Donald Trump's war on Iran has already cost you $200 in fuel price increases alone
Brown University
A Brown University research team is making it easier to track pain at the pump.
A new
digital tracker aims to quantify in real time the financial impact of
the war in Iran on energy costs for American consumers. As of mid-April, the
average American household has spent more than $150 in increased energy costs
from rising gasoline and diesel prices since the start of the conflict,
according to the tracker.
The project, led by Brown University political scientist and
energy researcher Jeff Colgan, highlights a growing U.S. consumer burden of
about $20 billion (as of mid-April) in increased energy costs from gasoline and
diesel since the start of the war with Iran on Feb. 28, 2026.
“This is an expense coming directly out of the pockets of
American consumers, and consumers can use the tracker to help plan for the
extra costs that might come with road trips or summer vacations,” said Colgan,
director of the Climate
Solutions Lab at Brown’s Watson School of International and Public
Affairs.














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