US-Iran War Fuel Spike Squeezes American School Districts’ Budgets

Last Updated: May 16, 2026

The US war with Iran, which began in late February, has disrupted global oil supplies and sent diesel prices soaring, creating a severe financial crisis for American school districts. The price spike is now a political liability for President Donald Trump ahead of November’s mid-term elections. School officials are being forced to divert funds from educational programs to keep buses running and classrooms powered, a shock they warn is unsustainable.

US school buses consume over 800 million gallons of diesel annually. Since December, the price fleets pay has jumped 67 percent to $5.52 a gallon, adding an estimated $1.8 billion in yearly operating costs. A recent survey by the School Superintendents Association found that nearly a third of districts are siphoning money from other programs to cover fuel costs, while almost a fifth are tapping emergency reserves. Measures like consolidating bus routes, deferring maintenance, and cutting administrative spending are being implemented, but officials caution these are temporary fixes.

The strain is felt nationwide. In Washington State’s Yakima School District, where 86% of students live in poverty, the extra fuel expense is equivalent to two teachers’ salaries. “It’s more than a straw on the camel’s back, it’s like a haystack,” said Superintendent Trevor Greene. In Minnesota, the Thief River Falls district warns student support services may be cut, and even schools in oil-rich Texas, like the Waco Independent School District, have seen an 84% year-over-year price increase.

The crisis is particularly acute in remote areas like Southwestern Alaska’s Yupiit School District. There, diesel is essential not for buses but for heating classrooms and powering community generators for its 550 students. With a short window to secure the year’s supply before the region becomes icebound, officials face a “pressure-packed situation”: either lock in a price nearly 66% higher than last year or gamble that prices might fall.

In contrast, some of the nation’s largest school districts are partially insulated from the price shocks. New York City, the country’s largest district, outsources about 60% of its pupil transportation, with contracts that often shift fuel price volatility to contractors. Meanwhile, the Los Angeles Unified School District has proactively moved away from diesel; 70% of its 1,300-bus fleet now runs on alternative fuels or batteries, significantly reducing its exposure to the crisis.

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