
If you’re purchasing diesel fuel in volume, whether for a fleet, a construction operation, a municipality, or a wholesale resale business, the price you pay isn’t arbitrary. It flows from a chain of interconnected markets that starts with crude oil futures traded in New York and ends at the terminal rack closest to your facility. Understanding how that chain works, and what causes prices to move at each link, gives you a meaningful edge when it comes to timing purchases and structuring supply contracts.
This article walks through how wholesale diesel is priced, what moves the market, and the practical strategies businesses use to protect their budgets when conditions get volatile.
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Every gallon of diesel you buy at the wholesale level is priced from the ground up. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, the retail price of diesel has four components: crude oil cost, refinery processing, distribution and marketing, and taxes. Wholesale prices reflect the first three layers, with retail taxes added at the pump.

Crude oil is by far the dominant variable. EIA data shows that crude oil costs have accounted for roughly 44–51% of diesel retail prices in recent years, depending on market conditions. When crude rises whether due to OPEC+ production cuts, geopolitical disruption, or demand surges, diesel prices typically follow within days.
Refineries convert crude oil into diesel, gasoline, heating oil, and other products. Their profit margin — the “crack spread” — fluctuates with supply, seasonal demand, and refinery utilization rates. EIA data from late 2024 shows refining costs representing roughly 13–22% of the retail diesel price in any given month. Unplanned refinery outages or scheduled maintenance can tighten regional supply quickly, pushing prices higher.
Once diesel leaves the refinery, it travels via pipeline to regional terminals, where wholesale buyers load tanker trucks. The price at that terminal is the “rack price” — the number that most wholesale contracts reference. Distribution and marketing costs have made up roughly 19–22% of diesel’s retail price in recent EIA data. Regional logistics matter: areas farther from Gulf Coast refineries (which produce about half of U.S. diesel) often pay a geographic premium.
Federal excise taxes on diesel fuel total 24.4 cents per gallon, and average state taxes add another 34.74 cents per gallon as of January 2024. PA has the highest state diesel tax in the country at $0.7410/gal. Taxes are applied at the retail level and are typically excluded from wholesale pricing discussions.
The NYMEX Ultra-Low Sulfur Diesel (ULSD) futures contract, traded on the CME Group exchange in New York, is the foundational benchmark for wholesale diesel pricing across the United States. Think of it as the national price signal that all regional markets are calibrated against.
Physical diesel isn’t actually delivered through the futures market in most cases. Instead, regional markets price off the NYMEX as a differential. An Atlanta terminal might price its rack at “NYMEX minus 3 cents,” while a Boston terminal might be priced at “NYMEX plus 2 cents,” depending on regional logistics and supply conditions.
Price reporting agencies, including S&P Global Platts, Argus Media, and OPIS, collect actual transaction data from these regional spot markets daily and publish benchmark prices. Suppliers use these published prices to set their daily rack offerings, and many commercial contracts are indexed directly to these benchmarks.
For buyers in the Mid-Atlantic region, the New York Harbor (NYH) barge price and the Colonial Pipeline ULSD price are the most relevant benchmarks. Colonial pipeline ULSD is one of the most actively traded physical diesel markets in the Americas, delivering fuel from Gulf Coast refineries to terminals throughout the eastern U.S.

Diesel prices don’t move in a vacuum. The primary drivers fall into several distinct categories:
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Each trading day, the front-month NYMEX ULSD futures contract settles at a price per gallon. This is the national benchmark.
Physical diesel markets in New York Harbor, the Gulf Coast, Chicago, and other hubs trade as a differential to NYMEX — often a few cents above or below, depending on local supply and demand.
The price at a specific terminal reflects the relevant regional spot market plus any costs to transport fuel from that hub through the pipeline network to that location. This is the “terminal basis” or “pipeline basis” — and it’s why two terminals 50 miles apart can have meaningfully different rack prices.
Distributors add a margin to cover logistics, operations, and services, arriving at the final rack price the buyer sees. For delivered purchases, transportation costs and applicable taxes are layered on top. For example, say a company in Hershey, PA negotiates a cost-plus-$.30 indexed price to source diesel from their nearest terminal, located in Highspire, PA. If the market price for that diesel at the Highspire terminal on a delivery day is $2.00, then the company will be billed $2.30 for each diesel gallon delivered.
There is no universal “best time” to buy diesel — but there are market conditions that create advantageous windows, and there are structural strategies that protect buyers regardless of timing.
Prices tend to be softer when:
Prices tend to firm when:

Market timing is a full-time pursuit, and even with real-time data and sophisticated tools, it remains unpredictable. For most commercial buyers, the more effective approach is working with a fuel supplier who monitors the market daily and can recommend the right pricing structure for your situation — one that manages risk when markets move against you and captures upside when they cooperate.
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What separates a good fuel supplier from a great one isn’t just the per-gallon price… it’s the ability to help you understand the market you’re buying in. Our team monitors the NYMEX, regional rack prices, and EIA distillate inventory data daily. We translate that market intelligence into practical guidance: when conditions favor locking in a fixed price, when an indexed contract makes more sense, and when a blended structure gives you the best of both worlds.
We work with commercial buyers to build procurement strategies around their operational profile, whether that means a straightforward cost-plus contract, a fixed price for an upcoming construction season, or a cap program that protects against spikes without sacrificing all market upside.
If you’re purchasing diesel in volume and want to review your current pricing structure, or if you’re new to wholesale procurement and want to understand your options, our team is ready to help.