- Texas, California, Florida, New York, and Georgia hold the most C-stores at roughly 16,500, 12,140, 9,730, 7,560, and 7,092 sites, giving buyers the deepest deal flow and most reliable exit comps.
- Tight cap rate markets favor sellers: Florida prices near 5.11% and Texas about 5.63%, while weaker markets at 6.0% to 6.5% and higher favor buyers hunting yield.
- Volume defines the asset more than the state: a busy urban station runs 100,000 to 150,000 gallons a month versus a US average near 4,000 gallons a day.
- In-store sales are roughly 30% of revenue but about 70% of profit, so the best states are ones where C-store traffic, not just fuel, is strong.
- A small-to-medium station owner often nets about 70K to 100K dollars a year, rising to 100K to 500K by site, with location a primary driver of the range.
- No-income-tax, high-growth states compress cap rates and reward sellers, while a 140 basis point spread can mean a price gap near 1,000,000 dollars on identical income.
The best states to buy a gas station are not always the cheapest. They are the markets where demand, deal depth, and exit liquidity all point the same direction. In 2026 the national cap rate for net-leased fuel and convenience assets sits around 5.6% with fuel and near 6.87% without it, but that headline hides a 140 basis point spread between the tightest Sun Belt markets and slower rural ones. Florida prices near 5.11%, Texas runs about 5.63% on roughly 16,500 C-stores, and weaker markets sit at 6.0% to 6.5% and higher. Where you buy decides your entry yield, how many comparable buyers exist when you exit, and how a lender underwrites the deal. This guide ranks the geography on the fundamentals that move money: store-count depth, population growth, fuel volume, in-store margins, and the cap rate spread between buyer-friendly and seller-friendly markets.
What actually makes a state good to buy in
Cheap entry is not the same as a good market. Four factors decide whether a state favors buyers, sellers, or both.
- Deal depth. States with more C-stores produce more listings, more comps, and a larger buyer pool at exit. Texas leads with about 16,500 C-stores, followed by California at 12,140 and Florida at 9,730.
- Cap rate spread. Tight markets like Florida near 5.11% reward sellers. Wider markets at 6.0% to 6.5% give buyers higher going-in yield.
- Demand drivers. Population growth, no state income tax, tourism, and dense fuel corridors all compress yields and support resale.
- Volume and in-store mix. A busy urban site does 100,000 to 150,000 gallons a month versus a US average near 4,000 gallons a day, and in-store items at 20% to 40% margins carry the profit.
Run any target through these four lenses before you anchor on price. Our cap rate calculator turns NOI and price into a yield you can compare across states.
Texas: the deepest market for buyers and sellers
Texas is the largest C-store market in the country at roughly 16,500 stores, and that scale matters in both directions. Buyers see constant deal flow across branded, unbranded, and truck stop assets. Sellers face a wide buyer pool that supports liquidity at exit. Cap rates average about 5.63%, tighter than the national 6.87% without-fuel figure but not as compressed as Florida.
No state income tax, sustained migration, and long fuel corridors on interstate freight routes keep demand firm. The depth of the market also means more financing relationships and more comparable sales to support an appraisal. For buyers who want a first acquisition with a clear resale path, Texas offers the most second-buyer optionality of any state. Gas Station Trader is the fuel and C-store practice of Eagle Nest Property Group in Dallas, so the Texas market is home turf. Start with our buy-side service or browse branded gas station listings to see live inventory.
Florida and the Carolinas: seller-friendly Sun Belt
Florida is the tightest major market in 2026 at roughly 5.11%, driven by migration, tourism traffic, and no state income tax. At about 9,730 C-stores it is also deep enough to support steady transactions. The Carolinas trade in a 5.0% to 5.5% band as Southeast capital chases growth, with North Carolina alone holding about 5,800 stores. Tennessee sits at 5.4% to 5.75%.
