Chevron is one of the most recognized fuel brands in the country, and a Chevron-branded station carries a different deal profile than an independent site. Buyers are paying for a name customers trust, an image program with real cost obligations, and a fuel supply agreement that ties the site to Chevron-branded product. Whether you are acquiring a single Chevron location or selling one, the value drivers come down to fuel volume, in-store sales, the underlying real estate, and the terms of the branding and supply contract. At Gas Station Trader, the fuel and C-store practice of Eagle Nest Property Group in Dallas TX, we represent buyers and sellers on branded fuel deals and price them against current market data, not guesswork.
What a Chevron Deal Actually Involves
A Chevron station purchase is rarely just dirt and a canopy. You are buying into a brand relationship with defined obligations. The transaction usually covers the fuel business, the in-store convenience operation, and in many cases the real estate. Inside sales matter more than most first-time buyers expect. Across the industry, in-store items carry 20-40% margins and the C-store accounts for about 30% of revenue but roughly 70% of profit, while net fuel profit is only a few cents per gallon even though 2025 fuel gross margins averaged 40+ cents per gallon.
Volume sets the floor on value. A busy urban station does 100,000 to 150,000 gallons per month, against a US average near 4,000 gallons per day. Before you sign, model gallons, inside margins, and the brand obligations together. Our how to buy a gas station guide walks the full process.
Fuel Supply, Branding, and Image Obligations
The defining feature of a branded Chevron deal is the fuel supply agreement. Most branded stations buy Chevron product through a jobber or distributor under a multi-year contract that dictates branded-fuel purchase commitments, signage standards, canopy and dispenser image requirements, and credit-card processing terms. Image upgrade obligations can require real capital, so confirm what the current owner has committed to and what comes due after closing.
Branded supply has tradeoffs against running independent. The brand drives traffic and credit-card acceptance, but it limits your sourcing flexibility and adds compliance cost. Read the full supply contract and the brand image schedule before you price the deal. See our jobber fuel supply agreement breakdown and the branded vs unbranded comparison to weigh the structure against an independent site.
Who Buys Chevron Stations
Buyers fall into a few clear groups. Owner-operators want a Chevron site to run themselves, often financed with an SBA 7(a) loan and targeting an owner who nets roughly $70K to $100K per year, scaling to $100K to $500K on a strong site. Multi-store operators add Chevron locations to build a network and squeeze better fuel and merchandise pricing. Roughly 60% of US C-stores are single-store operators, so consolidators have a deep pool to buy from.
A third group is passive investors buying the real estate under a long-term net lease and collecting rent. These buyers price the deal on cap rate, not on store operations, and many use a 1031 exchange to redeploy capital. We work all three buyer types. Start with our buy-side services.
How a Chevron Station Is Valued
There are three valuation lenses, and the right one depends on what is being sold. A business-only sale typically trades at 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA, with smaller stores closer to 2.0x to 3.5x SDE. A combined business-and-operations deal runs 4.0x to 7.0x EBITDA. When the real estate is included, pricing moves to roughly 8x EBITDA, reaching 7x to 9x in premium markets.
For net-leased branded fuel, cap rate drives price. Nationally these cluster near 5.6% (about 5.58% with fuel, 6.87% without). Florida is tightest near 5.11%, Texas runs about 5.63%, the Carolinas sit at 5.0-5.5%, and weaker markets push 6.0-6.5%+. Run the numbers with our valuation calculator and cap rate calculator, then read what is a good cap rate.
How to Buy a Chevron Station
Financing a Chevron acquisition usually runs through SBA or conventional debt. SBA 7(a) caps at $5M, requires a 15% minimum equity injection for special-purpose gas stations (10-15% down), offers real estate terms up to 25 years, and in June 2026 priced around 9% to 11.5% APR variable, with closings in 30 to 90 days. Conventional financing wants 30-40% down and many banks avoid underground storage tanks because of CERCLA liability, though conventional closings can run 30 to 60 days.
Every SBA fuel deal requires a Phase I ESA under ASTM E1527-21, costing $1,800 to $3,500, to clear environmental risk on the tanks. Build a real diligence file before you commit. Use our due diligence checklist and financing services to move efficiently.
How to Sell a Chevron Station
Selling a Chevron site starts with a clean valuation and a complete data package. Buyers and lenders will want fuel volumes, inside-sales margins, the fuel supply agreement, the brand image schedule, environmental records, and tank compliance history. Resolving open image obligations or supply commitments before listing removes friction and protects your price.
Expect a typical sale to take 3 to 6 months. Broker commissions run 10-20% on business-only deals and about 6-10% when the real estate is included. If you want to keep the operation but free up capital, a sale-leaseback lets you sell the real estate and lease it back on a long-term net lease, often the structure passive investors prefer. We price, package, and market branded fuel assets through our sell-side process and Eagle Nest Brokerage LLC, a licensed Texas broker.
