With fuel prices at an all time high in Wiltshire, it would be cheaper to fly abroad than to fill your car's tank (and still have money to spare) right now.
It costs over £100 on average to fill up the average tank at the moment, but if you were to fly from Bristol Airport this week, here are all the prices that would make your journey seem like a dip in the ocean compared to giving your car a top up:
Latvia
If you wanted to go to Latvia this week, you could get a £29 return ticket with Ryanair. If you wanted to avoid the car completely, you would even be able to throw in train prices to get to Bristol and back from Wiltshire, and it would still be cheaper than filling up your tank.
Vienna
Vienna is clearly waiting for you, with return tickets from Ryanair going for as little as £34 if you wanted to jet off to Austria this week.
Wroclaw
Even Poland is cheaper than a petrol tank, with the cheapest flight to the city of Wroclaw and back just £54.
Knock
And if you want to stay a bit closer to home, you can get to Ireland and back for £55.
Stockholm
You can even make the 956 mile journey to Sweden and back for £57.20 this week.
Milan
Italy, anyone? You can get a return to Milan this week for £70.
Girona
And for a slice of Spain, it's only a £70 to get to Girona and back this week.
Geneva
You can even get to Switzerland, which is known as being more pricey, for as little as £88, to go there and back this week. Time to go and indulge in Swiss chocolate then...
In June, the average cost of filling a tank of petrol hit £100 for the first time, to which the RAC said was a dark moment for drivers, and prices have only continued to soar since.
RAC fuel spokesperson Simon Williams said: “With average prices so high – 182.31p for a litre of unleaded and 188.05p for diesel – there’s almost certainly going to be upward inflationary pressure which is bad news for everybody.
“While fuel prices have been setting new records on a daily basis, households up and down the country may never have expected to see the cost of filling an average-sized family car reach three figures.
"With RAC research showing as many as eight-in-10 depend on their cars many must be wondering if any further financial support from the Government will be forthcoming.
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