For sellers, this region is where scarcity becomes leverage. A 50 basis point swing on 250,000 dollars of NOI moves price by hundreds of thousands of dollars, and tight Sun Belt cap rates push value up. For buyers, the trade is lower going-in yield in exchange for stronger resale demand and population tailwinds. If you own a quality site in Florida or the Carolinas, pricing the exit correctly is the whole game. See cap rates by state for the full spread and our sell-side process for how we take a tight-market asset to a national buyer pool.
Georgia, Ohio, and the high-count Midwest
Beyond the Sun Belt, several large states give buyers volume and value at once. Georgia holds about 7,092 C-stores and benefits from Southeast growth and Atlanta freight density. Ohio at 5,833, Michigan at 4,960, Pennsylvania at 4,800, and Illinois at 4,710 round out a deep Midwest and Northeast tier.
These markets often price wider than the Sun Belt, which favors buyers chasing yield rather than appreciation. The tradeoff is slower population growth and, in some metros, seasonal volume swings. Deal depth remains strong, so financing comps and resale buyers are available. New York carries about 7,560 stores but operating costs and regulation run higher, so underwrite expenses carefully. For buyers, the play in these states is to find sites with strong in-store performance, since C-store sales are roughly 30% of revenue but about 70% of profit. Model the economics with our valuation calculator before you bid.
Buyer markets vs seller markets: reading the cap rate spread
The single clearest signal of who holds leverage is the cap rate. The 2026 spread runs from Florida near 5.11% to weaker markets at 6.0% to 6.5% and higher, a range of roughly 140 basis points. On a 250,000 dollar NOI, that spread is a price gap close to 1,000,000 dollars for an identical income stream.
- Seller markets: Florida, the Carolinas, Tennessee, and most of Texas. Low caps, deep buyer pools, growth tailwinds. List here and scarcity works for you.
- Buyer markets: slower rural states and thinner metros at 6.0% and up. Higher going-in yield, smaller buyer pools, more operational upside to capture.
Brand also shifts the number. Wawa-leased assets trade at 4.83% to 5.20%, 7-Eleven at 5.00% to 5.40%, Murphy USA around 5.13%, and Circle K at 5.35% to 5.65%. A strong tenant can pull a weaker state into seller territory. Read what counts as a good cap rate before you decide a market is cheap.
How financing and environmental rules vary by deal, not just state
The state sets the tax and growth backdrop, but financing terms are national. SBA 7(a) caps at 5,000,000 dollars, and special-purpose gas stations need a 15% minimum equity injection, roughly 10% to 15% down, with real estate terms up to 25 years. June 2026 SBA rates run about 9% to 11.5% APR variable, with closings in 30 to 90 days. Conventional loans ask 30% to 40% down, and many banks avoid underground storage tanks because of CERCLA liability, with closings in 30 to 60 days.
Every SBA fuel deal requires a Phase I Environmental Site Assessment under ASTM E1527-21, costing 1,800 to 3,500 dollars. Environmental exposure does not change by state line, but tank age and soil conditions vary site by site. That is why due diligence beats geography on a single deal. Compare paths in our SBA vs conventional guide and confirm what a lender will fund through our finance service.
Owner economics: what a site nets across the map
State choice shapes the ceiling, but the site sets the number. A small-to-medium station owner often nets about 70,000 to 100,000 dollars a year, rising to 100,000 to 500,000 dollars by site. The wide range tracks volume and in-store strength more than the state flag on the map.
In 2025 fuel gross margins averaged 40-plus cents a gallon, but net fuel profit lands at only a few cents a gallon after card fees and operating costs. The profit lives inside the store, where items carry 20% to 40% margins. That is why a high-traffic site in a strong-volume corridor outperforms a low-volume site in a tax-friendly state. When you screen markets, weight fuel throughput and in-store sales over the headline cap rate. A 150,000 gallon-a-month urban site with a busy kitchen will beat a 4,000 gallon-a-day rural store almost anywhere. See how much owners make and whether the business is profitable for the full breakdown.