- Fuel pulls customers in but the C-store pays the bills, generating roughly 70% of a station's profit on about 30% of revenue, with in-store items carrying 20-40% margins versus only a few net cents per gallon on gas.
- A typical small-to-medium station owner nets about $70K to $100K per year, while stronger single sites reach $100K to $500K depending on volume, location, and inside sales mix.
- Earnings drive value: gas stations trade at 4.0x to 7.0x EBITDA for the combined business and around 8x EBITDA (7x to 9x in premium markets) when real estate is included.
- Two stations with similar fuel volume can earn very differently because net fuel profit runs just a few cents per gallon, so inside sales, foot traffic, and operating costs decide the real bottom line.
Ask how much a gas station makes and you get two very different answers depending on whether you mean revenue or profit. A site can push millions of dollars through the pumps and still net thin margins on fuel, while the cooler and the register quietly carry the business. Understanding that split is the difference between overpaying for a deal and buying a real cash machine.
This guide separates the layers most listings blur together: top-line fuel and inside sales, the gross margin on each, and the net profit an owner keeps after expenses. We use verified NACS fuel-margin data and current market figures so you can pressure-test any P&L. If you are weighing a purchase, sale, or refinance, the team at Gas Station Trader has transacted more than 250 million dollars in this sector.
Revenue vs. Profit: The Number That Actually Matters
Gas station revenue is a misleading headline. A busy urban station moving 100,000 to 150,000 gallons of fuel a month can report several million dollars in annual sales, but most of that cash flows straight back out to the fuel supplier. Fuel is a high-volume, low-margin business.
The number that matters is net profit, what the owner keeps after cost of goods, labor, rent or debt service, utilities, credit card fees, and maintenance. A small-to-medium station owner often nets roughly 70,000 to 100,000 dollars per year. Stronger sites, especially high-volume branded stores with a busy kitchen or car wash, push that into the 100,000 to 500,000 dollar range.
When you evaluate a deal, look past gross sales and ask for EBITDA and seller's discretionary earnings. Two stations with identical fuel volume can have wildly different bottom lines based on inside sales mix and expense discipline. Our gas station valuation guide walks through normalizing those numbers.
How Much a Gas Station Makes on Fuel
Fuel is the foot traffic engine, not the profit center. In 2025, fuel gross margins averaged 40 cents per gallon or more, the highest on record. That sounds strong until you subtract credit card swipe fees, which run 10 to 15 cents per gallon, plus freight, shrink, and the labor to sell it. Net fuel profit is typically only a few cents per gallon.
Run the math on a real site. A station selling the US-average volume of about 4,000 gallons per day clears meaningful gross dollars, but the net contribution from fuel alone rarely covers the full operation. A high-volume site moving 100,000 to 150,000 gallons a month earns more, yet the per-gallon economics stay thin.
This is why brokers and lenders value fuel volume as a traffic metric first and a profit metric second. Steady gallons mean steady customers walking inside, where the real money is made. If you are comparing branded supply against open-supply pricing, see branded vs. unbranded.
The C-Store Is Where the Money Is
Here is the figure every buyer should memorize. The convenience store is roughly 30 percent of revenue but around 70 percent of profit. The pumps bring people in, the inside sales pay the bills.
In-store items carry 20 to 40 percent margins, an entirely different business from fuel. Packaged drinks, snacks, beer, and tobacco move volume, but the highest-margin categories are foodservice, coffee, and fountain. A station with a working kitchen, a strong cooler program, and a car wash will out-earn a fuel-only site of the same gallonage by a wide margin.
When you underwrite a station, scrutinize the inside-sales line as hard as the gallons. Look at the food and beverage percentage of total inside sales, the average basket, and whether the current owner is leaving money on the table with weak merchandising. Upside in foodservice and car wash is often the cleanest path to growing net profit after closing. Our profitability guide covers the full margin picture.
What an Owner Takes Home Per Month and Per Year
Translating all of this into an owner's paycheck depends on the site, the structure, and how hands-on the operator is. A typical small-to-medium independent owner nets about 70,000 to 100,000 dollars per year, or roughly 6,000 to 8,300 dollars per month, often while working in the store.
Stronger operations earn far more. High-volume branded stores, sites with foodservice and a car wash, and multi-store operators commonly net 100,000 to 500,000 dollars per year. The variables that move the number most are fuel volume, inside-sales mix, whether you own or lease the real estate, and debt service if the purchase was financed.
Be realistic about labor. If you run the register yourself, your take-home reflects an owner-operator wage plus profit. If you staff the store fully and run it absentee, payroll comes out first and your margin shrinks. Decide early which model you want, because it changes the math. See absentee ownership for the staffed-management approach.
Why Two Stations Earn Very Different Money
Identical-looking stations can post wildly different profit. The drivers are predictable once you know what to check.
- Fuel volume: a site at 4,000 gallons a day and one at 5,000 gallons a day are different businesses, both at the pump and in resulting store traffic.
- Inside-sales mix: a store with strong foodservice and a car wash beats a packaged-goods-only site at the same gallonage.
- Real estate: owning the dirt versus paying rent can swing net profit by tens of thousands of dollars a year.
- Fuel supply: branded jobber contracts, open supply, and dealer arrangements each carry different per-gallon economics.
- Location and competition: a corner with a hard left-in, a highway exit, or a captive trade area earns more than a saturated intersection.
When you compare listings, normalize for these factors before you compare asking prices. A cheaper station can be the worse buy. Our team can model side-by-side P&Ls so you compare net to net, not headline to headline.
From Profit to Value: How Earnings Set the Price
A station's earnings drive its sale price through a multiple. Business-only deals, where you buy the operation but not the land, typically trade at 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA, with smaller stores valued on seller's discretionary earnings at 2.0x to 3.5x. When the real estate is included, combined deals run 4.0x to 7.0x EBITDA, with 6x to 7x for high-volume branded sites and around 4x for rural or unbranded stores.
Premium net-lease assets sold to passive investors price differently, often around 8x EBITDA and ranging 7x to 9x in strong markets. For real-estate-backed deals, buyers also apply a cap rate, which nationally sits near 5.6 percent and varies by state and tenant.
The takeaway for owners: every dollar of sustainable net profit you add is worth several dollars at sale. Growing foodservice or car wash income before listing compounds directly into value. See our cap rates by state breakdown for how location shifts pricing.
The Bigger Picture: A Large, Fragmented Market
There are about 152,000 convenience stores in the US, and roughly 60 percent are single-store operators. That fragmentation is why so many sites change hands every year and why disciplined buyers find deals. Texas leads with about 16,500 stores, followed by California near 12,140, Florida around 9,730, New York about 7,560, and Georgia near 7,092.
For owners, fragmentation means your competition is often a one-store operator who has not optimized inside sales, giving a sharper buyer real upside. For investors, it means a deep, liquid market with consistent listings across price points and risk profiles.
It also explains the range in this guide. With this many independent owners, earnings vary from a modest owner-operator income to half a million dollars or more at the strongest sites. Knowing where a specific station sits on that spectrum, and why, is the whole job. If you want a station's numbers stress-tested before you buy or sell, reach out or call 469.949.6467.