Air travel and road travel run on refined products of the same crude oil, and in 2026 both have been squeezed by the same supply shock. Yet the way fuel costs move through an airline’s income statement looks almost nothing like the way they hit a household’s monthly budget. Understanding that divergence explains why a gasoline spike and a jet-fuel spike, though driven by one barrel of oil, produce very different economic consequences.
The Per-Passenger Efficiency Picture
On a per-passenger basis, modern commercial flying is more fuel-efficient than many assume. A domestic U.S. airliner averages roughly 51 passenger-miles per gallon, and long-haul widebodies can reach 80 to 100 passenger-miles per gallon when filled near capacity. The average U.S. car, by contrast, returns about 22 to 25 miles per gallon, which at the typical national occupancy of around 1.5 people works out to a per-passenger figure in the mid-30s.
That math has held for more than a decade: research from the University of Michigan found that commercial flying overtook average driving on energy use per passenger-mile years ago. The swing variables are occupancy and trip length. A solo driver in a pickup loses badly to a full widebody, while a minivan carrying seven people beats almost any aircraft. The International Council on Clean Transportation notes that short flights burn far more fuel per passenger-mile than long ones because takeoff consumes a disproportionate share, which is why the cleanest comparison is over routes where a traveler could realistically choose either mode.
What Each Side Actually Pays for Fuel
The price gap between the two fuels is narrower than the headline retail numbers suggest. U.S. commercial airlines paid around $3.13 per gallon for jet fuel in March 2026, before the year’s supply disruption fully fed through. Retail aviation gasoline at private fixed-base operators ran far higher, near $7.83 per gallon nationally, but that reflects low-volume specialty distribution rather than the bulk cost that drives airline economics.
Both fuels sit on the same crude curve, and that curve moved sharply this year. IATA forecasts an average jet fuel price of about $152 per barrel in 2026, roughly 70% above the prior year, after spot prices briefly pushed above $200 per barrel in mid-April. Gasoline tracked the same path, rising about 40% year over year by May according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data. The common driver was a single event in the oil market, which lifted both products in tandem.
Fuel as a Corporate Cost Versus a Household Cost
Here the economics split. For airlines, fuel is a concentrated, manageable line item, typically 20% to 40% of operating costs and usually the first or second largest expense. That concentration makes carriers acutely sensitive to price: an industry rule of thumb holds that a one-cent change in the per-gallon price adds or removes roughly $40 million in annual costs. U.S. scheduled airlines spent about $3.23 billion on fuel in February 2026 alone, according to BTS data.
Because the exposure is large and predictable, airlines manage it actively. They hedge with financial contracts, adjust capacity, retire older aircraft for more efficient ones, and pass residual costs to passengers through fares and fuel surcharges. The cost is real, but it flows through a corporate structure built to absorb and redistribute it.
Gasoline behaves differently for the household. It is a diffuse, non-hedgeable expense paid at the pump, and for lower-income drivers it consumes a larger share of income, which makes a price spike function like a regressive consumption tax. Unlike an airline, a commuter cannot hedge a fill-up or pass the cost downstream. When prices jump, the response is to cut discretionary spending elsewhere, which is precisely why energy prices carry outsized weight in inflation data. Energy accounted for more than 60% of the May increase in the Consumer Price Index.
The 2026 Shock Hit Both at Once
The current episode illustrates why the distinction matters. A disruption to the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly a quarter of global crude flows, removed an estimated 10 million barrels per day from the market and sent physical crude prices toward $150 per barrel. Jet fuel and gasoline rose together, hitting airline margins and consumer wallets in the same quarter.
For carriers, the result is compressed profitability and pressure to raise fares into a record travel season. For households, it is a direct cut to purchasing power that ripples into broader spending and shows up in the inflation print. The same barrel produced a corporate margin problem and a consumer-demand problem simultaneously, transmitted through two entirely different mechanisms.
The takeaway for anyone tracking the economic impact is to watch the transmission, not just the price. Crude benchmarks and refining crack spreads set the input cost for both modes, but aviation converts that cost into fares and capacity decisions while road fuel converts it into reduced household consumption and higher measured inflation. One commodity, two channels, and a 2026 shock that ran through both at the same time.










