- Owning a gas station is profitable, but the money comes from inside the store, not the pump: the C-store is about 30% of revenue yet roughly 70% of profit, with in-store items carrying 20-40% margins.
- Fuel is a loss-leader that pulls traffic, not a profit center: 2025 fuel gross margins averaged 40+ cents per gallon while net fuel profit lands at only a few cents per gallon.
- A small-to-medium station owner often nets about 70K to 100K dollars per year, rising to 100K-500K depending on volume, location, and how the site is run.
- Profitability sets the price directly: business-only deals trade at 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA, combined business-plus-real-estate at 4.0x to 7.0x, and prime sites with real estate near 8x EBITDA.
Owning a gas station can be profitable, but the profit does not come from where most buyers think. Fuel moves the cars onto the lot. The C-store, the cooler, and the food program are where the margin lives. In 2025, fuel gross margins averaged more than 40 cents per gallon, yet net fuel profit after credit card fees, freight, and labor was only a few cents per gallon. Inside sales carry 20 to 40 percent margins, and the store generates roughly 70 percent of total profit on about 30 percent of revenue. A small-to-medium station owner often nets 70,000 to 100,000 dollars per year, with stronger sites reaching 100,000 to 500,000. This guide breaks down the real numbers so you can size up a deal before you sign an LOI.
The Short Answer: Yes, But the Profit Is in the Store
A gas station is profitable when the C-store is doing the heavy lifting. Pump margin alone does not build wealth. In 2025, fuel gross margins averaged over 40 cents per gallon, but after credit card interchange fees, freight, rent, and labor, the net fuel profit lands at only a few cents per gallon. The inside business is the opposite. In-store items carry 20 to 40 percent margins, and that store accounts for roughly 30 percent of revenue while producing about 70 percent of profit.
This is why operators obsess over inside sales per customer, foodservice, and cooler velocity rather than the price on the sign. A site pumping a lot of gallons with a weak store is a low-margin business. A site with strong foodservice, tobacco, and beverage sales is where owners actually take home money. When you evaluate a deal, separate the fuel P&L from the merchandise P&L. See how gas stations actually make money for the full breakdown.
What a Gas Station Owner Actually Takes Home
Owner take-home depends on store size, volume, and whether the owner runs the site or hires it out. A small-to-medium station owner often nets 70,000 to 100,000 dollars per year. Stronger sites, multi-store operators, and high-volume locations push that range to 100,000 to 500,000 by site.
Two variables drive the number. The first is fuel volume. A busy urban station does 100,000 to 150,000 gallons per month, while the US average station runs about 4,000 gallons per day. The second, and more important, is inside sales. A site with the same gallons but a stronger store will out-earn its neighbor by a wide margin.
Absentee owners net less because manager pay and shrink eat into profit. Owner-operators capture that labor as income, which is why most of the roughly 152,000 US C-stores are run by hands-on operators. About 60 percent are single-store operators. Absentee ownership changes the math, and you should model it before you buy.
Fuel as Loss-Leader: Why Gallons Alone Do Not Pay
Fuel is the highest-revenue, lowest-margin product on the lot. The price on the sign attracts traffic, but the spread between your rack cost and the street price is thin and volatile. Credit card fees alone can consume a large share of pump margin because customers swipe on nearly every fuel transaction. That is before you account for freight, taxes, and the cost of carrying inventory in underground storage tanks.
Net fuel profit of a few cents per gallon means a station doing 100,000 gallons a month generates only a few thousand dollars of fuel profit, not the headline number a 40-plus cent gross margin implies. Branded stations trade some margin for brand pull and supply security. Unbranded stations keep more spread but carry less traffic guarantee.
The takeaway is simple. Use fuel to drive count and feed the store. Judge a deal on inside profit per gallon, not on gallons alone. Branded vs unbranded covers the supply and margin tradeoff in detail.
Gas Station Profit Margins by Channel
Margins split into two very different businesses under one roof. On fuel, the gross margin looked healthy in 2025 at more than 40 cents per gallon, but net fuel profit was only a few cents after costs. On merchandise, in-store items carry 20 to 40 percent margins, with foodservice and proprietary food typically at the top of that range and tobacco at the bottom.
