Buffalo and the wider Western New York corridor remain a working fuel market driven by I-90, I-190, and cross-border traffic to Ontario. New York runs roughly 7,560 convenience stores statewide, the fourth-largest count in the country, and Buffalo carries a dense mix of branded majors, independent dealers, and high-volume highway sites. Gas Station Trader is the fuel and C-store practice of Eagle Nest Property Group, a Dallas firm with 250 million dollars plus transacted. We broker through Eagle Nest Brokerage LLC, a licensed Texas broker, and we underwrite Buffalo deals the same way we underwrite anywhere: real fuel volume, in-store margin, environmental condition, and what a buyer will actually finance. See all New York gas stations for sale.
The Buffalo gas station market
Buffalo sits on a fuel network that few inland markets match. I-90 and I-190 carry steady interstate volume, the Peace Bridge and other crossings feed Canadian traffic, and dense neighborhood corridors support standalone C-stores. A busy urban station here can move 100,000 to 150,000 gallons per month, well above the US average near 4,000 gallons per day. New York as a whole supports about 7,560 convenience stores, fourth nationally, and roughly 60% of US C-stores are still single-store operators, which describes much of the independent inventory around Buffalo.
Fuel is the traffic driver, but the store is the business. C-store sales are about 30% of revenue and roughly 70% of profit, and in-store items carry 20% to 40% margins. See our branded gas station listings and the gas station profit margins guide.
Buying a gas station in Buffalo
Most Buffalo acquisitions come down to three numbers: gallons, in-store margin, and the cost of capital. A small-to-medium station owner often nets about 70,000 to 100,000 dollars per year, and stronger sites run 100,000 to 500,000 dollars depending on volume and location. Underwrite the fuel margin honestly. 2025 fuel gross margins averaged 40-plus cents per gallon, but net fuel profit is only a few cents per gallon, so the store carries the deal.
Financing a New York fuel site usually runs through SBA 7(a), which caps at 5 million dollars and requires a 15% minimum equity injection on special-purpose stations, with real estate terms up to 25 years and June 2026 rates near 9% to 11.5% APR variable. Start with the financing options, the SBA 7(a) guide, and the valuation calculator.
Selling a gas station in Buffalo
Buffalo sellers get the strongest result when the books are clean and the environmental file is in order before the property hits the market. Buyers and SBA lenders will require a Phase I ESA under ASTM E1527-21, which runs 1,800 to 3,500 dollars and is required on SBA fuel deals, so getting ahead of underground storage tank questions protects both price and timeline. Most gas station sales close in 3 to 6 months.
Pricing follows the structure. Business-only deals trade at 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA, while combined business-plus-real-estate sites run 4.0x to 7.0x. Broker commissions run 10% to 20% on business-only deals and about 6% to 10% when real estate is included. Owners weighing a hold-and-lease should review our sale-leaseback option, the selling process, and the environmental insurance guide.
Values and cap rates in New York
Cap rates set the ceiling on what a Buffalo site is worth to an investor. National gas station cap rates sit near 5.6%, roughly 5.58% with fuel and 6.87% without, and weaker markets price wider at 6.0% to 6.5% and above. Western New York generally falls in that softer band rather than the tight Sun Belt pricing, so disciplined buyers can find more yield here than in Florida, where cap rates run near 5.11%.
Tenant credit moves the number. National NNN tenants such as 7-Eleven trade at 5.00% to 5.40% and Circle K at 5.35% to 5.65%. When strong real estate is included, gas stations can reach about 8x EBITDA. Run the math with the cap rate calculator, browse NNN gas stations, and read cap rates by state.
