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According to AAA, the highest average gas price in the United States in June 2022 was $5.02 per gallon. A big move in the oil markets tonight suggests that this record will soon be broken.
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Americans at the pump are about to have a rude awakening. We publish all day how bad Oil prices could gain, and oil futures just opened to a historic high.
Widely followed WTI crude oil futures rose from $72 a barrel earlier last week to $108 a barrel tonight. This is especially noteworthy since they closed at $90.90 on Friday. Big picture for customers: The pain at the pump increases over the following weeks.
Let’s see how painful it can be.
The national average for regular gas currently sits at $3.45 per gallon, according to AAA as of March 8, 2026.
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This number seems like a distant memory. The main reason is the Iran conflict and the threat of supply through the Strait of Hormuz, which is one of the most important oil destinations in the world.
We’re monitoring the situation live 24/7 on Wall St., and you can follow along here.
But here’s what’s going on.
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Oil futures don’t start trading until 6pm on Sunday. When they opened tonight, they were up 18%. WTI futures are now trading for around $108 per barrel.
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That’s a big jump from Friday, about 18%.
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That jump—if it holds through tomorrow—will lead to a big selloff in the stock market.
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However, a bigger issue for many Americans is that rising oil prices will only get worse. The average price per gallon across the US as of March 8 was $3.45. That’s already a 16% jump over the past week. However, what consumers pay at the pump is generally what financial markets lag behind.
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If the jump in oil prices continues tonight, it will lead to potentially historic gas prices next week.
The all-time record national average gas price, per AAA, is $5.02 per gallon, set on June 14, 2022. If oil prices are close to current levels, then this record is squarely in the crosshairs.
California is already showing us what’s happening: The state average has reached $5.159 per gallon, as detailed in this companion piece on California gas prices.
Consumer sentiment was already fragile towards this shock. The University of Michigan index sat at just 56.4 in January 2026, dangerously close to recession territory. The constant increase in gas prices is exactly the kind of gut punch that pushes stressed consumers over the edge.






