New York drivers, there may finally be light at the end of the tunnel.
After weeks of watching pump prices rise above $4 a gallon and stay there, there was a sudden shift Tuesday night that could reverse the pain — and quickly. President Trump declared a two-week ceasefire with Iran, and within hours the price of crude oil fell by more than 15%. For New Yorkers who have been paying some of the highest gas prices in the country, the time couldn’t come soon enough.
What happened – and why it matters for your wallet
Oil prices collapsed On Wednesday, in the hours after the US and Iran announced the ceasefire, US crude fell about 15% to around $95.50 a barrel.
That’s a dramatic drop, but oil still remains well above its pre-war price of about $67 a barrel. That’s why analysts are cautiously optimistic rather than jubilant.
The most important question for New York drivers right now is: When does that drop actually reach the pump?
AAA fuel analyst Bryan Jajkowski said the change is not immediate. “There’s a little bit of a lag by the time everything happens. If crude drops today, you’ll probably see a little drop at the pump next week.” He added that if gas prices drop, New Yorkers could see a slight drop this weekend or early next week.
The numbers: how much can you actually save?
Petroleum expert Patrick De Haan of GasBuddy said prices at the pump could start to drop as soon as this weekend, although the drop could initially be only a few cents per gallon. “If the situation holds and doesn’t worsen, the national average likely has plenty of room to try to fall back below the $4 gallon mark,” he said. “But it will probably take a few weeks to get there.”
There may be greater relief by the end of the month. Timothy Fitzgerald, professor of business economics at the University of Tennessee, predicts a decline of 50 cents by the end of April. For a New York driver filling up a 15-gallon tank, that would mean saving about $7.50 per fill-up — real money after weeks of paying more than $4.
The catch – and it is big
There’s another factor slowing the price drop that most drivers don’t know about: Gas station owners paid a lot more for the fuel currently in their tanks. Like economist Wayne Winegarden explainedtheir margin costs have fallen – but first they have to sell their expensive existing offering before those savings are passed on.
There is also a larger geopolitical wildcard. Iran announced Wednesday it would close the Strait of Hormuz again in response to continued Israeli attacks in Lebanon, and shipping company Maersk said the ceasefire “may create transit opportunities, but does not yet provide full maritime security.”
De Haan also warned that a decline in gas prices could quickly reverse if the ceasefire fails. “If there is an abrupt stop or a new escalation, the declines will stop and prices could start rising again.”
In short, for New York drivers
From this weekend onwards, pay attention to small drops of 1 to 3 cents per day. If the ceasefire holds, the national average could fall below $4 per gallon within one to two weeksS – and New York, where prices have become higher than most states, will benefit significantly if it does.
The war cost you more than a dollar a gallon. Getting it back won’t happen overnight, but this week the direction has finally changed.
Sources: AAA, GasBuddy, ABC News, CBS News, NY State of Politics, The National News Desk – April 8-9, 2026

