The prices of petrol and diesel haven’t fallen today, with averages remaining at record levels across Australia – despite the federal government’s fuel excise cut coming into effect.

On Monday, the federal government announced it would halve the fuel excise on petrol from 52.6 cents per litre to 26.3 cents per litre from April 1, 2026, for a period of three months.

The cut would save $14.47 on a full tank of a Toyota RAV4 hybrid with its 55-litre fuel capacity. The RAV4 was the best-selling vehicle in Australia in 2025 that runs on petrol.

As part of a four-stage emergency fuel plan, the government also said it would abolish the 32.4 cents per litre diesel heavy vehicle road user charge applied to trucks with a gross vehicle mass (GVM) of more than 4.5 tonnes.

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Yet prices at the pump remain elevated, with motorists across the country seeing little immediate change.

“For some very busy metropolitan sites, it could be a few days,” Rowan Lee, chief executive of the Australasian Convenience and Petroleum Marketers Association, told The Guardian.

“In remote areas where they [have] low volume, it could be a week or two. As that fuel is replenished, the reduced excise will be applied to that fuel and passed through to motorists.”

This delay is because fuel excise is charged at the terminal gate before fuel is delivered to service stations, meaning most fuel currently in tanks was taxed at the higher 52.6 cent per litre rate.