Greeley, CO

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Updated Jun 4

Gas prices near 80631

Greeley, CO · CO average $3.81/gal

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Finding cheap gas in Greeley (80631)

This ZIP holds central and east Greeley, including the downtown core, the University of Northern Colorado neighborhoods, and the older brick bungalows of Houston Heights and Arlington Park. Greeley is the seat of Weld County, the engine of Colorado's oil and gas production, and that energy economy keeps fuel demand and pricing distinctly local.

US 85 and US 34 are the two highways that frame the city's fuel flow, and the stations along them serve a heavy mix of commuters, students, and commercial traffic. That volume, plus the abundance of brands, tends to keep Greeley prices competitive relative to the smaller Front Range towns nearby.

UNC's roughly 13,000 students add a price-sensitive crowd near campus, which sharpens competition on the south and central stations. Checking a downtown-area stop against one out on the US 85 corridor is the reliable way to find the lower number here.

How to save more on gas in Greeley

  1. 1. Use warehouse clubs

    Costco and Sam’s Club typically price 15-25 cents per gallon below nearby stations. Membership pays for itself within a few fill-ups.

  2. 2. Fill up early in the week

    Stations often raise prices Thursday for weekend demand. Fill up Monday through Wednesday to avoid the lift.

  3. 3. Keep tires properly inflated

    Properly inflated tires improve fuel economy by up to 3 percent at current prices. Check pressure once a month.

  4. 4. Check back tomorrow

    Prices can shift 10-20 cents overnight during volatile markets. A quick check before you leave home avoids paying yesterday’s spike.

  5. 5. Pay cash at split-pricing stations

    Stations with cash and credit split pricing typically save an average of 10 cents per gallon when you pay cash.

About gas prices in Colorado

Colorado's state gas tax is around 22 cents per gallon, and the Front Range corridor draws fuel from the Suncor refinery in Commerce City plus pipeline supply from Wyoming and Salt Lake City. The state requires an oxygenated winter blend from November through February at high-altitude metros, which adds 5 to 10 cents per gallon during those months. King Soopers (Kroger), Costco, and Sam's Club are the dependable cheap options across Denver, Colorado Springs, and Fort Collins. Mountain resort towns (Aspen, Vail, Breckenridge) typically run 30 to 50 cents above Front Range averages due to long supply hauls and limited local competition (no Costco or Sam's Club within 50 miles of Aspen).