RealCost Guide

500 Mile Trip Cost UK

A 500-mile trip is a major UK journey. It could mean a long holiday drive, cross-country family visit, relocation journey, business trip, airport alternative or a route where train or flying may need serious comparison.

Use this page to estimate the fuel side of a 500-mile trip, then check whether return distance, overnight stays, rest stops, driver fatigue, passengers, luggage, tolls, train fares or flying alternatives change the real decision.

Plan the fuel cost of a 500-mile trip

Use the trip fuel planner below to estimate the fuel cost of your journey. For a 500-mile one-way trip, enter 500 miles. For a 500-mile trip there and back, enter 1,000 miles.

This calculator estimates the fuel side of the trip. Add parking, tolls, airport costs, rest stops, overnight stays, detours, passenger splitting, vehicle wear and driver fatigue separately where relevant.

Quick answer: At £1.50 per litre and 40 MPG, a 500-mile trip costs about £85.23 in fuel. If it is 500 miles there and 500 miles back, the 1,000-mile return trip costs about £170.45 in fuel.

500-mile trip or 500-mile return trip?

At this distance, one-way versus return distance completely changes the budget.

500 miles one-way

Use 500 miles if the destination is 500 miles away and you only want the outward journey cost.

500 miles there and back

Use 1,000 miles if the trip is 500 miles each way. This doubles the fuel cost.

Example fuel cost for a 500-mile trip

These examples use petrol at £1.50 per litre.

50 MPG car

500 miles costs about £68.18 in fuel.

40 MPG car

500 miles costs about £85.23 in fuel.

30 MPG car

500 miles costs about £113.64 in fuel.

What can change the real cost of a 500-mile trip?

A 500-mile journey has hidden costs that can easily overtake the simple fuel calculation.

Overnight stays
A hotel may be needed if the journey is too long or the return trip is unrealistic in one day.
Rest stops
Food, coffee, motorway services and charging stops can add a lot across a full-day drive.
Parking and tolls
Destination parking, toll routes, city charges, airport fees or ferry costs may apply.
Vehicle wear
A 500-mile trip adds serious mileage, tyre wear, servicing demand and depreciation.

Driver fatigue matters on a 500-mile trip

This is not just a money decision. A very long drive can be tiring, slower than expected and less practical than it looks on a map.

Journey time

Traffic, breaks, roadworks and slower final-mile driving can make the real journey much longer.

Breaks

A 500-mile drive should normally include proper breaks, not just fuel stops.

Return journey risk

A 1,000-mile return trip is a major travel plan and may need overnight stops or a different travel option.

Passengers, luggage and route type

A loaded car over 500 miles can use more fuel and make the journey feel very different.

Loaded car

Passengers, luggage, roof boxes and heavy loads can reduce real-world efficiency.

Motorway-heavy route

Steady motorway driving can be efficient, but high speeds and congestion can reduce MPG.

Destination traffic

The last few miles into a city, airport or holiday area can add time, stress and fuel use.

Should you split the cost of a 500-mile trip?

Passengers can make driving much cheaper per person, but the driver still carries the fatigue and vehicle wear.

Solo trip

You carry the full fuel cost, plus any parking, tolls, hotels, rest stops and destination charges.

Two people

An £85.23 fuel cost becomes roughly £42.62 each before extras.

Four people

An £85.23 fuel cost becomes about £21.31 each before extras.

Should you compare driving with train or flying?

At 500 miles, you should compare the alternatives before assuming driving is the best choice.

Driving may win if…

There are several passengers, lots of luggage, awkward endpoints or you need the car when you arrive.

Train may win if…

You are travelling alone, the rail route is direct, parking is expensive or you want to avoid driver fatigue.

Flying may win if…

The route is very long, airports are convenient, luggage is light and transfers do not wipe out the time saving.

Useful calculators and guides

Use these next depending on whether you want trip cost, distance cost or wider travel comparison.

Trip fuel planner
Open planner →
Fuel cost calculator
Open calculator →
Fuel cost per mile
Open calculator →
Driving vs train
Compare options →
Driving vs flying
Compare options →
Compare travel costs
Compare options →

500 mile trip cost UK FAQs

How much does a 500-mile trip cost?

At £1.50 per litre and 40 MPG, a 500-mile trip costs about £85.23 in fuel.

How much does a 500-mile return trip cost?

If the destination is 500 miles away and you drive back again, the total is 1,000 miles. At £1.50 per litre and 40 MPG, that costs about £170.45 in fuel.

Is a 500-mile trip expensive?

Yes, it can be. Fuel alone is significant, but overnight stays, rest stops, parking, tolls, driver fatigue, vehicle wear and alternative travel options can matter even more.

Should I use the trip planner or fuel calculator?

Use the Trip Fuel Cost Planner when you are thinking about a real journey. Use the Fuel Cost Calculator when you only want a simple fuel estimate for a fixed distance.

Can I split the cost of a 500-mile trip?

Yes. Divide the fuel cost by the number of passengers, then decide whether to split parking, tolls, hotels, rest stops or other extras too.

Should I drive, take the train or fly for a 500-mile trip?

Compare all three. Driving may work well for passengers, luggage or awkward destinations. Train may be better for solo direct routes. Flying may work when airports, transfers and luggage costs still make sense.

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