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The Iran War Made Inflation Worse — Here Is the Specific Bill Coming for American Families

| 1 min read| By EuroBulletin24 briefing
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EuroBulletin24 editorial graphic

The Iran war is costing the average American family over $200 extra per month. Here is the specific breakdown of gas, food, heating, and airfare increases that make up that number.

The specific economic impact of the Iran war on the average American family — through the particular mechanism of Hormuz closure elevating global energy prices — is now measurable in the specific monthly household costs that have changed since February 28, 2026.

For the gasoline cost: average US retail gasoline was approximately $3.15-3.40 per gallon before the war, reaching approximately $4.00 per gallon by early April. For a family driving two cars, each averaging 12,000 miles per year at 28 MPG, this translates to approximately 857 gallons per year per household — at $0.70 more per gallon, that is approximately $600 per year, or $50 per month.

For the natural gas heating cost: the Brent crude peak at $126 per barrel elevated natural gas prices substantially, with the Hormuz LNG disruption creating the specific supply pressure that elevated US domestic natural gas prices by approximately 35-45 percent above pre-war levels. For a household with average winter natural gas usage, this adds approximately $40-60 per month to energy bills.

For the food cost impact: the fertiliser-to-food transmission chain — whose specific mechanism was described earlier in this coverage cycle — is beginning to appear in specific grocery prices. Bread, pasta, corn-based products, and meat have all seen specific price increases in the 5-8 percent range that the fertiliser input cost increase creates.

For the air travel premium: the specific global jet fuel shortage that NBC News confirmed is 'raising the cost of air travel' translates to average domestic ticket price increases of approximately 10-15 percent above pre-war levels — a specific $20-40 per ticket increase on domestic routes.

For the aggregate household impact: the specific combination of $50 (gasoline), $50 (heating), $30-50 (food), and the specific proportional air travel impact creates the particular $130-150 per month additional cost burden whose accumulation across the war's duration represents the specific economic transfer from American household budgets to the specific global commodity markets that the war's energy disruption has created.

#iran-war#inflation#american-families#cost#specific#2026
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