Question:

In Canada, how are gas prices listed?

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In the U.S., its obviously dollars and cents per gallon because we use the english system of measurement. Since Canada is intelligent to use the metric system, what is the gas price measured by? Is it something like dollars per liter or something like that?

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  1. Pennies per litre.

    A few years ago, we had three-digit prices like, 76.9.

    Today, the prices have four digits, like: 133.9, which means $1.339, or, in English, "a dollar thirty three point nine."

    This may make it simpler: http://www.torontogasprices.com/

    BTW, if you do the math, our gas prices are quite a bit higher than U.S. prices -- we have higher taxes.


  2. canadian dollars or cents

    per leter not gallon

    its about $1.35 canadian in and around Toronto but can vary from province to province.

  3. Prices listed in (cents) / (liter).

    To compare with US prices:

    1 US Gal = 3.85 liters

    $1.00 CAD = $0.990 US

    So, seeing a price like 133.9 would be:

    ($1.339 CAD * 0.990 US/CAD * 3.85 L/gal) = 5.10 $US/Gal

  4. Prices are listed as Dollars/Cents per liter.

  5. No matter how you look at it the signs are to big and the prices are too high. If the Government would get off it's collective f***y, we would have water cars, compressed air cars and electric cars.

  6. Its plainly just dollars per litre.

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