Speedway is one of the most recognized fuel and convenience brands in the country, and its locations trade across two distinct deal types. The first is the absolute NNN sale-leaseback or net-lease investment, where the buyer owns the real estate and collects rent from a corporate or franchise operator. The second is the operating business, where you take over fuel volume, in-store sales, and day-to-day management. Each path values differently, finances differently, and attracts a different buyer. Speedway sites are prized for high-traffic corners, strong fuel throughput, and a national brand that supports financing and resale. Gas Station Trader brokers both the real estate and the going concern, and the right structure depends on whether you want passive income or operating control.
What a Speedway Deal Involves
A Speedway transaction is two different assets wearing one brand. On the net-lease side you buy the dirt, the building, and a lease, then collect rent while the operator runs the store. On the operating side you buy the going concern, which means fuel volume, in-store margin, payroll, and the fuel supply agreement that governs your gallons. Many sellers carry the real estate and the business together, and the structure you choose changes how you finance, what you diligence, and who competes to buy.
Fuel is roughly 30 percent of revenue but only a few cents of net profit per gallon, while the c-store drives about 70 percent of profit on 20 to 40 percent in-store margins. That mix is why operating buyers underwrite the inside sales hard. See our due diligence checklist and fuel supply agreement guide before you sign.
Cap Rates and Credit
Branded c-store net-lease deals price tighter than independents because the tenant credit and brand recognition reduce risk. Nationally, NNN c-store cap rates sit near 5.6 percent, roughly 5.58 percent with fuel and 6.87 percent without fuel. Among national operators, Wawa trades 4.83 to 5.20 percent, 7-Eleven 5.00 to 5.40 percent, Murphy USA around 5.13 percent, and Circle K 5.35 to 5.65 percent, the band a Speedway-style branded c-store most often falls into.
Geography moves the number as much as the brand. Florida is tightest near 5.11 percent, Texas runs about 5.63 percent, the Carolinas 5.0 to 5.5 percent, and Tennessee 5.4 to 5.75 percent, while weaker markets push past 6.0 to 6.5 percent. Use our cap rate calculator and read cap rates by state.
Why NNN Investors Target Speedway
Net-lease buyers want predictable rent backed by a tenant and a brand that will still be standing at lease end. Speedway delivers on both, which is why its corner real estate draws 1031 exchange capital, retiring operators trading into passive income, and out-of-state investors who never set foot on site. An absolute NNN structure pushes taxes, insurance, and maintenance to the tenant, leaving the landlord with mailbox rent.
That profile makes branded fuel a common 1031 replacement, where absolute NNN leases with 15 to 20 year terms are the ideal swap. The exchange clock is strict at 45 days to identify and 180 days to close. Start with our NNN gas station listings, the NNN investing guide, and the 1031 deadline calculator.
How a Speedway Site Is Valued
Valuation depends entirely on what you are buying. A pure real-estate net-lease deal is priced off cap rate, dividing annual rent by the market cap to set value. An operating business is priced off earnings, and the multiple jumps based on whether real estate is included. Business-only deals run 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA, with smaller stores at 2.0x to 3.5x SDE. Combined operations run 4.0x to 7.0x EBITDA, and real-estate-inclusive sales reach about 8x, stretching to 7x to 9x in premium markets.
Fuel volume anchors every method. A busy urban Speedway can move 100,000 to 150,000 gallons a month against a US average near 4,000 gallons a day, and per-gallon valuation runs 0.05 to 0.30 dollars of monthly throughput. Model your number with the valuation calculator and read how to value a gas station.
How to Buy a Speedway
Financing drives the timeline. SBA 7(a) funds gas stations up to 5 million dollars, treats them as special-purpose property requiring a 15 percent minimum equity injection at 10 to 15 percent down, and allows real estate terms up to 25 years. As of June 2026, SBA rates run roughly 9 to 11.5 percent APR variable with closings in 30 to 90 days. Conventional financing wants 30 to 40 percent down, and many banks avoid underground storage tanks because of CERCLA liability, though closings can move in 30 to 60 days.
Every SBA fuel deal requires a Phase I ESA under ASTM E1527-21, costing 1,800 to 3,500 dollars, to clear environmental risk. Compare paths in our SBA vs conventional guide, then start at buy a gas station and financing.
How to Sell a Speedway
Selling well starts with deciding whether to market the real estate, the business, or both, because each draws a different buyer pool and a different price. Net-lease investors pay on cap rate and want clean lease terms and strong throughput. Operating buyers pay on earnings and scrutinize fuel margin, in-store mix, and the books. A sale-leaseback lets you keep running the store while you sell the dirt to an investor and free up capital.
Plan on 3 to 6 months from listing to close in a typical process. Broker commissions run 10 to 20 percent on business-only deals and about 6 to 10 percent on real-estate-inclusive sales. Gas Station Trader has transacted more than 250 million dollars in fuel and c-store assets. Start at sell your gas station or explore the sale-leaseback path.
