With fuel prices up, travel will be down, even compared to the dismal July 4, 2008 holiday, predicts AAA.

With fuel prices up, travel will be down again, even compared with the miserable 2008 holiday.

If you’ve been filling your tank, lately, you know the bad news: after a brief, spring reprieve, fuel prices have been rising again, now nudging $3.00 a gallon in some parts of the country.

While prices are nowhere near the $4-a-gallon level, as they were this time a year ago, the impact is nonetheless being felt by motorists across the country, says the AAA.  And the most immediate impact will be on travel during the upcoming Independence Day holiday, the road club projects.

Expect 37.1 million Americans to travel more than 50 miles from home during the long Fourth of July holiday, but that’d be a 1.9 percent decline from last year, when 37.8 million motored over 50 miles.  And the 2007 travel statistics were already down 10.5% from Independence Day ’07, when 42.3 million of us took a long drive.

How will you readers of TheDetroitBureau.com respond to rising fuel prices?  Will you suffer through it and keep motoring, or will you switch plans, stay at home and set off a few of those firecrackers you hid away?  Click on the comment button and let us know!

Subscribe to TheDetroitBureau.com“Many Americans remain cautious about the outlook for their personal finances and these attitudes are reflected in the slight decline in travel we are forecasting for the upcoming holiday weekend,” says Robert L. Darbelnet, AAA President & CEO.

But Darbelnet adds that fuel prices aren’t the only thing to consider when deciding what to do over the Fourth.  The travel industry has been hammered, not just by gas prices, but also by the deep recession, and hotels, amusement parks and other entertainment venues are offering especially attractive deals to get folks traveling again.

Of course, there are other ways to get around.  Last year, air travel also declined for the Independence Day weekend, AAA reports, but this year, the company is projecting a nearly 5% jump, with 2 million Americans getting onboard for a quick holiday getaway.  It helps that the bottom tier of discount flights will cost an estimated 16% less than this time a year ago.

In fact, virtually everything but rental car prices are down for the upcoming holiday, with players like Hertz and Avis boosting daily charges about 5%, on average, to $51 a day.

All-in-all, AAA expects the typical Fourth of July traveler to spend about $1,160 over the holiday and to travel an average 614 miles.  Half that spending will cover transportation and lodging, while food and beverages will account for another 20%.  The rest will go towards shopping, entertainment and recreation.

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