May makes it four miserable months of price rises at the pumps
At 130.57p, a litre of petrol now costs 11p more than it did at the start of February. But with oil prices down at the end of May, does this signal some imminent price cuts?
At 130.57p, a litre of petrol now costs 11p more than it did at the start of February. But with oil prices down at the end of May, does this signal some imminent price cuts?
Third consecutive monthly increase in unleaded with a litre shooting up by 5.44p a litre, making a fill-up £3 more expensive
The average price of petrol rose for the second month in row, data from RAC Fuel Watch* shows.
After three consecutive months of pump price cuts both petrol and diesel went up in February. Petrol increases by nearly a penny a litre and diesel by more than a penny. Retailers instantly pass on slight wholesale price rise to drivers at the pumps
Data from RAC Fuel Watch shows that both petrol and diesel reduced by over a penny a litre in January, making it three consecutive months of falling fuel prices.
Pump prices fell for the second consecutive month in December, but not by the level they should have done considering the sharp drop in the price of oil, data from RAC Fuel Watch shows.
The RAC repeats its urgent call for a petrol price cut of at least 3p per litre, to reflect falling wholesale prices
With wholesale fuel prices falling, RAC fuel data indicates drivers should be benefiting from lower petrol prices
August saw yet another rise in the price of both petrol and diesel, new RAC Fuel Watch data reveals
RAC says ‘see-saw’ pricing continued in July with prices rising following a month of price cuts in June
Motorists benefited from falling fuel prices in June, but RAC data suggests the picture into July looks very uncertain
The RAC's Rod Dennis comments on reports that fuel retailers have started cutting petrol and diesel prices