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-   -   Cost of Gasoline in France (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/cost-of-gasoline-in-france-685962/)

jckcpv Mar 7th, 2007 09:08 PM

Cost of Gasoline in France
 
Will be traveling in Provence in a week. I've heard that gasoline is very expensive in France. What can I expect?

hausfrau Mar 7th, 2007 10:51 PM

jckcpv, gasoline is very expensive throughout Europe. In France and other parts of Western Europe you can expect to pay the equivalent of $5.50-$6.00 per gallon.

MorganB Mar 7th, 2007 10:58 PM

Diesel is about 1 euro per liter. Regular gas runs about 1.25 euros / liter.

roussillon Mar 7th, 2007 11:37 PM

One other thing to note on paying:

-if it is a filling station with an attendant on duty, then most US credit or debit cards will be accepted (not Amex)

-BUT if you are at a self serve pump, or at a filling station when no one is on duty, then your US credit and debit cards will normally NOT work in the machine. (Machines only take the French Visas and Mastercards etc that have a chip in the center of the card and require a pin).

I have seen lots of people get in trouble with this when running low on fuel.. Just remember the above and you should be fine.

kerouac Mar 8th, 2007 12:09 AM

In all of the major service stations (Total, Esso, BP, Shell, etc.) Amex is indeed accepted. I even get bonus points for using Amex in Total stations.

During store hours (since your cards won't work at automatic pumps), you will save significant amounts of money by filling the tank at hypermarkets in the suburbs of cities. The autoroute is the last place you want to buy fuel.

ira Mar 8th, 2007 04:31 AM

Hi J,

Get a Diesel, if you can.

Mileage is better, fuel is cheaper.

Fill up the tank on Saturday, when the stations are staffed.

You don't want to get stuck on Sunday with automatic pumps that won't take cash or your US magnetic strip CC.

Enjoy your visit.

((I))

jkbritt Mar 8th, 2007 04:53 AM

Pay cash if possible. Or, at least have cash with you just in case. I do not like my cc number bouncing all over Europe.


Budman Mar 8th, 2007 04:57 AM

Here's a handy link to the gas prices in Europe.

http://www.iru.org/Services/Fuel/Welcome.E.html

Gas = 1.182 Euros per liter X 3.8 liters to the Gal = 4.49 Euro per Gal X $1.30 per Euro = $5.83 per Gal.

Diesel - 1.025 Euros per liter X 3.8 liters to the Gal = 3.895 Euro per Gal X $1.30 per Euro = $5.06 per Gal.

Ergo -- Rental a diesel vehicle. M/PG will be better than gas vehicle + fuel is less expensive. It only makes sense. Just remember, don't put gas into a diesel tank. Diesel pump handle will black whereas a gas pump handle will be green. Maybe someone else can tell you the French words for diesel. ((b))

kerouac Mar 8th, 2007 05:09 AM

The French use 3 different words indifferently:
diesel (dee-ez-ell)
gazole (gaz-oll)
gasoil (gaz-wahl)

hausfrau Mar 8th, 2007 05:11 AM

Ah yes, very important - sometimes "diesel" is labeled as such in France, but it is also called "gazole."

Rastaguytoday Mar 8th, 2007 05:09 PM

Here's an up to the minute, sort of, of the petrol / gazole prices in Europe.

http://www.aaroadwatch.ie/eupetrolprices/

janisj Mar 8th, 2007 05:59 PM

&quot;<i>Pay cash if possible . . . . I do not like my cc number bouncing all over Europe.</i>&quot;

Do you feel the same about your home country?? You cc is just as secure buying petrol in Provence as it is in Peoria.

Michael Mar 8th, 2007 06:54 PM

<i>I do not like my cc number bouncing all over Europe.</i>

Any worse than bouncing all over the U.S.?

rs899 Mar 9th, 2007 04:00 AM

What exactly is the procedure tanking up in a hypermarche? Do you (1) pump first, then pay the attendant , or (2)see the attendant first , hand him your credit card, gesticulate wildly in the direction of your car and grunt something unintelligible?

Rick

Dukey Mar 9th, 2007 04:25 AM

TTT

kerouac Mar 9th, 2007 04:37 AM

You pump first and then drive up to the cashier in a booth like a tool booth, with a barrier that he raises once you have paid.

It is good if your language skills include being able to say &quot;num&eacute;ro cinq&quot; or &quot;num&eacute;ro deux&quot; or whatever to identify your pump.

Note: there is no button to push or lever to raise on the gas pump like in the U.S. Once it resets to zero, you can start pumping.

ira Mar 9th, 2007 05:38 AM

When filling your tank, make sure that the pump says &quot;gazol&quot; if you have a Diesel and &quot;essence&quot; for gasoline.

You absolutely do NOT want gasoline in a Diesel.

((I))

rs899 Mar 9th, 2007 06:24 AM

...nor do you want diesel in a vergasser.

I own both.

chartley Mar 9th, 2007 08:00 AM

And you have to hold the nozzle while your are pumping. You cannot put a catch on so that you can leave the car filling and walk away, confident that the pump will switch off when the tank is full.

