Most of the information you need can be found in the line at a gas station outside Patras on a Tuesday afternoon. Drivers do the kind of mental math that Greeks have done far too frequently in the last ten years as they stand by their vehicles and watch the digital meters rise above €2 per liter. The Fuel Pass hardly covers a single tank, according to a fifty-year-old taxi driver who shrugs at the pump. He’s not incorrect. Before anyone even discusses insurance, tolls, or groceries, the math is dire with prices hovering above €2 per liter and €50 in mainland support.
Fuel Pass III was introduced by the Greek government on Holy Monday, which in and of itself seemed like a strangely optimistic moment. In Greece, Holy Week is a time for families to travel, for the nation to breathe, for ferries to fill, and for the islands to awaken after winter. It was meant to be a relief to start a subsidy at that time. Rather, it has been perceived by many drivers as a gesture, the kind of policy that appears generous on a press release but shrinks when it comes to practical application. Speaking with people in Athens cafés gives the impression that the program was abandoned before it had a chance to take off.
| Program Name | Fuel Pass III (Greek government fuel subsidy program) |
| Launch Date | Holy Monday, April 6, 2026 |
| Subsidy Amount | €50 mainland drivers, €60 island residents, €30 motorcycles |
| Income Cap | €25,000 single, €35,000 married couples |
| Estimated Coverage | About 75% of Greek drivers |
| Total Support Plan | 300 million euros (≈ $344.7 million) announced by PM Kyriakos Mitsotakis |
| Driver of Crisis | US–Israel–Iran war disrupting oil markets |
| Petrol Price Range | Above €2/liter mainland, up to €2.35 on islands |
| Pre-War Petrol Price | Around €1.7 per liter |
| Greek Gulf Energy Dependence | Roughly 36% of imports from Persian Gulf |
| Implementing Ministers | Kyriakos Pierrakakis and Takis Theodorikakos |
One aspect of the issue is the numbers. Mainland petrol prices have surpassed €2 per liter, while island prices have reached €2.35, especially during Easter peaks. In that context, a €50 subsidy is hardly a fill-up. The reasoning of the government was fairly obvious. Cover about three-quarters of drivers, focus on lower and middle-class drivers, and steer clear of the kind of large, costly handouts that prior administrations relied on during the 2022 energy crisis. On paper, it’s a reasonable strategy. However, budgets are not read by the general public. Pump screens are read by it.
The timing of everything else is what is causing Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis political pain. The US-Israel-Iran conflict has affected oil markets in the manner that conflicts typically do. Greece experiences these shocks earlier and more severely than most of its neighbors because it depends on the Persian Gulf for about 36% of its energy imports, the highest percentage in all of Europe. The March announcement of a 300 million euro support plan was intended to appear proactive. The Fuel Pass came and went, prices continued to rise, and rumors of a potential extension into May began to circulate in Kathimerini and other places. That has also contributed to the annoyance. The cadence of these announcements has become untrustworthy.

The transportation sector has grievances of its own. Logistics and trucking organizations have cautioned that if the government continues to view fuel prices as a domestic problem rather than a national one, supply chains may collapse. There is pressure on coastal shipping. Jet fuel has doubled from pre-crisis levels for airlines. There is a subtle concern that the country’s logistics network’s ability to continue operating at current prices, rather than whether regular drivers can afford their commute, will determine the next stage of this crisis. It’s the kind of gradual squeeze that goes unreported until something goes wrong.
The political wear and tear is also difficult to ignore. Greeks experienced austerity, bailouts, the energy boom in 2022, and now this. In a way, the Fuel Pass is a tiny policy. However, when people feel ignored, small policies become symbols. It’s still unclear if the government can reclaim the narrative with a Market Pass return and other actions. For the time being, drivers are silently choosing which trips to skip while observing the screens at the pump. That is the true gauge of how this is going, more so than any speech in parliament.

