Petrol prices in Western Australia.
Regional WA petrol prices are locked daily under FuelWatch, exactly as Perth’s are – and tomorrow’s prices are published at 2:30pm today, statewide. FuelNow shows tomorrow’s price next to today’s for every reporting WA station, in Kalgoorlie as in Perth. This page tracks the ABS Rest of WA region: every reporting station outside Greater Perth.
Is petrol cheaper in Perth or regional WA?
As at day’s end on 12 July 2026, regional WA’s median Unleaded 91 price of 181.9 c/L sits 15.0 c/L above Greater Perth’s 166.9 c/L. The gap isn’t fixed: Perth runs a price cycle and regional WA doesn’t, so the difference moves week to week.
| Area | Median U91 (c/L) | Cheapest | Most expensive | Stations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Greater Perth | 166.9 | 142.7 | 209.5 | 482 |
| Regional WA | 181.9 | 154.5 | 420.0 | 456 |
Diesel: the regional WA median is 199.9 c/L across 450 stations – Greater Perth’s is 183.9.
Day’s-end figures from official FuelWatch data – every reporting station inside the ABS boundaries (Greater Perth; Rest of WA), median not mean, one station one vote. How these figures are calculated. The live station board for the capital is on the Perth page; the app carries every station in WA live.
Are petrol prices in regional WA going up or down?
Steady this week – regional WA’s Unleaded 91 median has moved less than 2 c/L over the past seven days and sits at 181.9 c/L. Regional WA doesn’t move in one region-wide price cycle the way a capital does – prices differ town to town, and the gap between stations is where the saving is.
How pricing works in regional WA
FuelWatch is not just a Perth scheme – it covers regional WA too, from Bunbury and Geraldton to Kalgoorlie and Broome. Every reporting station’s price locks at 6am for 24 hours, and tomorrow’s prices are published at 2:30pm each day – so a regional WA driver gets the same fill-up-now-or-wait answer a Perth driver does, the afternoon before.
On the ABS boundary, Mandurah sits inside Greater Perth – regional WA starts beyond it. Distances do the rest: the region’s cheapest and most expensive stations are often more than a dollar a litre apart, so on a long drive the map shows what fuel costs ahead on your route.
Questions
- What is the petrol price in regional WA today?
- As at day’s end on 12 July 2026, the median Unleaded 91 price across 456 reporting stations in regional WA is 181.9 c/L – the cheapest station is at 154.5 c/L and the most expensive at 420.0. Diesel’s median is 199.9 c/L across 450 stations. The FuelNow app shows every reporting station in WA live – free, no ads, no account.
- Is petrol cheaper in Perth or regional WA?
- As at day’s end on 12 July 2026, regional WA’s median Unleaded 91 price of 181.9 c/L sits 15.0 c/L above Greater Perth’s 166.9 c/L. The gap isn’t fixed: Perth runs a price cycle and regional WA doesn’t, so the difference moves week to week. Within the region the town-to-town spread is far bigger than the city–country gap – 154.5 c/L at the cheapest reporting station to 420.0 at the most expensive.
- Where do regional WA petrol prices come from?
- FuelWatch – Western Australia’s official fuel price scheme, the oldest in the country, covering Perth and regional WA alike. FuelNow reads the scheme directly: station-reported prices, locked daily, with tomorrow’s prices published at 2:30pm.
- Can I see tomorrow’s petrol prices in regional WA?
- Yes. FuelWatch’s 24-hour price lock covers regional WA as well as Perth: every reporting station’s price is locked from 6am, and tomorrow’s prices are published at 2:30pm today. FuelNow shows tomorrow’s price alongside today’s for every reporting WA station, so you can decide tonight whether to fill up now or wait for the morning.
Every fuel type
E10, Unleaded 91, 95, 98, Diesel, Premium Diesel, E85 and LPG – pick yours once and the whole map re-prices around it, in Perth and across regional WA.
The live station board: petrol prices in Perth · Where the data comes from, in detail: the data sources page · All cities and regions: petrol prices across Australia · Coming up: the August 2026 price rise, explained