There must be some regulation against it in Europe.

Not that we can afford to fill our tanks, anyway!

flanneruk Mar 9th, 2007 08:25 AM

&quot;There must be some regulation against it in Europe.&quot;

No. We just have cars with sensible-sized tanks (because they're energy efficient) so there's no point in the driver walking away. And since there's practically no attended serve, in the sensible parts of Europe anyway, there's no call for a widget that lets the attendant serve three cars at once.

annhig Mar 9th, 2007 08:33 AM

Hi, jckcpv!

there are some regional variations, but supermarkets/hypermarkets are usually cheapest.

Tax differs between countries, eg between France and spain. On a recent trip to s/w france, we came across a spanish enclave near the border, where everything is spanish, including a lower tax on fuel - hence the long queue of french cars filling up!

so you might find a day trip to monaco worth while!

regards, ann

Michael Mar 9th, 2007 08:35 AM

There is a point to the catch. In the U.S., it allows the driver to wash the windshield and windows of his car while the filling up. It's useful even when the car has a small tank.

rs899 Mar 9th, 2007 08:51 AM

flanneruk-

So where are the &quot;sensible parts of Europe&quot; ? I'd like to think about visiting them. I hope I won't be wasting my time in France next week...

Rick

Pvoyageuse Mar 9th, 2007 09:06 AM

On a recent trip to s/w france, we came across a spanish enclave near the border, where everything is spanish, including a lower tax on fuel - hence the long queue of french cars filling up!

Was the place Livia? :-)

kerouac Mar 9th, 2007 09:14 AM

Obviously it must have been Llivia. However, besides Spain, the very best borders to cross to buy fuel are Andorra and Luxembourg.

Pvoyageuse Mar 9th, 2007 11:11 AM

Obviously it must have been Llivia. However, besides Spain, the very best borders to cross to buy fuel are Andorra and Luxembourg.

Well thank you ! it is just that I didn't see the point in lining up for quite a long time in Llivia when Puigcerda is 5 km away and has lots of
gas stations. Though I live in the area, I was not even aware that Llivia had a gas station...
Was I wrong to ask?

Bewohner Mar 9th, 2007 11:23 AM

Llivia?

Puigcerda?

What does that have to do with the price of gasoline in France? Nyuk, nyuk, nyuk.

flanneruk Mar 9th, 2007 11:46 AM

rs899:

In a continent of 50+ independent nations, it's always dangerous to say &quot;always&quot; or &quot;never&quot;. Whatever might be the norm in Switzerland or Denmark, who knows what lunacy some pressure group (in the civilsed countries) or straightforward lunatic or bunch of thugs (in the unaccountable dictatorships like Belarus or the beetrot republics like Transdniestria) might have got into law. For all I know, San Marino might have passed a Bill last week requiring fuel to be dispensed only to drivers in medieval doublet and hose.

There are countries (like Bulgaria) that had no self-serve petrol last time I drove through. Whether that's still the case - well who knows?

klompen Mar 9th, 2007 12:13 PM

We are in Avignon right now. We've seen 95 octane gasoline for as little as as 1.19E per liter. The most we've paid is 1.27E per liter at a BP in St. Etienne. (Of course we found it for 1.22E right around the corner as soon as we filled up!) Total stations are always the highest we've seen.

We've had very good luck at the big stores such as Auchan that have a petrol station attached. Because we don't have a chip card we can't pay at the pump, but it's pretty easy. Pump the fuel, pull up to the pay station, tell them your pump number, hand them your U.S. credit card.

I can't tell you exactly what mileage our little Citroen C1 is getting, but we've driven from Paris to Tours to Avignon and around a bunch of places in Provence and have only spent about 45E on petrol so far. It seems to do quite well on fuel efficiency.

rs899 Mar 9th, 2007 12:53 PM

Klompen-

This is OT, but how's the Villages Hotel? Did you stay at one yet? We are booked in one in Orange , one in Rennes and one in Caen. We're right behind you guys..next week!

Rick

annhig Mar 10th, 2007 04:32 AM

Hi, pv - yes, it was llivia - I was having a senior moment and couldn't remember the name.

it seemed to us a rather singular place - we stopped for a drink in a cafe, and the owner and customers were having 3 way conversations, that is in french, spanish and catalan, all mixed up together. the waitress in our hotel confirmed that that was what they did at home, just using the word/phrase that seemed most apt at the time.

the queue for the petrol was nearly all french registered cars; presumably locals who couldn't be bothered to drive the extra, admittedly very few, kms to Spain proper.

regards, ann

Pvoyageuse Mar 10th, 2007 06:05 AM

Ann
thank you.
I hope you did not miss the pharmacy which is said to be the oldest in Europe. :-))

annhig Mar 10th, 2007 09:53 AM

hi, pv,

I'm afraid we did - it didn't feature in whatever guide book we had with us. However, after the exhaustive and exhausting tour we had round the old pharmacy in heidelberg with our german friends, It'll be a while before I eant to see any more.

regards, ann

annhig Mar 10th, 2007 10:00 AM

oops, that should have been &quot;yearn&quot;!


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