For Sale
6 Stores

Buy a gas station with specialists on your side.
Browse vetted stations and portfolios, get matched to off-market deals, and avoid the environmental and financing pitfalls that sink first-time buyers.
Stations & portfolios for sale
The deals you want are not on the open market.
The best stations sell quietly, broker to broker, before they ever hit a public marketplace. We see that flow. We also keep you out of trouble on the things that wreck a first deal.
Off-market access
Many of our best deals never get publicly listed. Tell us your criteria and we match you before the crowd.
Real numbers, vetted
We help you read fuel volume, inside sales margins, and seller add-backs so you are not buying a story.
Environmental cover
USTs and contamination history can be a landmine. We help you scope Phase I and Phase II before you are committed.
Financing that fits
SBA, conventional, and private. We connect you to lenders who actually fund fuel and C-store deals.
Representation
We represent your offer and your interests through diligence and closing, not the seller's.
Speed when it counts
Good deals move fast. We help you analyze and act before someone else does.
See new deals before they go public.
Tell us what you are hunting for. We will send matching stations and portfolios the moment they come available, including off-market opportunities.
Buying a gas station: common questions
Buy a gas station with specialists on your side through the fuel retail underwriting lens.
This page is evaluated through the fuel site first: gallons, grade mix, margin after card fees, MPD count, canopy visibility, tank history, environmental risk, supplier economics, and the physical forecourt. Read this guide as a fuel-site underwriting memo: what evidence proves the gallons, what tank or supplier risk changes price, and what lender questions come first?
Dispenser age, EMV status, hose condition, canopy lighting, signage, paving, and pump-island layout can create near-term capital needs after closing.
The fuel supply agreement controls pricing, rebates, volume commitments, assignment rights, branding, and whether a buyer can actually step into the deal.
Ask for monthly gallons by grade and diesel, not one annual total. Seasonality, price competition, and grade mix can change the real margin story.
Tank tightness, release history, monitoring, cathodic protection, spill buckets, and ATG reports belong in the first diligence package.
For gas station deals, the highest-value diligence usually lives in wet-stock reports, tank records, fuel invoices, supplier contracts, dispenser condition, canopy and lighting, traffic ingress, environmental reports, and fuel margin history. This service hub is intentionally written for buyers, operators, lenders, and investors underwriting fuel volume and fuel real estate, so it should be evaluated on the specific commercial questions it answers, not only on broad national search terms.
What makes Buy a gas station with specialists on your side a real diligence page.
This service hub is strongest when it helps a visitor decide what to do with a real fuel asset. The checklist below keeps the page tied to gas-station economics: gallons, tanks, supplier terms, forecourt condition, environmental records, card fees, and traffic conversion.
Ask for evidence. Lighting, camera coverage, pump-island visibility, cash exposure, and overnight staffing affect both operations and buyer comfort. For Buy a gas station with specialists on your side, do not treat this as generic background; make it part of the buyer, seller, lender, or investor checklist.
Ask for evidence. Required canopy, dispenser, signage, restroom, or loyalty-image upgrades can turn an attractive fuel site into a capital-heavy acquisition. For Buy a gas station with specialists on your side, do not treat this as generic background; make it part of the buyer, seller, lender, or investor checklist.
Ask for evidence. Traffic count only matters if drivers can see, enter, fuel, and exit easily. Median cuts, signalized corners, truck access, and competing corners must be mapped. For Buy a gas station with specialists on your side, do not treat this as generic background; make it part of the buyer, seller, lender, or investor checklist.
Ask for evidence. Diesel mix, fleet accounts, commercial routes, and truck access can materially change value, especially for highway and industrial-market assets. For Buy a gas station with specialists on your side, do not treat this as generic background; make it part of the buyer, seller, lender, or investor checklist.
Ask for evidence. Phase I findings, UST history, insurance, open incidents, and remediation obligations should be cleared before a lender or serious buyer relies on price. For Buy a gas station with specialists on your side, do not treat this as generic background; make it part of the buyer, seller, lender, or investor checklist.
For Gas Station Trader, the indexed value of the page should come from how well it answers the fuel-site question: what would a serious owner, buyer, lender, or broker verify before trusting the gallons and the real estate?
What this hub helps a serious visitor decide.
Buy a gas station with specialists on your side should route visitors around fuel-property economics: gallons, tanks, supplier terms, forecourt condition, card fees, environmental records, traffic access, and lender readiness. The hub is useful when it helps a person choose the next page or raise their hand with a real fuel-site goal. The primary intent here is buyer routing, acquisition criteria, evidence requests, and deal-fit screening.
Lighting, camera coverage, pump-island visibility, cash exposure, and overnight staffing affect both operations and buyer comfort.
Required canopy, dispenser, signage, restroom, or loyalty-image upgrades can turn an attractive fuel site into a capital-heavy acquisition.
Ask for monthly gallons by grade and diesel, not one annual total. Seasonality, price competition, and grade mix can change the real margin story.
Tank tightness, release history, monitoring, cathodic protection, spill buckets, and ATG reports belong in the first diligence package.
What a serious Buy a gas station with specialists on your side inquiry should include.
Gas Station Trader should turn Buy a gas station with specialists on your side traffic into fuel-property leads with enough detail to underwrite the site, not just a name and phone number. A useful inquiry explains the fuel asset, the tank and supplier proof, and the decision timeline.
Share whether this is a single station, portfolio, brand page, market search, guide question, or tool output. Include gallons, brand or supplier, MPD count, diesel mix, real estate versus leasehold, and tank ownership or responsibility.
The strongest gas-station lead can provide monthly gallons, wet-stock records, supplier agreement, fuel invoices, card fees, tank and ATG records, Phase I material, environmental history, and forecourt capex notes.
Clarify whether the goal is to buy, sell, value, refinance, or prepare for a 1031 or sale-leaseback. Include price range, financing capacity, timing, geography, and any supplier or environmental constraints.
For this service hub, a high-quality lead is one where the fuel economics, tank/supplier risk, and next action are clear enough for a broker or principal to respond intelligently.
Before you act on Buy a Gas Station, talk with a sector broker.
Gas Station Trader is built to turn buyer mandate interest into a real next step: valuation, buyer match, lending path, diligence package, or confidential sale strategy. Eagle Nest Property Group works across owners, operators, 1031 buyers, and private capital in fuel retail.