Fuel Prices in Sierra Leone: What Drivers Pay at the Pump
As of the latest data, petrol (gasoline) in Sierra Leone costs about $1.779 per litre, which works out to roughly $6.73 per US gallon. In the local currency that is around 43,985 SLL per litre. Diesel sits a little higher at $2.033 per litre. For a low-income West African nation, those are surprisingly elevated numbers, placing Sierra Leone at rank 126 out of 170 countries surveyed and comfortably above the world average of $1.484 per litre.

Why Sierra Leone's Pump Prices Are So High
The single biggest reason is simple: Sierra Leone produces no crude oil of its own. Every litre of petrol and diesel sold in Freetown, Bo, Kenema or Makeni arrives by tanker, refined abroad and paid for in US dollars. That import dependence makes the country acutely exposed to two forces it cannot control — the global price of refined product and the exchange rate of the Sierra Leonean leone.
The leone has been one of the region's weaker currencies, and a 2022 redenomination (knocking three zeros off the old notes) did nothing to halt the underlying depreciation. When the leone loses ground against the dollar, the dollar-denominated import bill is passed straight through to motorists. This is why a poor country can still post prices well above wealthier oil importers — the currency, not the wage level, drives the number on the pump. It is a pattern shared by other import-reliant African economies; compare Sierra Leone with the landlocked Central African Republic, where transport costs inflate prices even further.
Taxes, Subsidies and Government Policy
Pump prices in Sierra Leone are not set freely by the market. The Petroleum Regulatory Agency publishes a regulated maximum retail price, periodically adjusted to reflect import costs and the exchange rate. Built into that price is an excise component and other levies that fund road maintenance and the national budget — fuel duty is one of the easier taxes for the government to collect.
For years Sierra Leone cushioned consumers with subsidies, but like many countries facing fiscal pressure and IMF programmes, it has gradually allowed prices to track real import costs more closely. Each upward adjustment is politically sensitive, since fuel feeds directly into the cost of public transport, generator-powered electricity and food prices. Diesel deserves special mention: with grid power unreliable, many homes and businesses run diesel generators, so the $2.033-per-litre diesel price ripples through almost every sector of the economy.
How Sierra Leone Compares Globally
At $1.779 per litre, Sierra Leone is far cheaper than high-tax European markets — Scandinavian drivers in Sweden routinely pay more thanks to steep environmental levies. But it is noticeably pricier than parts of Southeast Asia such as Laos, and roughly in the same band as small European states like Montenegro. The lesson is that an oil importer's pump price has less to do with national income and more to do with taxes, logistics and currency strength. You can see the full picture on our world fuel prices table.

FAQ
How much does fuel cost in Sierra Leone right now?
Petrol costs about $1.779 per litre (roughly $6.73 per US gallon, or around 43,985 SLL per litre), while diesel is approximately $2.033 per litre at the pump.
Why is fuel expensive in Sierra Leone if it's a poor country?
Sierra Leone imports all of its fuel and pays in US dollars. A weak leone exchange rate, import logistics costs and fuel taxes push prices above the global average of $1.484 per litre, regardless of local incomes.
Does the government control petrol prices in Sierra Leone?
Yes. The Petroleum Regulatory Agency sets a regulated maximum retail price that is adjusted periodically to reflect international product costs and the leone-to-dollar exchange rate.
