No, shut the engine off before refueling to cut ignition risk, avoid pump shutoffs, and follow posted station rules.
You might be tempted to leave the car running for a minute while the tank fills, especially on a hot day, a cold morning, or when kids are in the back seat. It still isn’t the right move at the pump. Gas stations are built around one simple habit: engine off, phone away, nozzle seated, fuel cap closed when you’re done.
The reason isn’t just etiquette. Gasoline gives off vapors that can ignite if they meet a spark or another ignition source. A running engine does not mean a fire is about to happen every time, though it does add one more source of heat and electrical activity in a place where fuel vapors are present. Posted pump rules, state fire codes, and station policies are built around lowering that risk as much as possible.
So if you’re asking whether you can keep the car on while getting gas, the practical answer is no. Turn it off, step out, fuel up, cap the tank, and start the car again when you’re finished. That routine is short, easy, and safer.
Why Gas Stations Want Your Engine Off
Gasoline itself is not the only issue. The bigger issue at the pump is vapor. When fuel moves from the nozzle into the tank, vapors can collect around the filler neck and in the air near the dispenser. That is why stations ban smoking and open flames and why pumps have warning labels in plain language.
A running vehicle adds parts that get hot and parts that carry current. The odds of trouble stay low on an ordinary fill-up, yet fuel safety rules are written for low odds and high stakes. A small spark in the wrong place can do real damage.
There is also no real upside to leaving the engine on. Modern cars do not need a little fuel-stop warm-up. Idling while you stand at the pump just burns more fuel and sends out more exhaust without helping the car.
- It lowers fire risk around fuel vapors.
- It matches posted pump instructions at most stations.
- It lines up with fire-code language used in many places.
- It saves a bit of fuel that idling would waste.
- It helps you stay focused on the job at hand.
Can I Leave My Car On While Getting Gas? Station Rules Explained
If you want the plain rule, use this one: if the nozzle is going in the tank, the engine should be off. That covers nearly every normal gas stop for a passenger car, SUV, pickup, or van.
Some drivers think the rule is old-fashioned or tied to older cars. It’s not. Newer vehicles still have ignition systems, electrical parts, hot surfaces, and vapor around the filler area during refueling. New tech does not erase the basic hazard.
There is also a legal angle. In some places, refueling a vehicle while its engine is running is barred by regulation. California’s Title 8, Section 3319 says no internal combustion engine fuel tank shall be refilled with a flammable liquid while the engine is running. New Jersey’s Retail Gasoline Dispensing Safety Act also bars fuel dispensing while the vehicle’s engine is in operation. You can read the exact language in California Code of Regulations, Title 8, Section 3319 and the New Jersey Retail Gasoline Dispensing Safety Act.
That does not mean every state phrases it the same way. It does mean the engine-off rule is not a random gas-station myth. It shows up in real safety language and real operating rules.
What Counts As “Leaving It On”
Any idling engine counts. Remote start counts. A stop-start system that restarts the engine on its own can count too if the car is left in a mode where the engine may fire back up. If your vehicle has that feature, turn the car fully off before you begin.
Hybrid drivers sometimes get confused here. If the car is “ready” and capable of moving or turning the gas engine on, it is not fully off. Use the full shutdown routine shown in your owner’s manual before you start fueling.
| Situation | What To Do | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Regular gas stop | Turn the engine off before touching the nozzle | Keeps heat and electrical activity down near fuel vapors |
| Remote-started car | Cancel remote start and shut the car fully off | The engine is still running even if the cabin looks “parked” |
| Hybrid in ready mode | Power the vehicle fully down | The gas engine can start on its own |
| Cold weather stop | Fuel first, then restart and drive off | Idling at the pump does not help enough to justify the risk |
| Kids or pets in the car | Keep the stop short and stay by the pump | Safety at the dispenser still comes first |
| Need cabin heat or AC | Turn the car back on after the nozzle is returned | The pump area is not the place for engine idle time |
| Portable gas can filling | Place the can on the ground and fill it with the engine off nearby | Helps lower static and spill hazards |
| Unsure about station policy | Follow the posted signs on the dispenser | Those rules are written for that site’s setup |
Why Idling At The Pump Is A Bad Trade
Leaving the engine on does not save real time. You still have to swipe, select grade, insert the nozzle, and wait for the tank to fill. Restarting the car when you’re done takes only a moment.
