If you go on holiday this year, you must expect higher fuel prices in many popular travel organizations than in Austria. Refueling is particularly expensive according to a current analysis of the VCö (Verkehrsclub Austria) in Italy, Germany, France, Greece and Portugal. But it is also cheaper …
The fuel is cheaper than in Austria in Croatia, Spain, Slovenia, Bulgaria and Turkey. With the end of the school on Friday in Oost -Astenrijk and a week later many start their holiday trip abroad in the other federal states. According to Statistics Austria, 47 percent used the car in the previous year. The most popular travel destinations abroad are Italy, Germany, Croatia, Spain and Greece.
In Italy and Germany you eat expensive
In the most popular holiday destination Italy A 50-liter tank filling European currently costs around nine euros more than in this country, diesel for a good four euros. In Deutschland And Greece Eurosuper is even more expensive due to around eleven euros.
In France And Portugal Musters must also dig deeper into their pockets. However, refueling is considerably cheaper in Croatia (Eurosuper: -2.20 euros, diesel: -4.30 euros), Spain (Eurosuper: -2.60 euros, diesel: -7.10 euros) or BulgariaWhere a 50-liter filling-eurosuper costs more than 16 euros less.
Within the EU, the gasoline price in Denmark is the highest – 50 liters of Eurosuper costs 99 euros, around 23 euros more than in Austria. Switzerland is at the top of Diesel: there you pay 50 liters for more than 19 euros more than in this country, followed by Denmark and Finland.
Funning driving is worth it
According to VCö, fuel -saving driving behavior is worthwhile, regardless of the holiday country: if you travel on the highway instead of 130 km/h at 100 to 110 km/h, you can reduce fuel consumption by a fifth. Further tips from the VCö: Drive forward, switch it off quickly, avoid unnecessary luggage and use the air conditioning moderately.
Source: Krone

I’m Ben Stock, a journalist and author at Today Times Live. I specialize in economic news and have been working in the news industry for over five years. My experience spans from local journalism to international business reporting. In my career I’ve had the opportunity to interview some of the world’s leading economists and financial experts, giving me an insight into global trends that is unique among journalists.