How to Calculate Your Car's Gas Mileage
The most accurate way to measure your real-world MPG is the fill-to-fill method:
- Fill your tank completely and reset your trip odometer to zero.
- Drive normally until you need fuel again.
- Fill up again and note the gallons pumped and miles on the odometer.
- Divide miles driven by gallons used — that's your real MPG.
For example: 350 miles ÷ 11.5 gallons = 30.4 MPG. Do this over 2–3 fill-ups and average the results for a more accurate number.
Average MPG by Vehicle Type (2026)
| Vehicle Type | City MPG | Highway MPG | Combined MPG | Annual Gas Cost* |
| Hybrid Sedan | 50 | 48 | 49 MPG | $1,071 |
| Compact Car | 32 | 42 | 36 MPG | $1,458 |
| Midsize Sedan | 28 | 38 | 32 MPG | $1,641 |
| Crossover SUV | 24 | 32 | 27 MPG | $1,944 |
| Full-Size SUV | 17 | 24 | 20 MPG | $2,625 |
| Pickup Truck | 15 | 21 | 17 MPG | $3,088 |
| Minivan | 19 | 26 | 22 MPG | $2,386 |
*Annual cost based on 15,000 miles/year at $3.50/gallon.
Most Fuel-Efficient Cars of 2026
| Vehicle | Combined MPG | Annual Gas Cost* | Type |
| Toyota Prius Prime | 57 MPG | $921 | Plug-in Hybrid |
| Honda Accord Hybrid | 48 MPG | $1,094 | Hybrid |
| Toyota Camry Hybrid | 46 MPG | $1,141 | Hybrid |
| Toyota Corolla Hybrid | 52 MPG | $1,010 | Hybrid |
| Hyundai Ioniq 6 | 33 MPGe | $612† | Electric |
| Honda Civic | 36 MPG | $1,458 | Gas |
| Toyota Corolla | 34 MPG | $1,544 | Gas |
*15,000 miles/year at $3.50/gallon. †Electric cost based on $0.14/kWh national average.
10 Tips to Improve Your Gas Mileage
- Keep tires inflated to recommended PSI — under-inflated tires reduce MPG by up to 3%.
- Drive 55–65 mph on highways — fuel economy drops sharply above 65 mph due to aerodynamic drag.
- Avoid jackrabbit starts — smooth acceleration from stops can improve city MPG by 10–15%.
- Use cruise control — maintaining a steady speed on highways improves fuel efficiency.
- Remove roof racks when not in use — an empty roof rack reduces highway MPG by 5–10%.
- Replace air filter regularly — a clogged air filter can reduce MPG by up to 10%.
- Don't idle unnecessarily — idling gets 0 MPG. Turn the engine off if stopped for more than 60 seconds.
- Use the recommended motor oil — using the wrong viscosity can reduce MPG by 1–2%.
- Reduce AC use at low speeds — AC increases fuel consumption by 5–10% in city driving.
- Keep windows closed at highway speeds — open windows create drag equivalent to turning on AC.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I calculate my car's gas mileage?
Fill your tank, reset the trip odometer, drive normally, then fill up again. Divide miles driven by gallons used at the second fill-up. For example: 350 miles ÷ 11.5 gallons = 30.4 MPG. Repeat over 2–3 tanks for a more accurate average since driving conditions vary.
What is a good MPG for a car in 2026?
30+ MPG combined is good for a non-hybrid sedan. 25+ MPG is good for a crossover SUV. 20+ MPG is good for a full-size SUV or truck. Hybrids achieving 45–55 MPG are excellent. Anything below 20 MPG for a passenger car is considered poor fuel economy by current standards.
Why is my actual MPG lower than the EPA estimate?
EPA estimates are conducted in climate-controlled labs at ideal conditions — no AC, steady speeds, optimal temperature. Real-world factors that reduce MPG include: aggressive driving, using AC, cold weather (reduces MPG by 10–20%), high speeds, roof racks, heavy cargo, low tire pressure, and city traffic stop-and-go.
How much money does 1 MPG improvement save per year?
At 15,000 miles/year and $3.50/gallon: improving from 25 to 26 MPG saves about $81/year. Improving from 30 to 31 MPG saves about $56/year. The savings are higher at lower MPG values — going from 15 to 16 MPG saves $219/year because you're using far more gallons overall.
How do I calculate gas cost for a trip?
Divide your trip distance by your MPG to get gallons needed, then multiply by the current gas price. Example: 500 miles ÷ 30 MPG = 16.7 gallons × $3.50 = $58.33. Use our Road Trip Cost Calculator for a complete trip budget including food and hotels.