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Driving further for cheaper gas is worth it only when the total dollar savings from the fill-up exceed the fuel cost of the detour. That calculation depends on three variables: how much cheaper the distant station is per gallon, how many gallons you are buying, and how many extra miles the detour adds to your trip.
In most real-world scenarios, a five-cent-per-gallon price difference only justifies a detour of one mile or less. A twenty-cent difference can justify up to four miles of extra driving for a typical tank. Beyond those thresholds, you are spending more on the detour than you are saving at the pump.
This guide gives you that math in full, walks through the break-even formula with real examples across different vehicle types and price scenarios, and builds a practical decision framework you can apply at any intersection where a cheaper station sign is tempting you off your route.
Why Most Drivers Overestimate Detour Savings
The human brain is wired to respond to visible price differences. A sign showing $3.59 per gallon when you have been paying $3.79 registers as a twenty-cent saving, and twenty cents feels meaningful. What the brain does not automatically calculate is how much of that twenty cents evaporates in the fuel burned driving to the cheaper station and back to your route.
This is the detour savings illusion. The price difference is real. But the net saving after accounting for detour fuel cost is almost always smaller than it appears, and in many cases is negative. The illusion is compounded by the fact that most drivers do not know their vehicle’s true cost per mile.
Read: How to Get Cheap Gas
The One Number You Need Before Any Fill-Up Decision
Your fuel cost per mile is calculated with a simple formula:
Fuel cost per mile = Current gas price divided by your vehicle’s MPG
At $3.80 per gallon with a vehicle getting 28 miles per gallon, your fuel cost per mile is $0.136, or approximately 13.6 cents per mile.
At $4.50 per gallon with a vehicle getting 20 miles per gallon, your fuel cost per mile is $0.225, or 22.5 cents per mile.
This number changes every time gas prices move and differs significantly between a fuel-efficient compact and a full-size truck. Knowing your current fuel cost per mile turns every detour decision into a straightforward comparison rather than a guessing game.
The Break-Even Formula
The break-even formula answers a single question: how much do I save at the cheaper station, and does that saving exceed the cost of the detour in fuel?
Step 1: Calculate your gross savings at the cheaper station.n Multiply the price difference per gallon by the number of gallons you plan to purchase.
Gross saving = (price at the cheap station subtracted from the price at the nearby station) multiplied by the gallons purchased.
Step 2: Calculate the detour’s fuel cost. Multiply the total extra miles added by the detour (both directions if you need to return to your route) by your fuel cost per mile.
Detour fuel cost = Extra miles multiplied by (gas price divided by MPG)
Step 3: Calculate your net savings. Subtract the detour fuel cost from your gross saving. If the result is positive, the detour is worth it. If it is negative, staying at your original station saves you money.
Net saving = Gross saving minus Detour fuel cost

How Vehicle Efficiency Changes the Math
The break-even distance calculation changes significantly depending on your vehicle’s fuel efficiency. A more fuel-efficient vehicle costs less per mile to drive, meaning the detour is cheaper, and the break-even distance is longer. A less efficient vehicle burns more fuel on the detour, which eats into the price-difference saving faster.
Here is the same scenario (ten-cent price difference, 14-gallon fill-up, $1.40 gross saving) across different vehicle efficiencies at $3.80 per gallon:
| Vehicle Type | Approx MPG | Fuel Cost Per Mile | Break-Even Distance |
| Full-size truck or SUV | 15 MPG | $0.253/mile | 5.5 miles round trip |
| Midsize sedan or crossover | 28 MPG | $0.136/mile | 10.3 miles round trip |
| Compact or hybrid | 40 MPG | $0.095/mile | 14.7 miles round trip |
| Hybrid or EV range extender | 50 MPG | $0.076/mile | 18.4 miles round trip |
The truck driver who sees a 10-cent price difference should not drive more than about 5.5 round-trip miles to save that much. The hybrid driver with the same 10-cent difference can justifiably drive nearly three times as far for the same gross saving, because each mile of detour costs them so much less.
If you drive a fuel-inefficient vehicle, the conventional wisdom of “always go to the cheaper station” can cost you money when the cheaper station requires a meaningful detour. This is counterintuitive but arithmetically unavoidable.
Read: Route Optimization Tips That Save Gig Drivers $50+ a Month on Gas
The Time Cost Variable Most Drivers Ignore
The break-even formula covers fuel cost but not time cost. For most commuters and leisure drivers, the time cost of a short detour is negligible. For gig workers, freelancers, or anyone whose income depends on their driving time, the time variable changes the calculation meaningfully.
To incorporate time cost, estimate your time rate per minute and add it to the detour fuel cost.
Full detour cost = Detour fuel cost plus (detour minutes multiplied by your hourly rate divided by 60)
For a gig driver earning an effective rate of $20 per hour, a ten-minute detour adds $3.33 to the cost, on top of the fuel burned. A twenty-five-cent price difference on a nine-gallon fill-up saves $2.25 in fuel. After the 10-minute time cost is applied, the detour results in a net loss of $1.08, even before the detour fuel cost is calculated.
