Sponsored

Does Gas Station Brand Actually Change MPG? 🤔⛽️

MaverickDragon

2.5L Hybrid
Well-known member
First Name
Gary
Joined
Nov 9, 2025
Threads
4
Messages
1,185
Reaction score
1,908
Location
Grand Canyon, AZ
Vehicle(s)
2025 Maverick XL Hybrid AWD 4K Tow Package
Engine
2.5L Hybrid
Shell is always higher. And it’s from the same refinery as the “cheaply” gas.
As was noted, the refinery isn't the primary difference in the fuel, it's the additive packages.
As far as two stations getting fuel from the same refinery, that is pure conjecture on your part.
Fuel in my area gets shipped in from a number of different locations.
Sponsored

 

MavStangVa

2.0L EcoBoost
Well-known member
Joined
Apr 4, 2025
Threads
11
Messages
664
Reaction score
1,437
Location
Here, There, and Everywhere
Vehicle(s)
2024 LARIAT AWD
Engine
2.0L EcoBoost
Depends on the location. In big cities, the bulk terminals are usually located right at the refinery. But in less populated/rural areas, yes each brand has its own bulk terminal.
Only 29 states have oil refineries with Alaska and Hawaii being 2 of them so pretty sure my gas isn't coming from there 😆 . That leaves 27 states on the continental USA so 21 states rely on bulk storage facilities filled via pipelines. I drove past a bulk terminal in Virginia almost monthly for 20 years and saw BRAND tankers and unmarked tankers sitting in line to be filled. Just what I have observed here.
 

James K

2.0L EcoBoost
Well-known member
First Name
James
Joined
Jun 19, 2022
Threads
3
Messages
711
Reaction score
691
Location
NY
Vehicle(s)
2022 Maverick,1960 Bugeye, 1973 GT6, 2016 R1200GS, 2024 KLX300
Engine
2.0L EcoBoost
I noticed a difference between a couple of stations.
A discount gas station was 10 cents cheaper than the Shell across the street.
I noticed fewer mpg's with the cheap gas, on a very similar trip and the mpg's went back up after fill up from Shell.
IMHO, it's worth the extra 10 cents.
Full disclaimer, the cheapo-fuel was 15% ethanol, another reason why I won't use it again, but top tier fuel also has better additive packages than the brand X...
Ethanol does not have the same energy as dino juice so E15 would be expected to give lower MPG.
 

Probity

2.5L Hybrid
Well-known member
Joined
Jul 6, 2021
Threads
9
Messages
328
Reaction score
546
Location
Covington LA
Vehicle(s)
'24 Silverado CCSB 2.7 (a Mav. Hybrid next time?)
Engine
2.5L Hybrid
I'm thinking there is less difference between top tier fuel brands, than between a top tier and an "anything they can get" station.
I've also noticed that the off brand stations seem to be carrying E-15 fuel, which I refuse to use.
I tend to agree. Top Tier is........well, meets Top Tier specs from 20+ years ago.

I'll be interested to see when the new "Top Tier +" branded fuel makes it to my area (south Louisiana). Evidently bp and Amoco and Costco now market this "new" spec TOP TIER™ Announces New TOP TIER™+ Standard - TOP TIER™

I looked a bit into the 'new' Top Tier + last November. (51) Top Tier+ Gasoline | Page 3 | MaverickTruckClub - 2022+ Ford Maverick Pickup Forum, News, Owners, Discussions , post 32.

To repeat a bit of it, as far as gas additives go, what Top Tier+ promises is kind of a big deal. Top Tier+ will require cleanup performance with regard to fuel injector deposits rather than (current Top Tier) keep-clean performance. This means Top Tier+ fuels must be able to help eliminate deposits from already-dirty fuel injectors. And what BASF says - "TOP TIER+ formulations should be able to help restore some fuel economy and emissions performance to even older-model vehicles".

Three ‘new’ test methods: 1st test evaluates injector deposit control by measuring injector fouling, 2nd test no increase in particulates from the additive, and 3rd test focuses on protection against stochastic pre-ignition (SPI, harmful pre-ignition event that can occur in modern downsized engines and potentially lead to engine failure).

The new spec requires 50% improved injector performance compared to a dirty reference test, measured through long-term fuel trim—a numeric indicator of how much the engine must compensate to achieve as-designed performance.

What sort of $ premium we'll have to pay for the "+"? Dunno.
 