The structural fact every buyer should memorize is the 30/70 rule. The C-store is roughly 30 percent of revenue but about 70 percent of profit. A pro forma that leans on fuel revenue to look big is hiding a thin bottom line. A pro forma built on inside sales, foodservice attachment, and category mix is the one worth underwriting.
When you read a seller's financials, recast them. Strip fuel down to net cents per gallon, then build the store P&L by category. The combined number is your real EBITDA, and that EBITDA is what valuation multiples apply to. Learn how to value a gas station from these inputs.
How Profitability Sets the Purchase Price
Profitability is what you are buying, so it sets the price. The market prices gas stations three ways. Business-only deals trade at 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA, with smaller stores priced on SDE at 2.0x to 3.5x. Combined business-plus-real-estate deals run 4.0x to 7.0x EBITDA, with high-volume branded sites at the top and rural or unbranded sites near 4x. Deals priced on real estate value run about 8x EBITDA, ranging 7x to 9x in premium markets.
Passive net-lease investors price on cap rate instead. The national average is about 5.6 percent, roughly 5.58 percent with fuel and 6.87 percent without. Tighter markets like Florida sit near 5.11 percent, Texas around 5.63 percent. Strong tenants compress further, with Wawa at 4.83 to 5.20 percent.
Higher and more durable profit earns a higher multiple or a lower cap rate. That is why fixing the store before a sale pays off. Cap rates by state show how location moves the number.
The Costs That Quietly Eat Profit
Headline margin is not net income. Several recurring and one-time costs separate gross profit from owner take-home. Card processing fees scale with every fuel and merchandise swipe. Labor is the largest controllable line, and it is the cost that absentee owners cannot avoid. Utilities, insurance, and maintenance on pumps and coolers are constant.
Underground storage tanks add a category most other retail businesses never face. Compliance, monitoring, and the risk of contamination under CERCLA strict liability are real. That liability is exactly why many banks avoid USTs and why conventional financing often requires 30 to 40 percent down. It is also why a Phase I Environmental Site Assessment, at 1,800 to 3,500 dollars with gas stations at the high end under ASTM E1527-21, is required on SBA fuel deals.
Underwrite these before you trust a profit number. Understand UST risk and review the Phase I process so environmental surprises do not erase your margin.
Financing Affects Whether the Profit Reaches You
Debt service decides how much profit lands in your pocket. The SBA 7(a) program is the most common path for owner-operators. It caps at 5 million dollars, and special-purpose gas stations require a 15 percent minimum equity injection, commonly 10 to 15 percent down. Real estate terms run up to 25 years, which keeps monthly payments low. As of June 2026, rates are roughly 9 to 11.5 percent APR variable, and closings take 30 to 90 days.
Conventional financing typically requires 30 to 40 percent down because many banks shy away from USTs and CERCLA exposure. Closings run faster, 30 to 60 days. The lower leverage protects the bank but ties up more of your capital.
A station that pencils on paper can still fail to pay you if the debt structure is wrong. Model debt service against your recast EBITDA before you commit. SBA 7(a) for gas stations and SBA vs conventional walk through the tradeoffs.
Run the Numbers Before You Believe the Pro Forma
Profitability is provable, not assumed. Before you trust any seller's headline income, recast the financials yourself. Strip fuel to net cents per gallon, which run 0.05 to 0.30 per gallon of monthly throughput once you account for fees and costs. Build the store P&L by category at 20 to 40 percent margins. Subtract real labor, card fees, insurance, and UST compliance. What remains is the EBITDA a valuation multiple actually applies to.
Then sanity-check the price. A business-only deal at 2.5x to 4.0x, a combined deal at 4.0x to 7.0x, or a real-estate-driven deal near 8x should all reconcile to the cash flow you just built. If the asking price implies a multiple far above the cash flow, the pro forma is doing the selling.
Run your own numbers with the free gas station valuation calculator. Gas Station Trader is a specialist gas station and C-store brokerage with 250 million dollars plus transacted. We help owners buy, sell, finance, and structure sale-leasebacks. Call 469.949.6467 to talk through a real deal.