Here’s How to Squeeze More Miles Out of Every Tank!
Let’s be honest, nobody enjoys watching the numbers spin higher every time they fill up. And while you can’t control what’s happening at the pump, you actually have more say over your fuel bill than you might think. You don’t need to know anything about engines. You just need a few good habits.
Here’s what actually moves the needle.
Start with your tires. This is the one people skip, and it’s probably the easiest win on this whole list. Underinflated tires drag on the road more than they should, which means your engine burns extra gas just to keep you moving at normal speed. Check the pressure once a month (most gas stations have a free air pump), and you’ll find the right number printed on a sticker inside your driver’s door. It only takes a couple minutes, and it can bump your mileage by a few percent.
While you’re at it, don’t brush off a check engine light. It’s tempting to ignore it if the car still seems to be running fine, but a lot of the issues that trigger it, like a bad sensor or a misfire, are quietly costing you fuel the whole time. Getting it checked early is usually cheaper than letting it linger.
Same goes for your air filter. If it’s clogged with dust and debris, your engine has to work harder to pull in air, and that shows up at the pump too. It’s a five-minute check most people can do themselves, and filters are cheap to replace.
Clean out your trunk. This sounds too simple to matter, but it does. Hauling around golf clubs, that bag for Goodwill you keep forgetting to drop off, or a trunk full of “just in case” stuff means your car is burning gas to move extra weight everywhere you go. Same with roof racks and cargo boxes. If you’re not using it this week, take it off. They create drag that can hurt your highway mileage more than people expect.
Change how you drive, not just what you drive. Slamming the gas pedal and then slamming the brakes is one of the biggest fuel wasters out there, and most of us do it without realizing. Try easing into acceleration and coasting toward stops instead of braking at the last second. On the highway, cruise control helps too. It keeps your speed steady instead of the natural speeding up and slowing down we all do without thinking about it. And speaking of speed: once you’re going faster than around 60 mph, your fuel economy starts dropping fast. Cruising at a steady, reasonable pace instead of flooring it will save you more than you’d guess.
Rethink your errands. A cold engine burns more fuel per mile than a warmed-up one, so five separate short trips across the week are less efficient than looping them all together in one outing. And if you’re going to be sitting still for more than a minute or so, waiting in a drive-through line or to pick someone up, it’s often better to just turn the car off rather than leave it idling.
Traffic matters more than people think, too. A route that’s a mile longer but avoids stop-and-go congestion will often beat the “shorter” route once you account for all that starting and stopping. Your maps app’s traffic layer is worth checking before you head out.
A couple of small things that add up. At low speeds, rolling the windows down instead of running the AC saves gas. Once you’re on the highway, though, it flips. Open windows create enough drag that you’re better off closing them and running the AC. Gas is also slightly denser when it’s cooler out, so filling up in the early morning or evening technically gets you a touch more fuel for your money. And it’s always worth a quick check of a gas price app before you fill up. Prices can swing 20 to 30 cents a gallon between stations just a few minutes apart, and that adds up over a year.
None of this requires a new car or a trip to the mechanic. Just pick two or three habits from this list, get comfortable with them, and add more once they stick. It won’t fix gas prices, but it’ll definitely soften the blow.