Petrol and diesel prices rose again Saturday by nearly ₹1 per litre each for the third time in eight days. This pushed cumulative hikes to almost ₹5 per litre in only over a week despite a fall in international crude oil prices.Petrol and diesel prices rose again in India. (AFP)Hyderabad recorded the highest petrol price at ₹112.81 per litre on Saturday, followed closely by Thiruvananthapuram at ₹112.64 and Patna at ₹111 per litre. Mumbai’s petrol price touched ₹108.45 per litre after an 86 paise increase, while Kolkata and Jaipur also remained above ₹109 per litre.In Delhi, petrol prices climbed by 87 paise to ₹99.51 per litre, while diesel rose 91 paise to ₹92.49 per litre. Industry experts said gradual hikes may continue until OMCs recover estimated revenue losses of ₹8-10 per litre on petrol and diesel sales, HT reported earlier.Top 10 cities with highest petrol prices on May 23According to fuel price data compiled by Goodreturns,1.Hyderabad — ₹112.81 per litre2. Thiruvananthapuram — ₹112.64 per litre3. Patna — ₹111 per litre4. Kolkata — ₹110.64 per litre5. Jaipur — ₹109.84 per litre6. Mumbai — ₹108.45 per litre7. Bengaluru — ₹108.09 per litre8. Bhubaneswar — ₹106.18 per litre9. Chennai — ₹105.33 per litre10. Guwahati — ₹105.1 per litreDiesel crosses ₹100 in two citiesDiesel prices also witnessed sharp increases across cities. As per Goodreturns:1.Thiruvananthapuram — ₹101.55 per litre2. Hyderabad — ₹100.94 per litre3. Bhubaneswar — ₹97.80 per litre4. Patna — ₹97.03 per litre5. Kolkata — ₹97.02 per litre6. Chennai — ₹97 per litre7. Bengaluru — ₹95.99 per litre8. Jaipur — ₹95.05 per litre9. Mumbai — ₹95.02 per litre10. Guwahati — ₹94.03 per litreWhy fuel prices are risingSector experts said international crude oil prices remain volatile and elevated above $100 per barrel due to tensions in West Asia. India imports more than 88% of its crude oil requirements. This makes domestic fuel prices highly sensitive to global price spikes and rupee-dollar fluctuations.According to industry estimates, OMCs were losing nearly ₹1,000 crore daily on petrol, diesel and LPG sales after the first hike on May 15, HT reported earlier. The losses have now reportedly reduced to below ₹500 crore per day after three rounds of price increases.The three state-run fuel retailers, Indian Oil Corporation, Bharat Petroleum and Hindustan Petroleum, together control more than 90% of India’s fuel retail market and revise prices simultaneously.(With inputs from HT's Rajeev Jayaswal)
This city has the most expensive petrol after third fuel hike. Check top 10 places
In Delhi, petrol prices climbed to ₹99.51 per litre, while diesel rose to ₹92.49. | India News