What you do get from idling is extra fuel burn and extra exhaust. The U.S. Department of Energy notes that idling wastes fuel and that modern vehicles usually do not need warm-up time before driving. Their Consumer Guide to Reducing Vehicle Idling makes that point clearly.
There’s also the human factor. A driver who treats the stop as a quick in-and-out can get sloppy with the basics: not tightening the fuel cap, leaving the nozzle in too loosely, hopping back into the car during fueling, or pulling away with the hose still attached. Turning the engine off acts like a reset. It tells your brain, “I’m fueling now, not just pausing.”
What About Weather?
Heat and cold make the engine-on habit feel more tempting. They do not change the pump rule. A gas stop is short. Shut the car off, fuel up, and get moving again. If weather is severe, plan the stop before the tank gets low so you’re not stuck at the least pleasant station on the route.
What About Older Cars?
Older vehicles are one more reason to stay strict. Aging wiring, worn parts, and rough idle behavior do not make a good match with fuel vapors. If your car stalls, misfires, or smells like fuel, repair it before your next fill-up.
| Common Thought | Better Move | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| “I’ll only be here for a minute.” | Shut it off anyway | The engine-off step takes seconds |
| “It’s freezing outside.” | Bundle up, fuel, restart | Fueling is brief and safer with the car off |
| “My hybrid barely runs the gas engine.” | Power it fully down | Ready mode can still trigger engine activity |
| “I don’t want to drain the battery.” | Turn off accessories during the stop | A normal fuel stop is too short to drain a healthy battery |
| “Nothing bad has happened before.” | Stick to the posted routine | Fuel safety rules are built around preventing rare bad outcomes |
What To Do At The Pump Instead
The safest routine is not fancy. It is just consistent. Pull up square to the pump. Put the vehicle in park. Turn the engine fully off. Leave smoking materials away from the area. Touch a metal part of the car before grabbing the nozzle if you’ve been sliding around on the seat and want to cut static buildup. Then fuel the car without getting back inside until you’re done.
- Park and shut the engine off.
- Open the fuel door and remove the cap.
- Insert the nozzle fully.
- Stay near the nozzle while the tank fills.
- Do not top off after the pump clicks off.
- Return the nozzle, tighten the cap, and close the door.
- Restart the car only after fueling is complete.
If you are filling a gas can, set it on the ground first. Do not leave it in the trunk or truck bed while filling. That routine helps cut static issues and spill trouble. Use an approved container and cap it right away.
Cases That Confuse Drivers
Waiting With Children, Pets, Or A Passenger
You still should not leave the engine running. Keep the stop short, stay alert, and finish fueling before you do anything else. If someone in the car needs steady cabin cooling or heat for a medical reason, the safer move is often to have another adult with them or choose a stop where help is close at hand.
Diesel Vehicles
Diesel is handled with its own pump gear and has different fuel traits, though the station routine is much the same: engine off while fueling. Pump signage still rules the moment, and many sites apply the same no-idling habit across the board.
Electric Cars
This question does not apply in the same way to battery charging. Charging stations have their own safety rules and connector steps. Gas pump habits do not map over one-for-one.
The Rule Most Drivers Should Follow Every Time
If you want one habit that works almost everywhere, it is this: never fuel a car with the engine running. That lines up with pump signage, fire-safety logic, and plain common sense. It also costs you nothing but a few seconds.
A fuel stop should feel boring. That is the whole point. The less drama, the better.
References & Sources
- California Department of Industrial Relations.“California Code of Regulations, Title 8, Section 3319. Fueling.”States that no internal combustion engine fuel tank shall be refilled with a flammable liquid while the engine is running.
- State of New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development.“Retail Gasoline Dispensing Safety Act and Regulations.”Bars dispensing fuel into a motor vehicle while the vehicle’s engine is in operation.
- U.S. Department of Energy.“Consumer Guide to Reducing Vehicle Idling Fact Sheet.”Explains that idling wastes fuel and that modern vehicles usually do not need warm-up time before driving.

Certification: BSc in Mechanical Engineering
Education: Mechanical engineer
Lives In: 539 W Commerce St, Dallas, TX 75208, USA
Md Amir is an auto mechanic student and writer with over half a decade of experience in the automotive field. He has worked with top automotive brands such as Lexus, Quantum, and also owns two automotive blogs autocarneed.com and taxiwiz.com.