Zanky

2.5L Hybrid
Member
First Name
John
Joined
May 21, 2025
Threads
1
Messages
23
Reaction score
41
Location
Sebastian, FL
Vehicle(s)
2024 Maverick XLT Hybrid
Engine
2.5L Hybrid
Alright I can’t be the only one that notices this 😂

I swear my Maverick gets different MPG depending on where I fill up. Some tanks feel like they last forever and other times the fuel disappears way faster even though I’m driving the same routes.

Sometimes the truck even feels smoother after certain fill ups and other stations make it feel kinda sluggish for no reason.
I’ve noticed:
  • better MPG from some stations
  • worse MPG from others
  • different engine feel/sound
  • some gas seems to burn way quicker
Curious if anyone else has noticed the same thing or if this is all just in our heads lol
  • What stations have been the best for you guys?
  • Which ones have been the worst?
  • Does Costco actually live up to the hype?
  • And is Chevron/Shell actually better or just expensive branding?

Interested to see if there’s actually a pattern here or if we’re all just gas station conspiracy theorists now 😭
(Pic for attention)

1779915008874-18.webp
Go to top tier gas stations, does make a difference in mileage for me
 

Sponsored

Pointyears

2.5L Hybrid
Well-known member
First Name
Richard
Joined
Dec 16, 2025
Threads
6
Messages
650
Reaction score
1,233
Location
South Central PA
Vehicle(s)
2025 Maverick Lariat, 2018 Mustang convertible, 2012 Harley Softail, 2024 Vita
Engine
2.5L Hybrid
As was noted, the refinery isn't the primary difference in the fuel, it's the additive packages.
As far as two stations getting fuel from the same refinery, that is pure conjecture on your part.
Fuel in my area gets shipped in from a number of different locations.
I have a vague memory of additive packages being added on a per-tanker basis. Dunno if that's fact or just my AI (Actual Intelligence(tm)) hallucination.
 

Lone Ridr

2.0L EcoBoost
Well-known member
First Name
Ron
Joined
Nov 30, 2024
Threads
4
Messages
233
Reaction score
282
Location
Degonia Springs, In
Vehicle(s)
2024 Ford Maverick Lariat
Engine
2.0L EcoBoost
In case it hasn't been posted (tried to read all posts, this thread): https://www.toptiergas.com/#stations. This site will tell you which stations in your area are top tier. In my area its all Marathon stations and Costco. And yes, there's an app for that.
 

MaverickDragon

2.5L Hybrid
Well-known member
First Name
Gary
Joined
Nov 9, 2025
Threads
4
Messages
1,185
Reaction score
1,908
Location
Grand Canyon, AZ
Vehicle(s)
2025 Maverick XL Hybrid AWD 4K Tow Package
Engine
2.5L Hybrid
@Lone Ridr - Thanks for that.
In my area it's only Shell that's TT..
 

Bandwagon

2.0L EcoBoost
Member
First Name
Tony
Joined
May 5, 2026
Threads
1
Messages
7
Reaction score
24
Location
Mill Creek, WA
Vehicle(s)
2025 Ford Maverick Lariet
Engine
2.0L EcoBoost
There's actually a pretty clean explanation for most of this, and it splits the difference between "it's all the same" and "brands are magic."

The base gasoline really is pooled. Fuel gets refined to common specs, runs through shared common-carrier pipelines, and sits in the same terminal tanks regardless of brand. The gas in a Shell tank this week might've come out of an Exxon refinery, a Conoco one next week, and an actual Shell refinery the week after. So at the molecule level, the discount station and the Shell across the street are very likely pulling identical base fuel from the same rack.

What makes it "branded" happens in the last step: when the tanker loads, each brand injects its own additive package (Techron, Synergy, Shell's Nitrogen Enriched, etc.). But here's the key part — those additives are detergents, under ~1% of volume. Their job is keeping injectors and intake valves clean over thousands of miles. They don't change the energy content of the fuel, so they're not what's moving your MPG tank-to-tank.

The thing that actually does change MPG per tank is ethanol content. E15 has less energy per gallon than E10, full stop — that's physics, not perception. That's almost certainly what's behind the discount-station mpg drop someone mentioned: the cheap stuff was 15% ethanol vs the Shell's 10%. Match the ethanol first, or you're not comparing the same fuel.

So the real takeaway: Top Tier (Shell, Chevron, Costco, Exxon, etc.) is worth it for long-term engine cleanliness — 2-3x the EPA detergent minimum, and it matters more on direct-injection engines like our EcoBoost. But that's a slow, deposit-over-miles benefit, not a "feels smoother right after fill-up" thing. If a tank felt different immediately, that's ethanol % or just normal variance (temp, traffic, terrain, winter blend) far more than brand.

