With the national average for gas hitting a painful $4.55 a gallon, the White House is searching for an escape hatch. On May 10, 2026, Energy Secretary Chris Wright confirmed that the Trump administration is officially “open” to suspending the federal gas tax to provide immediate relief to American drivers struggling with the fallout of the war in Iran.
The 18-Cent Lifeline
Currently, Americans pay a federal tax of 18.4 cents per gallon on gasoline and 24.4 cents per gallon on diesel. While this tax is a primary funding source for the Highway Trust Fund, which pays for road repairs and public transit, the administration is signaling that “all measures” are on the table to lower the burden at the pump.
The Conflict Factor
Secretary Wright noted that the “free flow of traffic through the Strait of Hormuz” is the ultimate key to bringing prices down, but until that happens, a tax holiday is the most direct tool the government has.
Only two months ago, the administration was optimistic about seeing $3 gas before summer. Now, that confidence has evaporated as Secretary Wright refused to rule out the possibility of prices spiking past the $5.00 mark.

Why Now?
The move comes as new polling suggests that near-$5 gas is fundamentally changing how Americans live. People are driving less, canceling vacations, and, as we’ve seen in recent headlines, some are even quitting jobs because the commute has become unaffordable.
The gas tax suspension would offer a psychological and financial “quick fix,” but some argue that oil companies might simply raise their prices to absorb the 18-cent difference, leaving consumers with little to no actual savings.
A Band-Aid on a Bullet Wound
Yes, every cent counts when you’re staring at a $100 bill to fill up a Chevy Silverado, but 18 cents is barely a dent when prices have jumped over $1.50 in just a few months.
This administration is in a tight spot. On one hand, they’ve been “dragging” the economy into massive debt (now officially over 100% of GDP), and on the other, they’re looking to cut one of the few consistent revenue streams America has for infrastructure. If America stops collecting the gas tax, that’s more “crazy debt” being piled onto the next administration. They are essentially borrowing from the future roads to pay for today’s commute.
The Fandom of Politics
The administration is playing to the “fans,” the voters who are feeling the heat. Give the people a small win (18 cents) so they don’t focus on the big failure (the inability to stabilize the energy market)
In my view, a gas tax holiday is a desperate move for a desperate time. It might make for a great headline, but it doesn’t solve the war in Iran, and it doesn’t fix the fact that America’s economy is currently “Working to be Poor.” If the administration really wanted to help, they would be pressuring employers to offer “fuel stipends” or fixing the supply chain, rather than just starving their highway fund.





