Travel Road Trip Cost Calculator
Plan your drive with confidence. This free travel cost calculator estimates fuel, lodging, food, and activity spending in real time — then compares scenarios so you know exactly what your trip will cost before you pack the car.
Reviewed for accuracy: July 2026 · Fuel data benchmarked against EIA.gov and AAA Fuel Prices
Plan Your Trip
National average is about $3.80–$3.95 per gallon (July 2026). Expect $5.30+ in California, Washington, and Hawaii; $3.30–$3.50 across Texas, Oklahoma, and Indiana.
Home charging averages ~$0.17/kWh; DC fast charging on the road averages ~$0.50/kWh. A blended road-trip rate of $0.35–$0.45 is realistic. Assumes 3.3 mi/kWh efficiency.
Per person, per day. Free hotel breakfasts can trim $10–$15 per person each morning.
National park entry runs $20–$35 per vehicle; the $80 America the Beautiful annual pass pays for itself after three parks.
City parking alone can run $27–$45 per night in destinations like Nashville or Denver.
Your Trip Dashboard
Where the money goes
- Fuel
- Lodging
- Food
- Activities
- Tolls
Budget Efficiency Score
Scenario Comparison
Budget Mode
$0camping + cooler mealsYour Plan
$0as configuredComfort Mode
$0hotels + restaurantsHow This Travel Cost Calculator Works
Most road trip calculators stop at fuel. Real trips don’t. Fuel typically accounts for only 20–30% of total spending — lodging and food together consume 60% or more of a typical driving vacation budget, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics travel expenditure data. That’s why this travel cost calculator models all five major expense categories at once: fuel or EV charging, nightly lodging, daily food, activities, and tolls or parking.
Every figure updates instantly as you move a slider, so you can stress-test your plan in seconds. Wondering whether upgrading from motels to hotels breaks the budget? Whether adding two travelers actually lowers your per-person cost? Whether an EV saves real money on a 2,000-mile drive? Drag, compare, and decide.
What a road trip actually costs in 2026
Based on current market data, here are realistic per-person daily budgets for two travelers sharing a vehicle and room:
| Travel Style | Lodging | Food / Day | Per Person / Day | 7-Day Trip (per person) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Budget (camping, cooler meals) | $20–$45 | $25–$35 | $80–$160 | ≈ $585–$900 |
| Mid-range (motels, casual dining) | $65–$120 | $45–$70 | $170–$260 | ≈ $1,065–$1,500 |
| Comfort (hotels, restaurants) | $170–$280 | $85–$100 | $285–$460 | ≈ $1,770–$2,600 |
Five ways to cut your total without cutting the fun
Mix your lodging. Camping two or three nights and staying in motels for the rest can cut a week of lodging from $630+ to roughly $300. Chase free breakfast. Properties that include it effectively hand each traveler $10–$15 every morning. Fuel up strategically. Gas in Gulf Coast and Midwest states runs $1.50–$2.00 per gallon cheaper than the West Coast — time your fill-ups around state lines. Buy the parks pass. If you’re visiting three or more national parks, the $80 annual pass beats per-vehicle entry fees. Pack a cooler. Replacing just one restaurant meal per day with groceries saves a couple $250+ over two weeks.
Frequently Asked Questions
A realistic 7-day road trip for two people covering about 1,500 miles costs $1,100–$2,100 total in 2026, depending on lodging and dining choices. Budget travelers using camping and cooler meals can do it for under $1,200 combined, while a hotel-and-restaurant trip typically lands between $2,100 and $3,500. Fuel represents roughly $200–$260 of that at current national average gas prices near $3.85 per gallon.
Divide your total trip miles by your vehicle’s real-world MPG, then multiply by the price per gallon. Example: a 1,600-mile round trip in a 28 MPG sedan at $3.85/gal costs 1,600 ÷ 28 × 3.85 ≈ $220. Add 5–10% for detours, loaded-vehicle fuel penalty, and city driving. This calculator handles that math instantly as you adjust the sliders.
For two or more travelers, driving is usually significantly cheaper. Average domestic round-trip airfare runs about $290 per person in 2026, so a family of four faces $1,160 in flights before ground transport. The same four people share one tank of gas — a 1,600-mile round trip costs roughly $220 in fuel total, not per person. Solo travelers on long point-to-point routes are often better off flying.
Usually, but the gap narrows on the road. Home charging (~$0.17/kWh) makes EVs far cheaper than gas, but DC fast charging averages around $0.50/kWh on highways. At 3.3 mi/kWh and $0.40/kWh blended, an EV covers 1,600 miles for about $194 — versus roughly $220 in a 28 MPG gas sedan. Toggle EV mode in the calculator above to model your exact numbers.
Plan $30–$40 per person per day if you rely on groceries and a cooler, $50–$70 for a mix of grocery meals and casual restaurants, and $85–$100 if you eat out for most meals. Restaurant prices have risen 3.6–3.9% year-over-year, so grocery-heavy strategies save more than ever.
Parking and tolls. City-center hotel parking runs $27–$45 per night in destinations like Nashville and Denver — over $200 for a week before you’ve bought a single meal. Toll corridors in the Northeast can add $50–$100 to a long drive. Budget a buffer of 5–10% of your total for these extras.
Methodology, assumptions & data sources
This calculator was built and reviewed in July 2026 using the following assumptions:
- Fuel: total miles ÷ MPG × price per gallon. Default $3.85/gal reflects the AAA national average ($3.80) and EIA weekly regular retail data ($3.83) as of late June 2026.
- EV mode: total miles ÷ 3.3 mi/kWh × cost per kWh. Blended default $0.38/kWh sits between home (~$0.17) and DC fast charging (~$0.50) rates.
- Lodging: nights = trip days − 1. Nightly benchmarks: camping $28, budget motel $85, midscale hotel $170 (AAA national average ADR: $171), premium $280. One room/site assumed for up to 4 travelers; larger groups scale to two rooms.
- Food and activities: per person, per day, applied across all trip days.
- Drive time: total miles ÷ 60 mph average highway speed, including brief stops.
- Budget Efficiency Score: compares your per-person daily cost against 2026 market benchmarks ($80 budget / $170 mid-range / $285+ comfort per person per day). Lower relative cost scores higher.
Estimates are for planning purposes. Actual prices vary by region, season, and booking timing.
References
- U.S. Energy Information Administration. Gasoline and Diesel Fuel Update — Weekly Retail Prices. eia.gov/petroleum/gasdiesel
- AAA. National Average Fuel Prices. gasprices.aaa.com
- Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis (FRED). US Regular All Formulations Gas Price. fred.stlouisfed.org/series/GASREGW
- U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Consumer Expenditure Surveys — Travel Spending. bls.gov/cex
- National Park Service. Entrance Fees and America the Beautiful Passes. nps.gov/planyourvisit/passes
- Bureau of Transportation Statistics. Average Domestic Airline Itinerary Fares. transtats.bts.gov/AverageFare
