California gas tax rises July 1, adding cents at the pump - AOL

Californians will pay more at the pump starting July 1, as the state’s gasoline excise tax rises again just as millions prepare for Fourth of July travel.
The increase is modest per gallon, but layered onto already high fuel prices and other fees, it’s expected to push costs up statewide during one of the busiest driving weeks of the year.
Even as gas consumption declines with more electric vehicles on the road, the state continues to rely heavily on fuel taxes to fund transportation.
That creates a tension:
Higher taxes per gallon
On fewer gallons sold
For drivers, that likely means continued upward pressure on fuel costs — especially during peak travel seasons like summer.
California gas prices changes on July 1Most drivers won’t see just a 2-cent bump — real-world increases could be closer to several cents more per gallon depending on market factors and regulations.
Gas tax (excise tax)Rises from 61.2 cents to 63.4 cents per gallon
That’s an increase of 2.2 cents per gallon
Rises from 46.6 cents to 48.2 cents per gallon
Low Carbon Fuel Standard changes could add 5 to 9 cents per gallon
Total state taxes, fees and programs already add about $1.20 per gallon
The annual increase is built into state law.
A 2017 transportation funding law (SB 1) requires yearly adjustments tied to inflation
The rate is recalculated each year based on the California Consumer Price Index
Revenue funds road maintenance, bridge repairs and congestion relief projects
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Voters upheld the system in 2018 by rejecting a repeal attempt, allowing automatic increases to continue.
What Californians are paying nowCalifornia already leads the nation in gas prices.
Average gas price: about $5.48 per gallon as of late June
About 52% higher than the national average
Costs are driven by:
Taxes and environmental programs
Limited refinery capacity
Supply constraints and global oil markets
Despite higher prices, millions of Californians are still hitting the road.
8.94 million Californians expected to travel 50+ miles
More than 7 million will drive during the holiday window
That surge in demand can also push pump prices higher, especially in high-traffic regions.
What California drivers will actually payThe per-fill increase is small, but the cumulative cost over a summer of driving is noticeable, especially for long commuters. Sample commute impact (rough estimates):
Southern California commuter (25 miles each way)~10 gallons/week fuel use
Tax increase adds roughly $0.22/week
With other cost increases, could be closer to $0.50–$1/week
~12 gallons/week
Adds $0.26+ per week from excise tax alone
More when local prices spike
Added cost still small per fill-up, but adds up over time
Lower base prices, but longer drives
This article originally appeared on Palm Springs Desert Sun: California gas tax increase takes effect July 1