Realistic photo of a Philippine gas station celebrating fuel price rollbacks to P23 per liter for diesel, with happy drivers amid jeepneys and price signs.
Realistic photo of a Philippine gas station celebrating fuel price rollbacks to P23 per liter for diesel, with happy drivers amid jeepneys and price signs.
Imagem gerada por IA

Fuel prices roll back up to P23 per liter starting April 14 after weeks of Middle East-driven hikes

Imagem gerada por IA

Oil firms confirmed price rollbacks effective 6 a.m. Tuesday, April 14, matching Department of Energy projections: diesel down P20.89 to P23 per liter, gasoline P4.43 to P4.50, and kerosene P8.50. The cuts end surges of over P100 on diesel since late February's Middle East crisis. President Marcos suspended excise taxes on LPG and kerosene, while a jeepney subsidy launches.

MANILA, Philippines — Following weeks of fuel price hikes triggered by Middle East tensions since late February—part of a series of increases including P12+ on diesel and record highs up to P170 per liter in some areas—the Department of Energy projected sharp rollbacks starting April 14, confirmed by major oil firms the next day.

On April 12, Energy Secretary Sharon Garin announced minimum reductions based on international crude trends: diesel P20.89/liter, gasoline P4.43, kerosene P8.50—exceeding some industry estimates. Petron listed gasoline down P4.43, diesel P20.89, kerosene P8.50; PetroGazz diesel P20.95, gasoline P4.50; Seaoil and Flying V similar; Jetti diesel P2.70 (outlier). Prices remain high at P120-P130/liter for some products.

President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. called the relief a 'big help but not enough,' announcing on April 13 the suspension of excise taxes on LPG and kerosene for further cuts, and vowing more interventions. The DOE also launched a P10/liter subsidy pilot for jeepneys at 52 Metro Manila stations (up to 150 liters weekly for 18,000 drivers), though groups like Piston deem it inadequate, demanding VAT/excise tax cuts.

O que as pessoas estão dizendo

X discussions welcome the fuel price rollbacks effective April 14, 2026, with diesel dropping P20.89-P23 per liter to around P23/L, gasoline P4.43-P6.50/L, and kerosene P8.50-P11.50/L, providing relief after Middle East crisis hikes. News outlets and journalists report company-specific adjustments matching DOE projections, users express joy and timely fill-up jokes, while some highlight temporary relief with warnings of future hikes.

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Oil companies implemented major fuel price hikes effective April 7, pushing diesel prices past P140 to P150 per liter in several areas. The increases stem from volatility in global crude markets reacting to Middle East conflict. These mark historic highs despite staggered adjustments.

Due to the war in the Middle East, diesel prices in the Philippines are expected to exceed P100 per liter, prompting public utility vehicle drivers to consider other jobs. Jeepney and tricycle drivers like Renie Rabago and Omeng Elardo struggle with rising fuel costs while their earnings remain low. The government offers a one-time P5,000 subsidy to assist them, though some say it is insufficient.

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Philippine fuel supply may last until the second week of May with one million barrels expected soon, according to the Department of Energy. Energy Secretary Sharon Garin said the average supply stood at 45 days as of March 20, down from 55-57 days when the Middle East war began nearly a month ago.

 

 

 

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