For the first time since late 2022, the average retail price of diesel in the United States has crossed $5 a gallon, a threshold that carries real consequences for an economy that runs on the fuel. The milestone is the most visible sign yet of how deeply the war in Iran is cutting into global energy markets.
The national average reached just above $5 on Monday, having climbed sharply since the conflict began. The driver behind the spike is not difficult to identify. The Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway through which roughly one in five barrels of the world’s daily oil supply passes, has been largely closed to traffic. That single chokepoint has sent shockwaves through fuel markets worldwide, and diesel has felt the impact harder than most.
Why diesel hits differently
Diesel is not just another fuel. It powers the trucks that move freight, the machines that harvest crops and the equipment that builds infrastructure. When diesel prices surge, the cost increase does not stay at the pump. It moves through supply chains, lifts the price of goods and adds pressure to industries already operating on thin margins. A sustained spike tends to show up quickly in the prices consumers pay for nearly everything else.
The latest jump has been especially sharp because Persian Gulf refineries are among the world’s leading diesel suppliers. With regional output disrupted and supply lines strained, prices have climbed faster than those of other petroleum products. Jet fuel has soared above $200 a barrel and fuel oil, which keeps global shipping moving, is now trading near $140 a barrel. The entire energy complex is under pressure, but diesel is leading the way up.
Heating oil and household costs
The pain is not limited to the trucking industry or the gas station. Residential heating oil, which is functionally the same product as diesel, has also climbed above $5 according to federal energy data. For households in the Northeast and other regions that rely on heating oil to get through winter, the timing could hardly be worse.
Political pressure mounts
The prolonged climb in fuel prices is also beginning to register as a political problem. For President Donald Trump, a sustained surge at the pump could weigh on the Republican Party heading into midterm elections later this year. Fuel costs are one of the most direct and emotionally felt economic indicators for American voters, and $5 diesel is the kind of number that tends to stick in people’s minds.
Countries begin protecting their own supply
The pressure is triggering protectionist instincts around the world. South Korea has moved to cap the volume of oil product exports allowed by its domestic refiners. China’s refiners have begun pulling back on previously agreed export shipments of gasoline and diesel. More countries are expected to follow as governments prioritize keeping fuel supplies at home and shielding their own consumers from the worst of the price increases.
The broader picture is one of a global energy market under acute stress, with no quick resolution in sight. As long as the Strait of Hormuz remains disrupted and the conflict in Iran continues, the pressure on diesel and other key fuels is unlikely to ease. For businesses, consumers and policymakers alike, the $5 milestone may turn out to be a floor rather than a ceiling.

