
The University of California at Davis posted this photo of gas prices earlier this month in the Golden State.
Survey pinpoints gas price that Louisiana would find intolerable
As gas prices have moved back above $4 a gallon nationally for the first time in four years, the pressure isn’t just being felt at the pump.
It’s quietly reshaping household budgets across the country.
For many Americans, there’s a tipping point: a number where filling up stops being routine and forces trade-offs.
Groceries get trimmed, plans get canceled, and financial stress ticks up a notch.
To understand where that line sits, Advance America surveyed 3,002 drivers, asking a simple but telling question:
At what price per gallon would you have to start cutting back on essentials?
The answers reveal a country split not just by geography, but by tolerance — and in some cases, proximity — to financial strain.
Louisiana drivers have not hit their breaking point just yet. Residents say they would start cutting back on essentials at $4.63 per gallon, compared with a pump price of $3.65 as of Wednesday — leaving a 98-cent gap before that threshold is reached.
The 5 states closest to their thresholds:
No. 1. Vermont: 17 cents
No. 2. North Dakota: 50 cents
No. 3. Hawaii: 50 cents
No. 4. Utah: 53 cents
No. 5. South Dakota: 55 cents
The 5 states with the lowest thresholds:
No. 50. Alaska: $1.40
No. 49. Rhode Island: $1.14
No. 48. New Mexico: $1.05
No. 47. Massachusetts: $1.05
No. 46. Nevada: $1.04
Vermont drivers are closest to the edge
Vermonters reported the lowest threshold in the country, saying they would start cutting back at $4.28 per gallon. Considering prices currently hovering around $4.11, leaving just 17-cent cushion before behavior changes kick in.
At the other end of the scale, Alaska drivers show far more tolerance for rising prices. Residents here say they would begin cutting essentials at $6.02 per gallon — $1.40 above prices at the time of polling ($4.62 on April 7).
What Louisianans cut first and how they cope
When prices rise, the first sacrifices tend to come from lifestyle spending rather than absolute necessities. But the margin is surprisingly thin.
More than four in 10 (41%) say they would cut back on eating out or takeout first, followed by travel and leisure (29%).
Notably, 13% would reduce grocery spending, while 3% would cut back on health care or medications — a sign that rising fuel costs can push households into uncomfortable territory.
•Dining out, takeout: 41%
•Travel, leisure: 29%
•Groceries: 13%
•Savings, investments: 6%
•Utility bills: 6%
•Health care, medications: 3%
Everyday
adjustments
To cope with higher gas prices, most Louisianans look for small, practical changes before making drastic moves.
•40% say they would drive less
•19% would combine trips or plan routes more carefully
•17% would take on extra work or side income
More disruptive options — like switching to public transport (8%), carpooling (7%), or even changing jobs to reduce commuting (5%) — are far less common, suggesting limits to how flexible people are willing to be.
Five percent say they would turn to credit or loans just to cover rising costs.
Beyond the financial impact, rising gas prices are clearly taking a psychological toll.
•49% say they feel extremely or very stressed about fuel costs
•Another 33% feel somewhat stressed
That’s more than eight in 10 people experiencing at least some level of financial anxiety tied directly to gas prices.
•37% say rising gas prices have forced them to rely on credit or borrowing
43% have canceled plans with friends or family due to fuel costs
“Gas prices don’t just hit wallets — they change behavior,” said Laura McCutcheon, VP of marketing at Advance America. “What’s striking here is how little headroom many Americans feel they have left. For some, we’re not talking about a distant tipping point. We’re already right on top of it.”
