Shell, ExxonMobil, BP, Chevron, Marathon, Circle K, Sunoco and many regional players, plus warehouse clubs like Costco and supermarket fuel that are often cheapest. Prices vary widely by state because of differing taxes.

Gasoline is sold by AON octane — regular (87), mid-grade (89) and premium (91–93) — and diesel is widely available on interstate and trucking routes. EV charging is expanding fast, led by Tesla's network (now opening to other brands via NACS) alongside CCS providers.

What you'll find at the pump

Regular (87), mid-grade (89), premium (91–93) gasoline and diesel. Warehouse-club and supermarket stations are frequently the cheapest; interstate travel plazas are convenient for diesel and long stops.

EV charging in United States

Both NACS (Tesla) and CCS matter in the US. Filter by your connector — many non-Tesla EVs can now use parts of the Tesla network with an adapter. DC coverage is strongest along interstates and in metro areas.

Prices are added when reported by drivers or verified sources, always with a timestamp. Refuelia never shows invented numbers — where data isn't available yet, it says so. See United States on the map →

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