Natural Gas Henry Hub Price

Natural Gas (Henry Hub) Live

Natural Gas ETFs & Funds

United States Natural Gas Fund (UNG) ETF
ProShares UltraPro Natural Gas (BOIL) 3x ETF

Natural Gas ETF Trading

Natural Gas ETF (UNG) ETF
Inverse Natural Gas ETF (KOLD) 2x Inverse

Natural Gas Futures & Regional Markets

NG Front Month
FCG NatGas ETF
Cheniere LNG
SWN Resources

Real-time market data

Every chart on this page is rendered by a TradingView widget. Henry Hub and TTF front-month contracts, NYMEX futures, the UNG, BOIL, and KOLD ETFs, and the main U.S. gas producer equities all update during their respective market hours. For a closer look at how the benchmark is set, see our Henry Hub explainer.

Why track natural gas?

Natural gas heats homes, runs industrial processes, and backs up renewable generation on the grid. Henry Hub is the U.S. pricing benchmark; TTF is its European counterpart. The gap between the two, together with the LNG shipping cost, sets the economic case for exporting U.S. gas abroad — and reshapes prices on both sides of the Atlantic.

Henry Hub / TTF spread

The Henry Hub–TTF spread is the single most closely watched cross-basin relationship in global gas. It reflects LNG shipping and liquefaction costs, relative storage levels, and geopolitical risk premia. For background on how U.S. exports have turned the spread into a tradable signal, read the spread primer and U.S. LNG exports deep dive.

EIA weekly storage

The Energy Information Administration publishes the U.S. working-gas storage number every Thursday at 10:30 a.m. ET. Deviations from consensus can move Henry Hub sharply within minutes. Our storage reports hub tracks each release and explains what the number means for the curve.

ETFs and gas equities

Retail investors often express a natural gas view through ETFs such as UNG and FCG or leveraged products like BOIL and KOLD. Each carries distinct contango, leverage, and decay characteristics. Our ETF guide walks through how to use them without falling into the common traps.

U.S. shale basins

Most U.S. gas now comes from a handful of shale basins: the Marcellus and Utica in Appalachia, the Haynesville in Louisiana, and associated gas from the Permian in Texas. Each reacts differently to price signals. Our basins primer breaks down the geography and the economics.

Last reviewed on April 24, 2026. Charts and data provided by TradingView.