Week commencing 13 July 2026 · report in progress

Petrol rises 0.2p and diesel 0.1p in a week

UK fuel price report for the week commencing 13 July 2026: average petrol and diesel prices, the biggest cuts and rises, and how the oil market is shaping what you pay at the pump.

Published 13 July 2026 · FuelCosts.co.uk analysis of UK Government Fuel Finder data

The average price of petrol (E10) across UK forecourts was 151.9p per litre in the week commencing 13 July 2026, up 0.2p on the week before, while diesel averaged 165.3p per litre, 0.1p more expensive than the previous week.

Among the pricier grades, drivers paid an average of super unleaded at 168.1p (down 0.8p week on week) and premium diesel at 184.3p (down 0.9p week on week).

What it means for a full tank

At this week's average prices, filling a typical 55-litre family car with petrol cost around £83.55, about 11p more than a week earlier. The same fill with diesel came to around £90.92, about 6p more than a week earlier. Shopping around matters just as much as the national trend: with the cheapest local forecourt often several pence below the average, the same tank can cost £2–3 less a few streets away.

About these figures

Figures are calculated from daily UK-wide price observations reported to the Government's Fuel Finder scheme by stations that updated their prices during the week. Because forecourt prices vary widely within any town, the cheapest local station is often several pence below these averages.

At its peak, 1,146 forecourts contributed petrol prices on a single day during the week. Oil prices are Brent crude spot prices published by the US Energy Information Administration.

The numbers

Petrol (E10) averaged 151.9p per litre and rose 0.2p on the week before. Diesel averaged 165.3p per litre and rose 0.1p on the week before.

UK average prices
Petrol (E10)
151.9p+0.2p
Diesel (B7)
165.3p+0.1p
Super Unleaded (E5)
168.1p-0.8p
Premium Diesel
184.3p-0.9p

Find the cheapest fuel near you with our postcode search, see today's biggest price drops, or learn why supermarket fuel is cheaper. Journalists are welcome to cite these figures with a link to FuelCosts.co.uk.

Petrol rises 0.2p and diesel 0.1p in a week — Week commencing 13 July 2026 | FuelCosts.co.uk