FuelTrack

Cheapest fuel prices, trends and insights across Australia

  1. Fuel Prices
  2. /New South Wales
  3. /Orange
  4. /E10

Cheapest E10 Fuel Prices in Orange, NSW Today

As of 5 July 2026, the cheapest E10 around Orange, NSW is 161.50 c/L at BP North Orange. Average across 10 stations within 5km of Orange centre is 166.00 c/L – up 0.9 cents over the past two weeks.

Prices from New South Wales Government, updated every 15 minutes.

Cheapest E10 stations in Orange

Top 10 of 10 stations, sorted by price.

BP
BP North Orange161.50
United
United Petroleum Orange161.90
Astron
Astron Orange-Peisley Street162.90
7-Eleven
7-Eleven Orange163.90
7-Eleven
7-Eleven Orange North163.90
Ampol
EG Ampol Orange North165.90
Ampol
EG Ampol Orange167.90
BP
BP Orange (Summer ST)169.90
Lowes
Lowes Orange(Unmanned)169.90
Reddy Express
Shell Reddy Express Orange171.90

Fuel prices by type

7 fuel types available around Orange.

TypeCheapestAverageStations
LPG129.90129.901
U91157.90167.9010
E10161.50166.0010
Diesel169.90185.4010
U95176.90183.3010
Premium Diesel179.90187.607
U98186.90193.909

Frequently asked questions

Where is the cheapest E10 in Orange?

The cheapest E10 around Orange, NSW is 161.50 cents per litre at BP North Orange, 5 Hanrahan Place, ORANGE NSW 2800.

When is the best day to buy fuel in Orange?

Based on the past 4 weeks, Mondays tend to have the cheapest E10 prices around Orange, averaging 160.20 c/L. Thursdays tend to be the most expensive at 162.30 c/L – a difference of 2.1 cents.

How many petrol stations are in Orange?

FuelTrack tracks prices at 10 stations selling E10 around Orange, NSW. The area has 7 fuel types available, including LPG, U91, E10, Diesel.

What petrol brands are in Orange?

There are 7 fuel brands around Orange including BP, United, Astron, 7-Eleven, Ampol, Lowes, Reddy Express. Compare prices across all brands to find the cheapest fuel.

What's happening with Australia's fuel excise in 2026?

Fuel excise is the federal tax built into the price of every litre of petrol and diesel. It normally rises twice a year in line with inflation, and in early 2026 it sat at 52.6 cents a litre. When conflict in the Middle East pushed oil prices higher, the government brought in cost-of-living relief: from 1 April it roughly halved the excise, taking about 32 cents a litre off the bowser price. On 20 June that relief was extended into July but tapered to a 16 cent cut, lifting the excise to 36.6 cents, so pump prices rose at the start of July. The reduced rate runs until 2 August. From 3 August the full 52.6 cent excise returns, and because GST is charged on top of it, that's expected to add about 18 cents a litre at the pump, or roughly $9 on a 50-litre tank, unless retailers absorb part of the increase. A routine inflation adjustment in early August nudges the rate a little higher again.

Prices from New South Wales Government. View all New South Wales suburbs. Compare fuel prices across Australia.