A short video shot at a Marathon gas station in Vallejo, California, is going viral on X after a customer caught something strange. He filmed the pump charging him even though he had already pulled the nozzle away from his car, and no gas was coming out. In the clip, first posted to TikTok by @tk2pz and later shared on X by @WallStreetApes on April 7, 2026, you see the digital display on the pump. The numbers for gallons and dollars just keep rising, while the nozzle is clearly nowhere near her tank, and nothing is flowing.
The post caption framed it sharply: “All over America people are finding gas stations that continue to charge them even when gas is not being pumped. This time it’s in Vallejo, California. We are being robbed blind.” The clip drew hundreds of thousands of views within hours.
What’s going on in the video looks like something called “meter creep”, which is sometimes known as “pump creep” or “phantom pumping.” Basically, the pump’s screen keeps ticking up as if fuel is flowing, but nothing is actually coming out. The Petroleum Equipment Institute says this usually happens due to internal leaks in the pump or mechanical issues with its components.
As per the Nevada Department of Agriculture, meter creep isn’t common, but it does happen, usually because pumps are machines. They are outside all day, exposed to the weather, and over time, things can just wear out or break.
It’s rare because a gas station is trying to cheat anyone. More often, it’s just that some stations don’t catch the problem soon enough. If inspections turn up a pump that isn’t working right, inspectors can shut it down, and you will see a hotline number on the pump so you can report any issues yourself if you spot something bizarre.
Internet Reacts to California Gas Station Pump Still Charging Customer With No Gas Coming Out
Dark humor about the timing landed first. “That pump is dreaming up gallons. My wallet is living the nightmare. Gas is already too expensive at the moment for that haha,” one person wrote. Another connected it to broader political frustration: “Gotta fund that war somehow.”
Several replies focused on accountability and legal action. “Law enforcement needs to open an investigation,” one commenter said. Another offered practical advice: “That’s when you should call a police officer.”
A more measured response pointed toward the existing regulatory system: “Gas stations get monthly inspections from the state and feds for weights and measurements. There’s a phone number on the pump to call if measurements are wrong.”
The clip grabs attention because it captures something that has been bugging everyone: gas prices keep climbing, and throws in something even more maddening: getting charged for gas when none is going into your car. Whether it’s the meter acting up or the pump just glitching, seeing that number tick up while the nozzle is not even near the tank is tough to ignore.
Gas in California is already way over $5 a gallon and, in some spots, pushing toward $9 or $10. So every cent feels like it counts more than ever, and a pump charging for nothing is the kind of thing that spreads quickly.







