How to Find the Cheapest Petrol in Melbourne Every Week (2026)
CityLink and EastLink tolls add up fast. A daily CBD commute via toll roads can cost $15-20 per day — that’s $4,000+ per year. Here’s every bypass route Melbourne locals use to avoid the toll gates.
These are not theoretical tips from someone who Googled “Melbourne hacks.” These are tested strategies from people who live here and use them every week.
1. Western Ring Road bypass
Instead of CityLink from the west, use the Western Ring Road (M80) to Pascoe Vale Road. It adds 10 minutes but saves $8+ per trip. The trick is avoiding the Keilor Park Drive merge during peak hour.
2. Punt Road instead of CityLink
From the south-east, Punt Road to Hoddle Street avoids the Burnley Tunnel toll. It’s slower in peak hour but free. Use Google Maps real-time traffic to decide.
3. Bell Street across the north
Bell Street connects the Western Ring Road to the Eastern Freeway without a single toll. It’s the unofficial free bypass of Melbourne’s north.
4. Springvale Road instead of EastLink
EastLink charges $5-7 per trip. Springvale Road runs roughly parallel and is free. Yes, it has traffic lights. But at $14/day saved, those lights are worth it.
5. Footscray Road to Dynon Road
From the west into the CBD, Footscray Road to Dynon Road avoids CityLink entirely. It’s the route trucks use, and it works.
6. The Burnley Tunnel alternative
Take Alexandra Parade to Hoddle Street to Punt Road. It’s surface roads, but during off-peak it’s actually faster than sitting in tunnel traffic.
7. Chandler Highway bridge
Since the new bridge opened, Chandler Highway connects Alphington to Kew without tolls. Useful for east-to-north trips that would otherwise hit EastLink.
8. Use Waze for toll-free routing
Waze has a ‘avoid tolls’ setting that actually works well in Melbourne. Turn it on permanently and it’ll route you around every toll gate.
9. Weekend toll discounts
EastLink offers weekend capped pricing. If you must use toll roads, batch your errands to weekends when the cap is lower.
10. E-tag vs casual use
If you use toll roads more than twice a month, get an e-tag. The casual-use surcharge is 50 cents per trip extra. Over a year, that adds up.
The Petrol Price Cycle in Melbourne
Melbourne petrol prices follow a roughly 2-3 week cycle. Prices spike on one day and then gradually drop over the next 2 weeks before spiking again. The ACCC runs a website called Petrol Price Cycles that tracks this in real time for Melbourne.
The apps 7-Eleven Fuel Lock, GasBuddy, and MotorMouth all show real-time prices at nearby stations. The difference between the cheapest and most expensive station in the same suburb can be 15-20 cents per litre. On a 50-litre tank, that is $7.50-10.00 savings per fill. Fill up weekly and you save $400-500 per year just by checking an app before you drive to the servo.
The Real Cost of Melbourne Tolls
Let us put this in perspective. A daily return trip on CityLink from Tullamarine to the CBD costs about $12-16. That is $60-80 per week. Over a year, you are spending $3,000-4,000 just on toll fees. Add fuel and car costs, and driving into Melbourne from the north or west is genuinely expensive.
The bypass routes in this guide save you most of that. Yes, they add 10-15 minutes each way. But that extra 20-30 minutes of driving saves you $250+ per month. For most people, that trade-off makes sense.
When Tolls Are Actually Worth It
Late at night, on weekends, and during school holidays, toll roads are fast and nearly empty. The cost drops too — EastLink caps weekend charges, and CityLink has lower off-peak rates. If you only use tolls during these times, the convenience is worth the small cost.
Why This Matters in 2026
Cost of living in Melbourne has risen significantly over the past three years. Rent is up 20-30 percent across most suburbs. Groceries, fuel, and utilities have all climbed. The Reserve Bank’s interest rate decisions affect mortgage holders, and the flow-on effects hit renters too. In this environment, every dollar saved matters more than it did five years ago.
The strategies in this guide are not about being cheap. They are about being deliberate with your money so you can spend it on the things that actually improve your life. Nobody notices the $5 you saved on parking, but you will notice the extra $2,400 in your savings account at the end of the year.
Melbourne remains one of Australia’s most liveable cities precisely because the free and low-cost options are so good. The trick is knowing they exist and building them into your routine.
The Bottom Line
Melbourne is expensive, but it does not have to be as expensive as most people make it. The difference between someone who pays full price for everything and someone who knows the tricks is easily $200-300 per month. That is $2,400-3,600 per year — a holiday, a new laptop, or three months of rent saved.
Start with the tips that save you the most time or money, and build from there. Most of these take zero effort once you know about them. The trick is knowing about them in the first place, and now you do.
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