Stations running dry in Byron
See stations in Byron where one or more fuel types may be unavailable right now. Compare flagged sites, fuel types, and nearby alternatives before making a special trip.
What this means: roughly 1 stations currently show a flagged or missing fuel price. Filter by state or fuel below, then confirm on the map before you drive.
Availability signals come from fuel price feeds and can include placeholder prices, inactive station records, or unavailable fuel records. Confirm locally before relying on a single station.
Stations affected
Fuel entries flagged
States affected
Fuel types affected
Data sourced from government fuel price feeds. A station is marked as "running dry" when its reported price is $999.90 (placeholder), zero, or explicitly flagged as unavailable. Auto-refreshes every 5 minutes. Last data update: 04/06/2026, 10:46 am
National Fuel Availability Bulletin: Current Supply Chain Status
Australia is currently experiencing localized fuel shortage issues driven by recent supply chain disruptions. Industry reports indicate that while the national fuel reserve remains stable, logistical challenges in downstream distribution have resulted in widespread outages across various service station networks. These intermittent supply constraints have occasionally led to instances of petrol stations running dry in specific regions, though authorities emphasize that this is primarily a distribution bottleneck rather than a national fuel deficit.
Queensland is currently identified as the most severely impacted state, where logistical delays have necessitated close monitoring of fuel stocks. To assist motorists in navigating these supply chain disruptions, we strongly advise using the FuelRadar map to verify real-time stock levels at your local servo before traveling. Ensuring your journey is planned using up-to-date data remains the most effective way to avoid service stations that may be temporarily out of product.
What to check
- The ACCC continues to monitor retail fuel pricing and supply levels closely to ensure transparency and prevent anti-competitive behaviour during supply disruptions.
- Major fuel retailers have confirmed they are prioritising fuel deliveries to key regional hubs and emergency services to mitigate the impact of the current supply chain disruptions.
- The Australian Government maintains that the national liquid fuel security stocks remain at robust levels, with ongoing coordination between suppliers to restore service station inventory levels as quickly as possible.
Browse related fuel outage pages for Byron
Use these pages to compare affected states, regions, and local hotspots without losing the current outage context.
State pages
Regional pages
What does "Running Dry" mean?
A station is flagged as "running dry" when its reported fuel price data becomes stale, shows placeholder values ($999.90), or the station is explicitly marked as inactive by data providers. This typically indicates the station has run out of one or more fuel types, though it can also reflect temporary reporting issues.
Why are stations running dry?
Availability can change because of delivery timing, temporary supply gaps, station maintenance, reporting delays, or strong local demand. Regional stations can be affected sooner because deliveries are less frequent and storage capacity varies by site.
How often is this data updated?
FuelRadar Australia aggregates data from official fuel price feeds across Australian states and territories. The availability tracker refreshes every 5 minutes so you can see the latest status signals in one place.
What should I do if my local station is dry?
Use the FuelRadar Australia map to find the nearest station that still has fuel. Fill only what you need, check nearby alternatives before making a special trip, and consider another compatible fuel type if your vehicle supports it.
FuelRadar Australia sources fuel price data from government-mandated reporting systems including FuelCheck (NSW), MyFuel SA, FuelWatch (WA), and other official state APIs. This dashboard is updated every 5 minutes and covers 1 affected stations across all Australian states and territories.