Pooled base fuel, brand-specific detergents, and ethanol % as the real MPG lever. Not a conspiracy, just the supply chain.
 
Sponsored

MaverickDragon

2.5L Hybrid
Well-known member
First Name
Gary
Joined
Nov 9, 2025
Threads
4
Messages
1,185
Reaction score
1,908
Location
Grand Canyon, AZ
Vehicle(s)
2025 Maverick XL Hybrid AWD 4K Tow Package
Engine
2.5L Hybrid
@Bandwagon - Well said.
I'd add to your ethanol comment that at least in my area, "cheap" gas in the places I get fuel, seem to be those with 15% ethanol, and the name brand gas has 10%, so it isn't possible to get an apples to apples mpg comparison.

Again, as you stated, ethanol has a lower energy content, so the fact that higher content ethanol fuel will provide poorer mileage is a given.
It also makes the modest difference in price a better deal at only 10 cents more per gallon for me when purchasing top tier fuel locally.
 

lanceoak

2.5L Hybrid
Active member
First Name
Lance
Joined
Jul 18, 2025
Threads
7
Messages
39
Reaction score
43
Location
Canada
Vehicle(s)
2025 XLT Hybrid
Engine
2.5L Hybrid
Alright I can’t be the only one that notices this 😂

I swear my Maverick gets different MPG depending on where I fill up. Some tanks feel like they last forever and other times the fuel disappears way faster even though I’m driving the same routes.

Sometimes the truck even feels smoother after certain fill ups and other stations make it feel kinda sluggish for no reason.
I’ve noticed:
  • better MPG from some stations
  • worse MPG from others
  • different engine feel/sound
  • some gas seems to burn way quicker
Curious if anyone else has noticed the same thing or if this is all just in our heads lol
  • What stations have been the best for you guys?
  • Which ones have been the worst?
  • Does Costco actually live up to the hype?
  • And is Chevron/Shell actually better or just expensive branding?

Interested to see if there’s actually a pattern here or if we’re all just gas station conspiracy theorists now 😭
(Pic for attention)

1779915008874-18.webp
Back in the day my EX worked in the office at the Gulf Oil refinery. She noticed it was not only Gulf Oil tankers that loaded up. Other brands loaded there as well. I assume the oil companies had an agreement to share refineries to reduce costs. I think a lot of the additive stuff is just hype to sell the product. We don't have the same number of refineries in our area that we had back then.
 

A112358

2.5L Hybrid
Well-known member
First Name
Rusty
Joined
Mar 30, 2026
Threads
9
Messages
98
Reaction score
102
Location
Middle of Nowhere Arizona
Vehicle(s)
2025 Maverick Hybrid AWD
Engine
2.5L Hybrid
Back in the day my EX worked in the office at the Gulf Oil refinery. She noticed it was not only Gulf Oil tankers that loaded up. Other brands loaded there as well. I assume the oil companies had an agreement to share refineries to reduce costs. I think a lot of the additive stuff is just hype to sell the product. We don't have the same number of refineries in our area that we had back then.
I mentioned Refinery Exchange Agreements earlier.
Yes, for the most part the additives are different but very similar, such as Tide vs. Gain laundry detergent or Coke vs. Pepsi, etc.
 

HeyBales

2.5L Hybrid
Well-known member
First Name
Mike
Joined
May 3, 2024
Threads
4
Messages
4,917
Reaction score
4,500
Location
KC Metro area
Vehicle(s)
2005 Toyota RAV4, 2024 XLT Hybrid
Engine
2.5L Hybrid
E-15 a noticeable difference in mileage to E-10?
Good luck.

Did this math for another group saying it was the reason for a loss of 10 mpg.

1 liter ethanol has 21 MJ of energy, compared to 32 MJ for gasoline.
33% less energy per volume.
Who runs pure ethanol in their vehicle?! No one.

Pretend the old standard up to 10% was 10% ethanol then.
30.9 MJ for the mix - 3.4% less efficient than pure gasoline.
Ok - increase that mix up to now 15%.
30.7 MJ for the mix - 4.1% less than pure gas.
But only 0.65% worse than 10% was.

Ok - pretend in a gas guzzling truck - 15 mpg in prior 10% mix.
Now - 14.9 mpg on the 15% mix. oh yikes. (30 mpg would be 29.81)

$4.30 for 10% vs $4.05 for 15% price difference - say 300 miles then fillup.
$86 vs $81.54.
Only if the price remained the same would the efficiency matter - by dimes.
Sponsored

 
 







Top