Insights

Gas Station Cap Rates by State and Brand (2026 Data Study)

A verified, annually restamped breakdown of where gas station cap rates sit in 2026, by state, by tenant brand, and by deal structure.

Key takeaways
  • Gas station cap rates average about 5.6% nationally in 2026, ranging from Florida's tight 5.11% to 6.0-6.5% and higher in weaker markets, with Texas around 5.63%.
  • Tenant credit sets the floor: Wawa trades at 4.83-5.20% and 7-Eleven at 5.00-5.40%, while Circle K runs wider at 5.35-5.65%.
  • Cap rates only apply to leased real estate income, so owner-operated stations sell on EBITDA multiples of 2.5x to 4.0x for the business alone and about 8x when real estate is included.
  • Financing drives buyer pricing because SBA 7(a) caps at $5M with a 15% minimum equity injection for special-purpose fuel deals, and many conventional banks avoid underground storage tanks due to CERCLA liability.

The gas station cap rate is the single number that decides what your site is worth. It converts net operating income into value, and a swing of 50 basis points can move a price by hundreds of thousands of dollars. In 2026 the national average for net-leased fuel and convenience assets sits around 5.6%, but that headline hides wide spreads. Florida trades near 5.11% while Mississippi pushes past 6.5%. Wawa compresses below 5% while unbranded rural stores trade far wider. This study breaks down c-store cap rates 2026 by state, by brand, and by structure, so owners pricing an exit and investors hunting yield can anchor to real numbers. Every figure here is sourced from active net-lease and business-sale comps, then refreshed each year. Use it to set expectations before you go to market.

What a gas station cap rate actually measures

A cap rate is net operating income divided by purchase price. A site with $300,000 in NOI selling at a 6% cap is worth $5,000,000. Lower the cap to 5% and the same income is worth $6,000,000. That inverse relationship is why a tight cap rate signals a premium asset and a wide cap rate signals more risk or weaker fundamentals.

The number you quote depends on what is included. Net-leased convenience assets with fuel trade around 5.58% nationally. The same stores priced on the convenience store cap rate without fuel income land near 6.87%, because fuel volume is the riskier, more cyclical revenue line. Blended, the market sits around 5.6%.

Cap rates apply cleanly to passive, net-leased real estate where a credit tenant pays rent. Owner-operated stations sell on EBITDA or SDE multiples instead, which we cover below. Knowing which framework a buyer is using is the difference between pricing a building and pricing a business. See our gas station valuation guide for the full methodology.

Gas station cap rates by state in 2026

Geography drives pricing more than almost any other factor. Population growth, no state income tax, and dense fuel corridors compress yields. Slower rural markets push them wider.

  • Florida is the tightest major market at roughly 5.11%, driven by migration and tourism traffic.
  • Texas averages about 5.63%, the deepest market by store count at around 16,500 C-stores.
  • The Carolinas trade in a 5.0% to 5.5% band as the Southeast Sun Belt draws capital.
  • Tennessee sits at 5.4% to 5.75%.
  • Weaker markets like Mississippi run 6.0% to 6.5% and higher, reflecting thinner buyer pools and lower volumes.

The gas station cap rate by state spread between Florida and Mississippi is roughly 140 basis points, which on a $250,000 NOI is a price gap of nearly $1,000,000 for an identical income stream. Location is not a tiebreaker here. It is a primary value driver. If you own in a tight market, that scarcity is leverage when you list.

Cap rates by brand and tenant credit

Tenant credit is the other half of the equation. The stronger and more recognized the operator, the tighter the cap rate, because investors pay up for reliable rent and brand-driven volume.

  • Wawa sets the floor at 4.83% to 5.20%, prized for high inside sales and fierce customer loyalty.
  • 7-Eleven trades at 5.00% to 5.40% on the strength of its scale and corporate guaranty.
  • Murphy USA sits near 5.13%, anchored by its Walmart-adjacent fuel volume model.
  • Circle K ranges 5.35% to 5.65%.

Unbranded and regional operators trade well wider because their guaranty is weaker and resale is harder. The gap between a Wawa at 4.83% and an unbranded rural store is not a rounding error. It reflects real differences in rent durability, fuel throughput, and exit liquidity. For a deeper look at how brand affects both volume and value, read branded vs unbranded gas stations.

When cap rates do not apply: EBITDA multiples

Most gas stations in the US are owner-operated, and roughly 60% of the 152,000 C-stores are single-store operators. These do not sell on cap rates. They sell on a multiple of earnings, because the buyer is purchasing a job and a business, not passive rent.

  • Business only, no real estate, trades at 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA. Smaller stores priced on seller's discretionary earnings run 2.0x to 3.5x SDE.
  • Business plus a leased location trades at 4.0x to 7.0x EBITDA, with 6x to 7x for high-volume branded sites and around 4x for rural or unbranded stores.
  • Business plus owned real estate trades around 8x EBITDA, ranging 7x to 9x in premium markets.

The real estate is what bridges the gap between an operating multiple and a passive cap rate. When you own the dirt and sign a long-term lease to a strong operator, you convert a 4x business into a sub-6% cap real estate asset, which is exactly why sale-leasebacks create value. Know which math a buyer is running before you negotiate.

What moves a cap rate up or down

Two stations on the same highway can trade 100 basis points apart. The drivers are concrete and measurable.

