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Gas Prices Question
<sarcasm> For some strange reason, I'm driving to Chicago on Friday. </sarcasm>
For those on my friends list with recent experience - IIRC, I should be able to get most, if not all, of the way to Naperville, IL on a tank of gas. So, I've got two options - fill up just before leaving Wisconsin, or fill up in one of Chicago's western suburbs. Which is my better bet?
For those on my friends list with recent experience - IIRC, I should be able to get most, if not all, of the way to Naperville, IL on a tank of gas. So, I've got two options - fill up just before leaving Wisconsin, or fill up in one of Chicago's western suburbs. Which is my better bet?
WI!WI!
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Their US gas prices map (http://www.twincitiesgasprices.com/Price_By_County.aspx) shows a jump in $.08 range crossing the border. Yes, it could be a $.00 difference, but it could also be a $.16 difference. I saw evidence that the map is being generated in near real-time, the ranges are selected to match the display.
A history comparison of Madison vs. Chicago (http://www.twincitiesgasprices.com/Retail_Price_Chart.aspx) shows Chicago being more expensive by $.08-.16 for the past six months. It graphs by city - that was the closest pair I could find.
Re: WI!WI!
Re: WI!WI!
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To me, the major cost is the time required to get on and off the freeway; I get gas at the same time I get food.
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Enjoy your trip!
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But, I do recall from many interstate trips that gas prices usually change, often dramatically, when crossing state lines because of the tax difference. According to the first hit when Googling "State Gas Taxes" I can see that Illinois' tax is $0.09/Gallon plus either 6.55% or 6.82% depending on how two taxes actually get added in. Wisconsin is at $0.321/Gallon. So for $2.50/gallon base those come to $2.83, $2.86, or $2.70 (again unsure what taxes apply to other taxes) for Illinois and $2.82 for Wisconsin. If the base prices are higher, then the difference will go up.
Of course other regulation gets in the way too. I think both California and the Chicago area (which may or may not include the Rockford area) require specially formulated gas at least part of the year which also adds to the gas prices.
FWIW, in 1999 when I moved from California back to Illinois, gas prices went down noticeably each time i crossed the state line, until I went from Missouri to Illinois where they jumped back to nearly California prices. The biggest drop was California to Arizona.
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K.
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