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Fuel prices in Monaco

Petrol in Monaco costs about $2.305/litre (€2.02), ~$8.73/gal. See why taxes, the euro, and a captive market make fuel so expensive.
$2.305Gasoline · USD / litre
€2.02Gasoline · Local / litre
$8.73Gasoline · USD / gallon
$2.180Diesel · USD / litre
#159World rank of 170
55% above the world averagevs world average

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How Monaco compares

CountryGasoline (per litre)USD/gal
🇲🇨 Monaco$2.305$8.73
World average (gasoline)$1.484$5.62
🇱🇾 Libya (Cheapest gasoline)$0.023$0.09
🇭🇰 Hong Kong (Most expensive gasoline)$4.073$15.42

Gasoline price trend in Monaco

Reliable price history isn't available for Monaco from our data sources yet. We track its pump prices weekly from 22-Jun-2026, so this chart will fill in over time.

Compare neighbouring countries

Fuel Prices in Monaco: What You Pay at the Pump

Monaco is one of the most expensive places on the planet to fill a tank. A litre of petrol in the principality runs about $2.305 (roughly €2.02 at local pumps), which works out to around $8.73 per US gallon. Diesel is only slightly cheaper at about $2.18 per litre. Against a world average of $1.484 per litre, Monaco sits firmly in the priciest tier — ranked 159th out of 170 countries, where a higher rank number means higher prices.

Monaco fuel prices — illustration

Why Monaco's Fuel Is So Expensive

Monaco produces no oil of its own. Every drop of petrol and diesel sold in the principality is imported, and in practice that supply chain runs straight through neighboring France. Monaco shares a customs union and a common excise framework with France, so the fuel taxes baked into a Monégasque pump price largely mirror French duty levels — and France carries some of the heaviest fuel taxation in Europe.

Those taxes are the single biggest reason a litre costs more than $2.30. Across Western Europe, excise duties plus value-added tax routinely make up well over half of the retail price. The actual crude and refining cost is a minority share; the rest is government levy. Because Monaco aligns its indirect taxation with France, drivers here effectively pay French-style fuel duty even though the territory is one of the wealthiest per-capita places on Earth.

The Euro, Density, and a Captive Market

Monaco uses the euro, so the dollar figures quoted above move with the EUR/USD exchange rate. When the euro strengthens against the dollar, the headline USD price rises even if the local euro price at the pump is unchanged. That currency effect explains part of why a €2.02 litre converts to a steep $2.305.

Geography matters too. Monaco is roughly two square kilometres of dense, vertical urban space wedged against the Mediterranean. There is little room for high-volume service stations, competition between sellers is thin, and operating costs (land, labor, logistics) are extreme. A handful of stations serving an affluent, low-price-sensitivity clientele have little incentive to discount. The result is a captive market where prices stay near the top of the regional band.

How Monaco Compares to Its Neighbors

Monaco's pricing tracks closely with the broader European pattern of high-tax fuel. It is similar to or above neighboring France, and noticeably costlier than markets where taxes are lighter or subsidies exist. Greece, another heavily taxed Mediterranean market, shows how excise policy keeps the whole region elevated. Switzerland, just up the road through the Alps, is another expensive non-oil-producing economy worth comparing. Even far-flung French territories like Mayotte illustrate how French tax structures travel with the flag. For the full picture, browse all world fuel prices.

The Trend

No reliable historical low/high series is available for Monaco specifically, so its long-run trend is best read through France, with which it is fiscally fused. As long as French excise duty and euro-area VAT stay where they are, expect Monaco's pump prices to remain among the highest in Europe, drifting mainly with crude markets and the EUR/USD rate rather than with any local policy change.

Monaco fuel prices trends — illustration

FAQ

How much does gas cost in Monaco?

About $2.305 per litre for petrol and $2.18 per litre for diesel, which is roughly €2.02 locally and around $8.73 per US gallon. That makes Monaco one of the most expensive fuel markets in the world.

Why is fuel so expensive in Monaco?

Monaco imports all its fuel through France and shares France's high excise and VAT framework. Heavy fuel taxes, a tiny captive market with little price competition, and the euro-to-dollar exchange rate all push prices well above the $1.484 global average.

Is petrol cheaper in France than in Monaco?

The two are closely aligned because they share a customs and tax framework, so prices are similar. Day to day either can edge ahead depending on station and brand. Compare current figures on our France fuel prices page.