  • Fuel volume. A busy urban station moves 100,000 to 150,000 gallons a month against a US average near 4,000 gallons a day. Higher throughput tightens the cap.
  • Lease structure. Absolute NNN leases with 15 to 20 year terms and rent bumps command the lowest caps. Shorter terms or landlord obligations push them wider.
  • Inside sales mix. The C-store is about 30% of revenue but roughly 70% of profit, so strong inside sales support a stronger price.
  • Environmental risk. Underground storage tanks carry CERCLA strict liability, which narrows the buyer pool and can widen the cap.
  • Real estate quality. Corner lots, hard signals, and growth corridors all compress yields.

Margins shape the story too. 2025 fuel gross margins averaged 40-plus cents per gallon, but net fuel profit is only a few cents. In-store items carry 20% to 40% margins. Buyers underwrite the durable inside-sales profit, not the volatile fuel line.

How financing shapes what buyers will pay

Cap rates do not exist in a vacuum. The cost and availability of debt set the ceiling on what a buyer can bid, and gas station financing is tighter than most asset classes.

SBA 7(a) loans cap at $5,000,000, and because stations are special-purpose properties, they require a minimum 15% equity injection, commonly 10% to 15% down. Real estate terms run up to 25 years, with June 2026 rates roughly 9% to 11.5% APR variable and closings in 30 to 90 days. See our SBA 7(a) guide for the full process.

Conventional financing typically demands 30% to 40% down, and many banks avoid USTs entirely due to CERCLA strict liability, which thins the lender pool. Closings run 30 to 60 days.

Every SBA fuel deal also requires a Phase I Environmental Site Assessment under ASTM E1527-21, costing $1,800 to $3,500 with gas stations at the high end. When debt gets expensive, buyers protect their returns by bidding wider cap rates. That is why rate moves ripple straight into station pricing.

Cap rates for 1031 buyers and NNN investors

A large share of the lowest-cap gas station trades are bought by 1031 exchange investors trading out of management-heavy property into passive net lease. They are deadline-driven, which is part of why credit-tenant fuel assets trade so tight.

The clock is strict. A 1031 buyer has 45 days to identify replacements and 180 days to close, both counted in calendar days from the sale closing date. That urgency pushes motivated capital toward turnkey assets, and an absolute NNN gas station with a 15 to 20 year term is the ideal replacement property because it needs zero landlord involvement.

For sellers, this is the most valuable buyer pool to reach. A passive NNN investor will accept a sub-6% cap that an owner-operator never would, because they are buying durable income, not a business to run. Packaging your site with a strong lease and clean environmental record positions it for that audience. Learn more in our guides on NNN gas station investing and the 1031 replacement property process.

Using cap rates to price your exit

If you are selling, the cap rate is your pricing weapon, but only if your numbers are clean. Buyers and their lenders will rebuild your NOI from tax returns, so add-backs need documentation and your rent or income figures need to hold up under scrutiny.

Start by separating the real estate from the business. A small-to-medium owner often nets $70,000 to $100,000 a year, ranging to $100,000 to $500,000 by site. Decide whether you are selling the business, the dirt, or both, because each draws a different buyer and a different multiple.

Plan for the timeline and the costs. Business sales typically run 3 to 6 months, sometimes 6 to 12. Broker commissions run 10% to 20% on business-only deals and about 6% to 10% on real-estate-inclusive deals. Build those into your net-proceeds math early.

Gas Station Trader is a specialist gas station and C-store brokerage based in Dallas, TX, part of Eagle Nest Property Group, with $250 million-plus transacted across buy, sell, sale-leaseback, and finance. To price your site against current cap-rate comps, call 469.949.6467 or start with our guide on how to sell a gas station.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

It depends on structure and location. Net-leased convenience assets with fuel average around 5.6% nationally, roughly 5.58% with fuel income and 6.87% without. Premium markets like Florida trade near 5.11% and the Carolinas sit at 5.0% to 5.5%, while weaker markets like Mississippi run 6.0% to 6.5% and higher. A lower cap rate means a higher price, so for a seller a 5% cap is good news and for a buyer hunting yield a 6.5% cap is more attractive.
Wawa leads at 4.83% to 5.20%, followed by 7-Eleven at 5.00% to 5.40%, Murphy USA near 5.13%, and Circle K at 5.35% to 5.65%. Stronger tenant credit and higher inside sales compress the cap rate, because investors pay more for reliable rent. Unbranded and regional operators trade well wider since their guaranty is weaker and the asset is harder to resell.
Cap rates apply to passive, net-leased real estate where a credit tenant pays rent. Most US stations are owner-operated, and about 60% of the 152,000 C-stores are single-store operators, so they sell on earnings multiples instead. Business-only deals trade at 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA, business plus a leased site at 4.0x to 7.0x, and business plus owned real estate around 8x, ranging 7x to 9x in premium markets.
Significantly. The spread between Florida at roughly 5.11% and Mississippi at 6.5%-plus is about 140 basis points. On a station with $250,000 in net operating income, that gap translates to nearly $1,000,000 in value for an identical income stream. Location growth, fuel corridor density, and the depth of the local buyer pool all feed directly into the cap rate.
1031 exchange and NNN investors. They are trading out of management-heavy property into passive net lease and face a strict 45-day identification and 180-day closing window from their sale closing date, both in calendar days. That deadline pressure pushes them toward turnkey absolute NNN gas stations with 15 to 20 year terms, and they will accept a sub-6% cap that an owner-operator would never pay because they are buying durable passive income.
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