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Five ways the Iran peace deal could affect you and your money
Daniel Thomas · 2026-06-19 · via BBC News

Getty Images A young woman fills her car at a petrol station Getty Images

The outbreak of the US-Israel war with Iran in February caused shock waves across the global economy.

The region plays a key role in global oil and gas supplies, and the closure of the key Strait of Hormuz shipping corridor, has driven up prices on a wide range of things from energy bills to air fares.

On 18 June, Iran and the US signed a deal aimed at bringing an end to the war, with the Strait set to reopen.

But negotiations on some of the thorniest issues - including Iran's nuclear programme - will be deferred for 60 days, raising questions about how long this agreement will last.

Here are five ways the deal might affect your day-to-day life.

1. How far will petrol and diesel prices fall?

The war caused an immediate rise in motor fuel prices, as production and transport of oil in the Middle East slowed or stopped entirely.

Prices at the pump have started to drift lower in recent weeks on rising hopes for a peace deal.

But they are still far above where they were before the conflict began.

As of Thursday in the UK, petrol cost an average of 154.72p per litre, while diesel was an average 174.30p per litre, according to RAC Fuel Watch data.

Nearly four months ago, petrol was 132.05p a litre and diesel was 141.6p.

In the US, the latest data shows that average gasoline prices stood at $4.05 (£3.05) per gallon, up from $2.94 per gallon before the war started, while diesel had risen from $3.81 to $5.06 over the same period.

Simon Williams, head of policy at the RAC, said the recent fall in global oil and wholesale petrol prices "if sustained - will "in time lead to much lower prices at the pumps".

But he said: "The big question is how fast will this happen, and whether the fall in pump prices happens as swiftly as the rise drivers had to endure through March and April did."

2. Why heating bills are hard to call

UK gas prices almost doubled at the beginning of the conflict, sparking fears of higher energy bills across the country. Gas is used directly in millions of homes for heating and hot water; it was also used to generate about 27% of our electricity last year.

The benchmark UK gas price was below 80p a therm before the Iran war began but was trading at around 157p by 19 March. Now it's back down at 98p per therm.

However, the consultancy Cornwall Insight says it would be "overly optimistic" to assume prices will quickly return to pre-conflict levels.

Firstly, the UK energy regulator Ofgem has already set its next price cap on household energy bills for July and it can't be changed. The average household bill is set to rise by 13% - or £221 – per year from next month. The cap covers 33 million households in England, Wales and Scotland.

A line chart showing how gas prices in pence per therm from 2021 to 2026. The prices are measured in futures which are one month ahead. The prices start around 72p in mid 2021, and spike up to a peak of around £6.40 in the Autumn months after Russia invaded Ukraine on February 28th 2022. They then fell back to lower levels of around 77p at the start of 2026, and rose again when the USA and Israel attacked Iran in February.

They peaked at around £1.57 in March and have dropped back to about 98p as of June 18th.

3. Why airfares may stay high

The Gulf is where Europe gets around half of its jet fuel from. In the weeks following the start of the war, jet fuel prices soared from about $784 per tonne to $1,838, raising fears of shortages and higher flight prices.

In recent weeks, jet fuel prices have fallen sharply to around $967 a tonne, but the aviation industry is not out of the woods yet, says Amaar Khan, a jet fuel specialist at Argus Media.

He says European airlines should have all the fuel they need to meet demand this summer and beyond. But he also expects jet fuel prices to remain above pre-war levels for much of this year.

4. Prices could rise faster

Inflation, which measures the rate at which prices rise, had been falling in the UK and globally prior to the war. But the conflict has disrupted that overall downward trend, largely because of the rise in global energy prices.

In February, UK inflation fell to 3% and the Bank of England said before the current conflict it believed inflation could reach its 2% target by as soon as April.

In March, however, it climbed to 3.3% before settling at 2.8% in April and May.

Charlotte O'Leary, associate economist at the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, says there is expected to be a "sizeable" upward impact on inflation when Ofgem increases its energy price cap in July.

Over in the US, inflation rose from 2.4% in February to 4.2% in May, with the war seen as a major contributing factor, while in the European Union it went from 2.1% to 3.3% over the same period.

US inflation surged in recent months, as measured by the Consumer Price Index from January 2016 to May 2026. In the year to January 2016, prices rose by 1.4% on average. The annual rate then rose gradually to a peak of 2.9% in mid-2018, before starting to gradually fall again, hitting 0.2% in May 2020, in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic. From there, it rose sharply over the next two years, hitting 9.0% in the year to June 2022, before falling sharply back to 3.1% by June 2023.The latest figures show prices rose by 4.2% in the year to May 2026, up from 3.8% the previous month. The source is the US Bureau of Labour Statistics. There is no data for October 2025.

5. When will interest rates fall?

Interest rates are the primary tool used to control inflation; they also influence the cost of borrowing as well as the interest paid to savers.

But uncertainty over the impact of the Iran war on energy prices has prompted central banks around the world to keep interest rates on hold.

The Bank of England held rates at 3.75% for a fourth consecutive meeting this week. Its governor Andrew Bailey said that recent drops in oil prices were "encouraging" but high energy prices during the war had still left "inflationary pressure in the pipeline".

Interest rates are widely expected to remain on hold for the rest of this year, with some analysts predicting cuts next year.

Last week, the European Central Bank opted to increase its interest rate to 2.25%, the first rise for almost three years, noting that the conflict was "generating inflation pressures".

A Line chart showing interest rates in the UK from January 2021 to June 2026. At the start of January 2021, rates were at 0.1%. From late-2021, they gradually climbed to a high of 5.25% in August 2023, before being cut to 5% in August 2024, 4.75% in November, 4.5% in February 2025, 4.25% in May, 4% in August, and 3.75% in December. At the Bank of England's latest meeting on 18 June 2026, rates were held at 3.75%.

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