Gas Prices in Idaho: What's Behind the Pump Cost
Idaho drivers are currently paying about $4.126 for a gallon of regular gasoline, with mid-grade at $4.448 and premium at $4.694. Diesel sits higher at $4.79 per gallon. Those numbers put the Gem State noticeably above the US national average of roughly $3.867 for regular, a gap of about 26 cents that surprises a lot of residents who think of Idaho as a low-cost place to live.

Across the state's seven major metro areas, prices are tracked at retail pumps in cities like Boise, Nampa, Idaho Falls, Pocatello, Coeur d'Alene, Twin Falls, and Lewiston. The spread between the cheapest and most expensive corners of Idaho can be wide because of how far some communities sit from supply terminals.
Why Idaho Pays More Than the National Average
The biggest single reason is geography. Idaho has no oil refineries of its own. Nearly all of its gasoline arrives by pipeline and truck from refineries in Salt Lake City, Utah, and from the Pacific Northwest. That dependence on a small number of distant supply points means that whenever a refinery in the region has a maintenance turnaround or an unexpected outage, Idaho prices spike fast and stay elevated longer than in coastal states with deeper supply.
Taxes add a steady, predictable layer on top. Idaho levies a state excise tax of 32 cents per gallon on gasoline and diesel, plus a 1-cent-per-gallon transfer fee that funds petroleum cleanup programs. Stack the federal excise tax of 18.4 cents per gallon (24.4 cents on diesel) on top, and well over 50 cents of every gallon is tax before the fuel itself is even priced. Unlike some states, Idaho does not add a separate general sales tax at the pump, which keeps it from climbing as high as heavily taxed states.
Idaho is a net fuel importer in every practical sense. It produces no meaningful crude oil and refines none, so it is fully exposed to wholesale market swings without the cushion of local production. Because all prices here are quoted and paid in US dollars, there is no currency conversion to worry about, unlike cross-border markets.
How Idaho Compares to Other States
Idaho's pump prices land in an interesting middle tier. It is more expensive than many Midwestern and Southern states but well below the West Coast. Compare it with Michigan, where prices swing on summer-blend rules, or with high-tax, high-demand markets like New York and Illinois, where layered state and local taxes push costs up. Even the District of Columbia tells a different story driven by dense urban demand. Idaho's relatively high number despite modest taxes underscores just how much logistics and refinery access matter.
The Seasonal and Trend Picture
Idaho prices follow a familiar rhythm: they climb through spring as refineries switch to summer-blend fuel and travel demand rises ahead of the busy national-park and outdoor-recreation season, then ease in autumn. The current reading above $4 reflects the typical early-summer peak. Diesel at $4.79 stays stubbornly high year-round because Idaho's agriculture and freight sectors lean heavily on it, and diesel tracks global distillate demand more than gasoline does.
For drivers, the practical takeaways are simple. Filling up in larger metros like Boise usually beats prices in remote mountain towns, premium fuel rarely benefits engines built for regular, and timing fill-ups earlier in the week often shaves a few cents. Keeping an eye on Salt Lake City refinery news is the single best predictor of where Idaho prices head next.

FAQ
Why is gas so expensive in Idaho?
Idaho has no in-state refineries and imports all of its fuel by pipeline and truck from Salt Lake City and the Pacific Northwest. That dependence on distant supply, plus shipping distance to remote towns, pushes prices above the national average even though Idaho's fuel taxes are moderate.
How much is a gallon of regular gas in Idaho right now?
Regular unleaded averages about $4.126 per gallon statewide. Mid-grade runs around $4.448, premium about $4.694, and diesel approximately $4.79. Prices vary across Idaho's seven metro areas, with Boise and other larger cities typically cheaper than remote locations.
What is the gas tax in Idaho?
Idaho charges a state excise tax of 32 cents per gallon on gasoline and diesel, plus a 1-cent transfer fee. Adding the federal tax of 18.4 cents on gasoline (24.4 cents on diesel) means total taxes exceed 50 cents per gallon, though Idaho applies no extra sales tax at the pump.
