Drivers are set to pay the lowest Independence Day price for gasoline since 2005 — and for the first time on record, the Fourth of July holiday per-gallon cost will run below the price from New Year’s Day, according to GasBuddy.

Motorists on the road for the Fourth of July holiday weekend are expected to pay an average of $2.21 a gallon for gasoline, well below the 10-year average of $3.14, the retail fuel-pricing-information provider said on Tuesday.

GasBuddy

It pegged prices on Tuesday afternoon at $2.253 a gallon.

“Perhaps we can finally get rid of the myth that gas prices go up for the holiday,” said Patrick DeHaan, senior petroleum analyst at GasBuddy. “This is like Christmas in July, instead of seeing fireworks at the pumps like we saw just a few short years ago.”

GasBuddy, meanwhile, also pointed out that the national average price is set to be lower by roughly 12 cents a gallon on Fourth of July than it was on New Year’s Day. That would mark the first-ever price decline between the two holidays, based records going back to the year 2000.

GasBuddy

On average over the past decade, prices have been 47 cents higher on the Fourth of July than on New Year’s Day.

Unless there’s a “drastic change” from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, with deeper crude production cuts or “some shift to the geopolitical climate, I don’t see an organized, widespread trend of higher gas prices until next spring,” DeHaan told MarketWatch.

Still, drivers are likely to see at least some temporary price hikes this summer.

Gasoline prices could see some short-term increases later this summer, possibly in August, which marks the peak of the Atlantic hurricane season, said DeHaan.

Tropical storm Cindy, which blew through the Gulf of Mexico last week, disrupted oil output in the region—and that is expected to show in the form of a weekly supply decline for crude. Prices US:CLQ7 climbed Tuesday as a result.

Futures prices for gasoline US:RBN7 also climbed Tuesday, but traded close to 10% lower month to date.