About 27,000 results
Open links in new tab
  1. Gasoline - Wikipedia

    Gasoline (North American English) or petrol (Commonwealth English) is a petrochemical product characterized as a transparent, yellowish and flammable liquid normally used as a fuel for spark …

  2. Find The Nearest Gas Stations & Cheapest Prices - GasBuddy

    Search gas prices by city or zip code... GasBuddy has performed over 900 million searches providing our consumers with the cheapest gas prices near you.

  3. Gasoline | Definition, Uses, & Facts | Britannica

    Jan 14, 2026 · Gasoline, mixture of volatile, flammable liquid hydrocarbons derived from petroleum and used as fuel for internal-combustion engines. It is also used as a solvent for oils and …

  4. Types of Gasoline Explained: Learn the Differences

    Jan 9, 2026 · Learn about the different types of gasoline, the differences, which you should use, and get the information you need before you fill up.

  5. Gasoline explained - U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)

    Gasoline is a fuel made from crude oil and other petroleum liquids. Gasoline is mainly used in vehicle engines. Petroleum refineries and blending facilities produce finished motor gasoline for retail …

  6. AAA Fuel Prices

    1 day ago · Today’s AAA National Average $2.929 Price as of 2/16/26

  7. Gasoline Prices - FuelEconomy.gov

    Find the most efficient new and used vehicles with Find and Compare Cars. Find out how much you can save by improving your fuel economy using our fuel cost calculator.

  8. Average Price: Gasoline, All Types (Cost per Gallon/3.785 Liters

    Jan 13, 2026 · Graph and download economic data for Average Price: Gasoline, All Types (Cost per Gallon/3.785 Liters) in U.S. City Average (APU00007471A) from Jan 1978 to Dec 2025 about …

  9. RBOB Gasoline Spot Price Chart - Markets Insider

    6 days ago · RBOB Gasoline Price: Get all information on the Price of RBOB Gasoline including News, Charts and Realtime Quotes.

  10. What is gasoline? - How Gasoline Works | HowStuffWorks

    When you burn gasoline under ideal conditions, with plenty of oxygen, you get carbon dioxide (from the carbon atoms in gasoline), water (from the hydrogen atoms) and lots of heat.