Sorpresa sorpresa: l’Irlanda è tra i paesi più costosi dell’UE per fare il pieno di un’auto

https://www.thejournal.ie/readme/petrol-prices-ireland-eu-6923954-Jan2026/

di Banania2020

12 commenti

  1. Tarahumara3x on

    I think it goes far beyond being one of the most expensive places to fill up a car. Literary no value for money for anything

  2. qwerty_1965 on

    We tax road fuel like an amazing luxury instead of vital, the result is that changes in the price of a barrel of crude only make a small difference (yes really!).

    This will only get worse as we transition to EVs

  3. YoIronFistBro on

    You don’t say!

    It’s among the most expensive countries to do _anything_.

  4. gowangowangowan on

    Half of all workers pay no income tax. We have to tax some people so how…

  5. mcsleepyburger on

    It’s a good thing we have an ultra efficient 24/7 public transport system available to all, as otherwise these tax hike would be nothing but punitive

  6. Life_Breadfruit8475 on

    Breaking news. One of the most expensive and highest income countries in the EU has one of the most expensive petrol prices in the EU. 

  7. Key_Duck_6293 on

    I got around everywhere I needed to in 2025 via Train, Bus, Luas, Ebike & the odd GoCar rental.

    Calculated the total cost of tickets, rentals, bike servicing, bike insurance etc.. to be about €490.

    If you live in an Urban Area you can save €1000s a year by not owning a car

  8. CthulhusSoreTentacle on

    I imagine you could begin the sentence “Ireland is among the most expensive countries in the EU to …” and there’s countless numbers of ways to accurately end it.

  9. JourneyThiefer on

    I used to go to Monaghan not even that many years ago basically every week because the diesel was cheaper than here in Tyrone. Now it’s like 20p more expensive than up here

  10. MrStarGazer09 on

    European Commission figures for January 2026 put Ireland as the fifth highest country for petrol and the third dearest for diesel, but only the 13th and eighth respectively before tax, meaning the gap is largely driven by taxes and levies.

    More than 50% or the cost is from taxes (excise duty and several environmental taxes). It’s a joke.

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