The UK network combines branded stations — BP, Shell, Esso, Texaco, Gulf — with supermarket forecourts from Tesco, Sainsbury's, Asda and Morrisons that are usually the cheapest fuel around. Motorway services are the most expensive, so many drivers fill at supermarket sites near their route.

Unleaded (E10 standard, E5 as Super) and diesel are the common grades. Clean Air and Ultra Low Emission Zones in London and other cities affect older vehicles. The UK's public EV charging network is large and growing rapidly, with many rapid and ultra-rapid hubs.

What you'll find at the pump

Unleaded E10 (standard), Super unleaded E5, and diesel. Supermarket forecourts are typically cheapest; motorway services are dearest. Older cars may need E5 Super.

EV charging in United Kingdom

CCS is the dominant DC standard with Type 2 for AC. Rapid and ultra-rapid hubs are widespread along motorways and A-roads, and city on-street charging is extensive.

Prices are added when reported by drivers or verified sources, always with a timestamp. Refuelia never shows invented numbers — where data isn't available yet, it says so. See United Kingdom on the map →

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