For gig workers and anyone earning income while driving, the time cost of detours is frequently the factor that makes even apparently attractive price differences not worth pursuing during working hours.
A Practical Decision Framework for Every Fill-Up
Rather than running the full formula at every intersection, here is a simplified decision framework that covers the most common scenarios:
If the price difference is under five cents per gallon, the detour is rarely worth it unless the cheaper station is literally on your route with no extra driving required. At five cents per 14 gallons, you are working with 70 cents of gross savings. A one-mile round-trip detour in an average vehicle costs approximately fifteen to twenty-five cents. The margin is too thin to justify any meaningful detour.
If the price difference is 5 to 15 cents per gallon, the detour is worth it if the cheaper station is within 2 to 4 miles round-trip. Beyond that range, the numbers typically do not support the trip. On-route stations at this price difference are always worth choosing.
If the price difference is 15 to 30 cents per gallon, a detour of 8 to 15 miles round-trip is mathematically justified for a typical tank fill in an average-efficiency vehicle. This is the range where detours genuinely pay off and are worth planning around.
If the price difference exceeds 30 cents per gallon, it is significant enough to justify a meaningful detour. Prices this far apart in the same local market are relatively rare but do occur during supply disruptions, regional refinery issues, or when a wholesale club station is nearby. In these scenarios, planning to drive specifically to the cheaper station is worth it.
How Beem Helps You Make Smarter Fuel Decisions
BudgetGPT: Understand What Fuel Is Costing Your Household
BudgetGPT analyzes your spending patterns to surface insights about where your money goes. For households where fuel is a significant monthly expense, understanding the exact dollar impact of fuel costs provides a foundation for evaluating detour decisions in the context of your full financial picture rather than in isolation.
Everdraft™: Bridge the Gap When Prices Spike
When a regional price spike creates a genuine cash flow gap before your next deposit, Beem’s Everdraft™ provides cash advances of up to $1,000 with no interest charged and no credit check required. For commuters and gig drivers whose budgets are directly tied to fuel costs, it provides a zero-interest bridge without the cost of high-interest borrowing.
Conclusion
The question is never just “Is that station cheaper?” It is “Is that station cheap enough to justify the distance?” Those are different questions with different answers, and the math that separates them takes less than a minute to run once you know your vehicle’s fuel cost per mile.
In most scenarios involving price differences of less than 15 cents per gallon, detours of more than a few miles result in a net loss rather than a net saving. The drivers who consistently come out ahead are the ones who know their numbers, map the cheapest on-route stations in their regular driving area, and reserve detours for the genuinely large price differences that make the extra miles worth it.
Beem’s PriceGPT supports exactly that kind of informed decision-making, and when fuel costs create a short-term cash flow gap regardless of your strategy, Everdraft™ keeps you moving with zero interest and no credit check required. Download the app now!
People Also Ask: Is Driving Further for Cheaper Gas Worth It?
1. Is it worth driving further for cheaper gas?
It depends on the price difference, how many gallons you are buying, and how far out of your way the cheaper station is. Divide your gross savings (price difference multiplied by gallons) by your fuel cost per mile (gas price divided by MPG) to find your break-even distance. Any detour shorter than that distance produces a net saving. Any detour costs more than what you save at the pump.
2. How do I calculate whether a cheaper gas station is worth the detour?
Calculate your gross savings by multiplying the price difference per gallon by the number of gallons you plan to buy. Calculate your detour fuel cost by multiplying extra round-trip miles by your fuel cost per mile. Subtract detour fuel cost from gross saving. A positive result means the detour saves money. A negative result means staying at your original station is cheaper, despite the higher posted price.
3. How far is too far to drive for cheaper gas?
For a five-cent price difference on a 14-gallon fill-up in an average-efficiency vehicle, the break-even distance is approximately 5 miles round-trip. For a twenty-cent difference on the same fill-up, it adds roughly twenty miles round-trip. The smaller the price difference and the less fuel-efficient your vehicle, the shorter the distance that justifies a detour.
4. Does my vehicle’s MPG affect whether a gas detour is worth it?
Yes, significantly. A more fuel-efficient vehicle costs less per mile to drive, making detours cheaper and the break-even distance longer. A truck or SUV getting 15 MPG burns through detour savings three times faster than a hybrid getting 45 MPG for the same price difference and fill-up size.
5. What if the cheaper gas station is on my regular route?
If the cheaper station is on your existing route with no extra miles required, the detour calculation is irrelevant. Your detour distance is zero, your detour fuel cost is zero, and the entire price difference is a pure saving.








































