Valero is one of the most widely flagged fuel brands in the country, and almost every Valero you see is run by an independent dealer or jobber rather than the refiner itself. That single fact shapes every deal. When you buy or sell a Valero, you are usually buying a small business and the real estate under it, not a corporate net lease. The brand comes through a fuel supply agreement and an image program, so the sign on the canopy is licensed, not owned outright. That makes Valero sites accessible to first-time buyers and owner-operators, with valuations driven by fuel volume, in-store margin, and the terms of the supply contract. Cap rates and pricing track the branded-fuel market, not a credit-tenant net lease.
What a Valero deal actually involves
A Valero station almost always sells as a going concern. You are acquiring fuel volume, the convenience store business, and in most cases the land and building. The Valero brand itself is not for sale. It rides along through a fuel supply agreement and an image program that the new owner must qualify for and assume or renew.
That means a Valero purchase looks more like buying an independent station with a brand attached than buying a corporate-leased asset. The C-store side carries the profit. In-store items run 20% to 40% margins, and the C-store is about 30% of revenue but roughly 70% of profit. Fuel drives traffic, but net fuel profit is only a few cents per gallon even when 2025 gross margins averaged 40-plus cents. Read our branded vs unbranded comparison before you commit to a flag.
Fuel supply, branding, and image obligations
The Valero brand reaches a site through a supply contract, usually held by the dealer directly or sourced through a jobber. That agreement sets your fuel pricing, minimum volume, term length, and the conditions for keeping the brand. It is the single most important document in the deal and rarely transfers without the supplier signing off on the new owner.
Branding also comes with image and brand standards. Expect requirements around canopy, dispensers, signage, and store appearance, and budget for any image upgrade the supplier requires at transfer. Read the supply contract and the image obligations before you agree on price, because a looming reimage or an unfavorable supply term changes the math. Our fuel supply agreement guide and the dealer structures guide break down what to look for.
Who buys Valero stations
Valero sites draw a broad buyer pool because they are accessible. Owner-operators are the largest group. About 60% of the roughly 152,000 US C-stores are single-store operators, and many of them want a recognized fuel brand without a corporate lease. A well-run Valero often nets an owner around 70,000 to 100,000 dollars a year, and stronger sites reach 100,000 to 500,000 by location.
Jobbers and multi-site operators also buy Valero locations to add volume under supply agreements they already hold. Passive investors who want a true net lease usually look elsewhere, since a dealer-operated Valero is an active business. Buyers chasing mailbox income should compare NNN gas stations and absentee-run sites instead.
How Valero stations are valued
Valero pricing follows the branded-fuel market. The national gas station cap rate sits near 5.6% with fuel operations and roughly 6.87% for real-estate-only deals. Branded C-store comps generally land in the 5.35% to 5.65% range, and geography matters. Florida prices tightest near 5.11%, Texas runs about 5.63%, and weaker markets push to 6.0% to 6.5% or higher.
On the operating side, business-only Valero deals trade at 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA, combined business-plus-real-estate sites run about 8x EBITDA (7x to 9x in premium markets), and fuel volume is often valued at 0.05 to 0.30 dollars per gallon of monthly throughput. A busy urban site can move 100,000 to 150,000 gallons a month. Run your numbers with our valuation calculator and cap rate calculator.
How to buy a Valero station
Start with the fuel supply agreement and the financials, then build financing around them. Special-purpose gas stations qualify for SBA 7(a) loans up to 5 million dollars, but require a 15% minimum equity injection, meaning roughly 10% to 15% down, with real estate terms up to 25 years. As of June 2026, SBA rates run about 9% to 11.5% APR variable, and closings take 30 to 90 days. Conventional financing typically asks 30% to 40% down, and many banks avoid sites with underground storage tanks because of CERCLA exposure.
Environmental diligence is required either way. A Phase I ESA costs 1,800 to 3,500 dollars under ASTM E1527-21 and is mandatory for SBA fuel deals. Work through our due diligence checklist and the full buyer process before you sign.
How to sell a Valero station
Selling a Valero starts with clean numbers and a transferable supply agreement. Buyers and lenders will underwrite your fuel volume, in-store margin, and owner profit, so organize 2 to 3 years of financials and confirm what the brand and supplier require for transfer. A site with strong volume, a long runway on its supply term, and no pending reimage commands the best pricing.
Most station sales take 3 to 6 months. Broker commissions run 10% to 20% on business-only deals and about 6% to 10% when real estate is included. If you own the land, a sale-leaseback can separate the real estate value from the operating business and may price tighter than a combined sale. List with our sell-side team to reach active branded-fuel buyers.
