
As drivers prepare to hit the road for Thanksgiving in record numbers, gas prices are relatively steady compared to last week.
The national average is $3.06, down a penny from a week ago and the same price as a month ago, reported AAA.
Oklahoma’s average rose one cent to $2.50 per gallon, which is still 13 cents cheaper than one month earlier.
Despite the burst of gasoline demand that will occur during Thanksgiving week, overall demand is low this time of year which helps keep pump prices down. The national average has seen few fluctuations in 2025 thanks to low crude oil prices and no major storms affecting Gulf Coast refineries.
Oklahoma City gasoline prices are $2.45 per gallon, two cents more than a week ago but 11 cents below the average from one month earlier.
Tulsa’s average of $2.50 is 7 cents higher than last week and 9 cents cheaper than one month ago. The average price in Lawton is $2.39, up 7 cents in the past week.
Adair county has the lowest county average in the state at $2.36 while Comanche county is $2.38 and Canadian County is $2.39.
Highest average is in Ellis County at $2.97 per gallon.
If you’re traveling out of state for Thanksgiving Day, prices average $2.69 in Kansas, $2.67 in Colorado (That’s right!), $2.84 in New Mexico, $2.65 in Texas, $2.65 in Arkansas and $2.72 in Missouri.
Gas
The nation’s top 10 most expensive gasoline markets are California ($4.63), Hawaii ($4.47), Washington ($4.18), Nevada ($3.84), Oregon ($3.81), Alaska ($3.75), Arizona ($3.37), Pennsylvania ($3.29), Idaho ($3.29), and Illinois ($3.29).
