How to Calculate Gas Mileage (MPG)

Knowing your vehicle's actual fuel economy—rather than the EPA estimate—helps you budget accurately, identify maintenance issues, and compare costs against other transportation options.

The MPG Formula

MPG = Miles Driven / Gallons Used

How to Measure Accurately

  1. Fill up your tank completely and reset your trip odometer to 0
  2. Drive normally until you need to refuel
  3. Fill up again completely; note the gallons pumped
  4. Divide miles on the odometer by gallons pumped

Example: Trip odometer shows 312 miles; you pump 11.8 gallons. MPG = 312 / 11.8 = 26.4 MPG

Calculating Fuel Cost

Fuel cost = (Miles / MPG) × Price per gallon

Monthly driving 1,200 miles at 26.4 MPG with gas at $3.50/gallon: (1,200 / 26.4) × $3.50 = 45.45 × $3.50 = $159/month

Annual Cost Comparison

MPGCost/Year (15,000 miles @ $3.50)
20 MPG$2,625
25 MPG$2,100
30 MPG$1,750
35 MPG$1,500
40 MPG$1,313

Moving from 20 to 30 MPG saves $875/year.

When MPG Drops: Diagnostic Clue

If your calculated MPG drops 10–15% below your usual figure, common causes include:

  • Low tire pressure (increases rolling resistance)
  • Dirty air filter
  • Failing oxygen sensor
  • City vs. highway ratio change
  • Cold weather (thicker oil, engine warm-up)

Use our MPG calculator to track fuel economy across multiple fill-ups.