PetrolPulse

Market Update

Wednesday 10 June 2026

Unleaded 91 and diesel · Brent crude, AUD/USD, capital pump prices, and city-by-city 4-week outlook

What moved this week

As of Wednesday 10 June 2026, the national average for Unleaded 91 across Australia's capital cities sits at 170.9c/L, down 5.5c on last week. Diesel averages 206.8c/L nationally, with the cheapest reported bowser at 178.3c/L. Wholesale import costs eased 1.6% over the past week to an estimated 157.1c/L — the input that flows through to pump prices over the following one to two weeks.

Wholesale market signals

Brent Crude

US$93.55

per barrel

vs week prior:-4.5%

Singapore MOGAS tracks Brent with ~1 week lag

AUD/USD

0.7003

exchange rate

vs week prior:-1.8%

A lower AUD raises the cost of imported fuel

Import Parity

157.1

cents per litre

vs week prior:-1.6%

Estimated wholesale cost before excise and GST

What this means for pump prices

Highermedium confidence4-week outlook

Brent crude eased 4.5% over the past week to US$93.55 per barrel, while the Australian dollar weakened 1.8% against the US dollar, lifting the local cost of imported fuel. These are the two inputs that, together with refining and shipping margins, determine the wholesale cost of fuel landed at Australian terminals.

The four-week outlook is leaning higher. Retailers absorbing costs — prices likely to rise Petrol stations are currently selling 13c/L below their typical margin — an unusual situation that historically corrects upward. Prices are likely to rise in the coming weeks regardless of where crude goes. This is a good time to fill up.

Historically, moves in import parity take about 10-14 days to show up at the bowser. With wholesale decreases this week, you can expect the pressure to filter through to pump prices over the next two weeks — earlier in metros that follow a tight price cycle, later in regional markets where retailers smooth changes out.

Capital city pump prices

Average and cheapest reported pump prices in each capital on Wednesday 10 June 2026, with the change vs 7 and 30 days prior.

CityU91 avgU91 cheap
Sydney165.1c149.9c
Melbourne169.2c149.9c
Brisbane170.3c154.3c
Adelaide159.7c151.9c
Perth171.3c149.2c
Canberra175.7c167.9c
Hobart179.1c161.9c
Darwin177.1c165.5c

Averages computed from stations within a metro radius of each capital. 7d and 30d deltas apply to the U91 average.

City-by-city cycle outlook

Where each capital sat in its local discounting cycle on Wednesday 10 June 2026, and what the model was telling drivers to do.

Sydney

Falling — heading toward troughFill when you need to
Avg: 165.0c/LConfidence: Medium

Prices are stable right now. Tue–Wed tends to be the cheapest day in Sydney. Fill up when convenient.

Melbourne

Falling — heading toward troughFill when you need to
Avg: 169.2c/LConfidence: Medium

No clear timing signal right now. Fill up when you need to.

Brisbane

Falling — heading toward troughYou have time
Avg: 170.3c/LConfidence: High

Fri–Sun is historically the cheapest day to fill up in Brisbane. That's 1 day away. If your tank allows, waiting could save up to 2.8¢/L.

Perth

Near trough — cycle lowYou have time
Avg: 171.3c/LConfidence: Low

Prices here follow a strong weekly pattern — Tuesday is usually cheapest, about 10¢/L below the week's peak. Worth waiting ~5 days for the weekly low.

Adelaide

Falling — heading toward troughFill when you need to
Avg: 159.7c/LConfidence: Medium

No clear timing signal right now. Fill up when you need to.

Canberra

Falling — heading toward troughFill when you need to
Avg: 175.7c/LConfidence: High

Prices are stable right now. Wednesday tends to be the cheapest day in Canberra. Fill up when convenient.

Hobart

Falling — heading toward troughYou have time
Avg: 179.1c/LConfidence: Low

Sat–Sun is historically the cheapest day to fill up in Hobart. That's 2 days away. If your tank allows, waiting could save up to 2.9¢/L.

Darwin

Falling — heading toward troughYou have time
Avg: 177.1c/LConfidence: Low

Friday is historically the cheapest day to fill up in Darwin. That's 1 day away. If your tank allows, waiting could save up to 3.5¢/L.

Looking ahead

Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide, Canberra, Hobart, Darwin are on the falling leg, which is when local prices typically reach their lowest before the cycle resets.

If your tank can wait, the next predicted price low is approaching in Brisbane (around 0 days away from the next trough), Perth (around 12 days away from the next trough), Hobart (around 0 days away from the next trough).

Layered over the local cycle, the macro signal is biased upward for the next four weeks based on the wholesale cost trajectory. That doesn't always change the day-to-day call, but it does shift where each city's cycle is likely to land relative to recent history.

How this update is generated

Each day at 6:00am AEST, PetrolPulse fetches the latest Brent crude spot price and AUD/USD exchange rate, then combines them using the standard Singapore MOPS import parity formula to estimate the wholesale cost of fuel delivered to Australian terminals.

Capital city averages are computed from live station-level data within a metro radius of each capital — not state-wide aggregates — so regional outliers don't skew the headline number. Comparisons against 7 and 30 days prior show whether the city was trending up or down on the day, separate from the wholesale signal.

The city-by-city cycle outlook combines local cycle-position analysis with the forward-looking macro signals above. When import parity moves significantly relative to current retail prices and the recent margin, the directional call updates automatically.

Current market update →How petrol prices are set →How our forecasts work →