Trump Says Gas Should Cost $2.50: Here's Why It Doesn't
President Trump has taken to Truth Social to call for lower gas prices, and this time the demand came with a number attached. According to AAA, the national average currently sits at $3.85 a gallon, itself a step down from highs reached during the Israel-Iran conflict, of over $4.50. That's not good enough for the president. He wants gas stations to drop prices to around $2.50, and he wants it done immediately, emphasizing the demand in all capital letters on Truth Social.
The Math Behind the Demand
Trump's argument is straightforward. Crude oil prices have fallen sharply since June's spike, so he believes gasoline prices should have followed. He's pointed to a $68 a barrel figure as his benchmark, though WTI crude was actually trading a touch higher at the time, around $70.64. In his view, retailers are holding onto wider-than-normal margins instead of passing lower wholesale costs on to consumers. He called it price gouging and promised retailers "big problems" if they don't fall in line.
There's a catch, though, and oil analysts have been quick to point it out. Crude and gasoline are related, sure, but they trade on different rhythms. Refiners typically purchase crude weeks before it's processed into gasoline, meaning lower oil prices don't instantly translate into cheaper fuel. Further, crude oil typically accounts for roughly half the price of a gallon of gasoline, with refining, transportation, distribution, and taxes making up the rest.
According to analysts, reaching a national average near $2.50 would likely require crude oil prices to fall substantially further, refining margins to compress, and state fuel taxes to remain low. While some regions occasionally dip below that figure, a nationwide average at that level would represent one of the cheapest periods for gasoline in years.
California Gets Singled Out Too
Trump didn't stop at retailers. He also took aim at California, where taxes and environmental charges make up roughly a fifth of the pump price, pushing the state average to $5.43, third highest in the country, according to AAA. He warned that taxes could soon cost more than the fuel itself. For now, crude prices, refining margins, and state taxes remain far bigger drivers of pump prices than political pressure.
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This story was originally published July 1, 2026 at 6:58 PM.