Cheat Sheet for High Gas Prices During Severe Weather Season
The post Gas Prices Are Surging Into Severe Weather Season: How to Save Big at the Pump in 2026 appeared first on iWeatherNet.
Gas prices are marching higher again just as we head into spring severe weather and the start of hurricane season — but with a smart strategy, you can slash your cost per gallon and protect your budget all year long. Oil prices are up 40% as of the writing of this article.
Gas prices in the U.S. have hit their highest level in four years. This weeks jump was the biggest increase in more than a month.
$5 per gallon in Columbus, Ohio as of April 30, 2026.
CBS Evening News Price at the Pump segment.
Gas prices behave a lot like a storm pattern: several ingredients lining up at once.
You can’t control geopolitics or the atmosphere, but you can absolutely control the effective price you pay per gallon by stacking discounts and rewards.
In true Clark Howard frugal style: never buy gas without some kind of deal attached.
Many gas loyalty programs run strong new‑member offers, such as up to 25¢ per gallon off for new signups on your first fill‑up or first few fills. That’s easy money for entering a phone number or installing an app.
If you know you’ll be driving more as we move through spring storms and into summer, get enrolled now so your best discounts are ready when you actually need them.
Next layer: use a gas cash‑back app so you get paid after you fill up.
Here’s how this typically works:
Why it matters:
The key: these app rewards usually stack with your fuel rewards discount and your credit card earnings. You’re not choosing just one; you’re layering multiple savings streams on the same purchase.
Now add the points‑and‑miles layer so every dollar at the pump is working for you.
Based on the cards you mentioned, here’s how they line up for gas spending:
| Recommended Cards | Gas rewards (U.S. stations) | Current signup bonus (as of March 2026 – always check issuer site for latest) | Best use at the pump |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hilton Surpass | 6x points on gas | 130,000 Hilton points + 1 free night. See more. | Everyday gas if you value Hilton stays highly |
| Marriott Bountiful | 4x points on gas | 85,000 Marriott points offer as incentive to sign up | Great if you’re building Marriott Bonvoy points |
| Marriott Boundless | 3x points (up to $6k/yr combined categories) on gas | Free night awards plus 120,000 points to sign-up. | Good hotel‑focused option with strong welcome offer |
| Southwest personal cards | 2x points on gas | 75,000+ Rapid Rewards points bonus. See more. | Best if you fly Southwest often and chase Companion Pass |
| Chase Freedom/Freedom Flex | 5% back when gas is a rotating quarterly category | $250 sign-up bonus back after $500 spend | Turn on during quarters when gas is a 5% category |
| Discover it | 5x on gas when in rotation (effectively 10x first year for new cardholders) | First‑year “cashback match” (Discover matches all cash back earned in year one instead of a fixed upfront bonus) PLUS: $100 after spending on the card. See here. | Powerful first‑year earner when gas is in the 5x rotation making it 10x back! |
Frugal Gas strategy:
Think of your credit card as your always‑on savings engine: even when no promos are running, it’s still quietly earning you something on every gallon.
Use the calendar to your advantage by lining up your biggest savings before demand and disruption risks peak.
Spring brings strong fronts, heavy rain, hailstorms, and severe weather that can disrupt travel and modestly stress logistics. Even without big supply hits, people naturally drive more.
Smart moves:
Ruptured oil refinery tanks and piping after Hurricane Katrina
Hurricane season adds another layer of risk, especially for regions tied to Gulf Coast refining and shipping.
How to prepare:
One more way to save money — and time — is to plan your trips as carefully as you plan your fuel strategy.
Here’s what stacked savings might look like on a single fill‑up:
Savings layers:
Total: around $11 in combined value from one tank of gas — without changing where you drive, only how you pay and how you plan.
Repeat that across a spring and summer of driving, and you’ve built a meaningful buffer against rising gas prices driven by both markets and weather disruptions, while also saving time and miles with smart routing and forecasting.
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