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Henry Hub • NationalApr 1, 2026

Henry Hub Drops to $2.90/MMBtu as April Injection Season Opens With Surplus Storage

The Bottom Line (Natural Gas — National)

Henry Hub natural gas prices have fallen to the $2.80–$3.00/MMBtu range entering April 2026, despite Winter 2025/2026 being the most expensive in ISO-NE wholesale market history ($6 billion). A warmer-than-normal end to winter left storage inventories above the 5-year average, removing the supply fear premium. The EIA still forecasts a $3.80/MMBtu annual average for 2026 — creating a $0.90/MMBtu gap between current spot and the annual forecast that represents a potential procurement window for commercial buyers.

$2.90
Henry Hub Spot
Early April 2026
$3.80
EIA 2026 Avg
Full-year forecast
Above Avg
Storage
Entering injection

Why Gas Prices Still Matter for Your Electricity Bill

Natural gas generates roughly 43% of US electricity. In every major grid market — ERCOT, PJM, ISO-NE, MISO, and CAISO — gas-fired units are the marginal price-setting resource during peak hours. When Henry Hub moves, your commercial electricity bill follows, typically with a 2–4 month lag as contracts reprice.

This is why the current $2.90 spot price matters. Despite the chaos of the most expensive ISO-NE winter on record and rising data center demand, the market is telling us that near-term natural gas supply is abundant. The question is how long it lasts.

The Winter That Didn’t Drain Storage

Winter 2025/2026 was a tale of two realities. In New England, it was a disaster — the coldest winter in 20 years drove ISO-NE wholesale energy costs to $6 billion, and pipeline-constrained regional prices spiked above $30/MMBtu on the Algonquin Citygate. But nationally, the picture is surprisingly benign:

  • Storage above average: US working gas inventories are entering the April–October injection season above the 5-year average, thanks to a milder-than-expected winter in the South and West.
  • Strong production: Domestic natural gas production remains at or near record levels, providing steady supply.
  • Early injections: Some regions began net injections in late March, earlier than the traditional April start.
IndicatorCurrentEIA ForecastSignal
Henry Hub Spot$2.90/MMBtu$3.80 avgBelow forecast
Working Gas StorageAbove 5-yr avgComfortableBullish supply
LNG Export DemandGrowing+2.1 Bcf/dUpside risk
Summer Power BurnTBDWeather-dependentKey variable

What Could Push Prices Higher

  • LNG export expansion: New liquefaction capacity coming online in 2026 will add approximately 2.1 Bcf/d of additional export demand.
  • Hot summer: Above-normal cooling degree days would spike power burn and draw down storage during injection season.
  • Data center power burn: Every additional GW of data center load running 24/7 on gas-fired generation adds roughly 0.15 Bcf/d of incremental demand.

What Could Keep Prices Low

  • Record production: Appalachian and Permian associated gas providing steady supply growth.
  • Mild shoulder season: April–May temperature forecasts suggest moderate weather nationally.
  • Storage buffer: Starting injection season above the 5-year average reduces volatility risk through mid-summer.

Commercial Procurement Action Items

  • Gas-indexed buyers: The current $0.90/MMBtu discount to the EIA forecast represents a natural entry point. Consider locking 50–70% of expected volume at current index levels.
  • Fixed-rate electricity buyers: If your contract includes a gas adjustment clause, request a blended rate capturing Q2 2026 pricing before summer demand materializes.
  • Northeast buyers: Regional basis differentials remain elevated. Budget for $5–8/MMBtu premiums on Transco Z6 and Algonquin Citygate in winter planning.
  • Hedge timing: The April–June window historically offers the lowest gas prices of the year. Review your hedge book now.

Source: EIA Short-Term Energy Outlook (March 2026); EIA Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report; Henry Hub spot data via CME Group; ISO-NE Internal Market Monitor.

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