- A Phase I Environmental Site Assessment (ASTM E1527-21) costs 1,800 to 3,500 dollars and is required for SBA fuel deals; never close on a station with underground storage tanks without one.
- C-store sales drive roughly 70% of station profit on about 30% of revenue, so verify in-store margins (20-40%) separately from fuel, where 2025 gross margins averaged 40-plus cents per gallon but net profit is only a few cents.
- Confirm fuel throughput independently; a busy urban station moves 100,000 to 150,000 gallons per month against a US average near 4,000 gallons per day, and price is often quoted at 0.05 to 0.30 dollars per gallon of monthly volume.
- Review every fuel-supply and franchise agreement before closing, including branding obligations, minimum-volume commitments, and assignability to a new owner.
- Verify seller financials against tax returns, POS reports, and fuel invoices; a small-to-medium station owner often nets 70,000 to 100,000 dollars per year, up to 100,000 to 500,000 by site.
- Combined business and real estate deals trade at 4.0x to 7.0x EBITDA, around 8x with strong real estate, so price discipline depends on diligence that confirms the earnings are durable.
Buying a gas station is unlike buying any other small business. You are acquiring a fuel-dispensing operation, a convenience retail store, real estate that may carry environmental liability, and a web of supply, franchise, and lease agreements all at once. A missed underground tank problem or an unverified fuel margin can erase your returns in a single year. This checklist walks through every category a buyer should inspect before closing, from the Phase I environmental assessment that SBA fuel deals require to the financial records that prove a seller's claimed cash flow is real. With station cap rates running around 5.6% nationally and combined business-plus-real-estate deals trading at 4.0x to 7.0x EBITDA, the price you pay leaves little room for surprises. Diligence is how you find them first.
Environmental Due Diligence and Underground Storage Tanks
Environmental review is the single most important step in any fuel-deal diligence. Most gas stations store fuel in underground storage tanks (USTs), and under federal CERCLA law a buyer can inherit liability for contamination that predates ownership. This is why many conventional lenders avoid UST properties entirely and why SBA fuel deals require a Phase I Environmental Site Assessment.
Commission a Phase I ESA performed to the ASTM E1527-21 standard. Budget 1,800 to 3,500 dollars and 2 to 4 weeks. The report reviews historical use, regulatory records, and visible signs of release. If it flags a recognized environmental condition, a Phase II with soil and groundwater sampling follows.
Beyond the ESA, request UST registration records, tank age and material, leak-detection logs, the most recent tank tightness test, and any state cleanup-fund eligibility. Confirm tanks are within usable life and compliant with current upgrade rules. See our guides on underground storage tanks, the Phase I environmental process, and environmental insurance for the full protocol.
Financial Verification and Quality of Earnings
Sellers quote the number that helps them most. Your job is to prove the cash flow is real and repeatable. Start with 3 years of federal tax returns and reconcile them against profit-and-loss statements, bank deposits, and merchant-processing records. Gaps between reported and deposited revenue are a warning sign.
Separate the two profit engines. Fuel and in-store retail behave differently, and they should be analyzed on their own lines. A small-to-medium station owner often nets 70,000 to 100,000 dollars per year, rising to 100,000 to 500,000 by site, so confirm where this specific store falls.
Pull POS reports to verify in-store sales mix and margins, fuel invoices to confirm gallons and cost, and lottery, ATM, car wash, and food-service settlements for ancillary income. Normalize owner add-backs carefully, since aggressive add-backs inflate the multiple you are paying. Run the verified numbers through our gas station valuation calculator and read gas station profit margins and how to value a gas station before agreeing on price.
Fuel Supply, Branding, and Franchise Agreements
The fuel contract can make or break a station's economics, and many buyers overlook it. Request and read every fuel-supply agreement in full. Key terms include the supplier or jobber relationship, branding requirements, minimum-volume commitments, image and signage obligations, pricing mechanics, term length, and whether the agreement is assignable to you at closing.
For branded sites, confirm the franchise or branded-supply agreement transfers and review any required remodels, equipment upgrades, or fee obligations the brand may impose on a new owner. A required image program can add six figures of capital you did not budget. Understand the difference between operating models before you sign, because dealer, lessee-dealer, and commission arrangements carry very different risk and margin.
If the station runs on a jobber contract, study the supply terms closely. Our guides on the jobber fuel supply agreement, dealer vs lessee-dealer vs commission, and branded vs unbranded stations explain the tradeoffs and what to negotiate.
Real Estate, Lease, and Title Review
Whether you are buying the real estate or operating on a lease changes everything about the deal. If real estate is included, order a title search, a current ALTA survey, and a zoning verification confirming continued use as a fuel-and-retail site. Review any easements, access rights, and encroachments, since corner visibility and curb cuts directly drive volume.
If the station sits on a lease, the lease is the asset. Read the remaining term, renewal options, rent escalations, assignment rights, and who is responsible for tank and environmental obligations. A short remaining term with no options is a major value risk. For triple-net structures, confirm exactly which costs fall on the tenant.
Cap rates anchor real estate pricing. Stations trade around 5.6% nationally, with Florida tightest near 5.11% and Texas around 5.63%. Use our cap rate calculator and review triple net lease explained and what is a good cap rate for a gas station to benchmark the asking price.
Equipment, Inspections, and Deferred Maintenance
Fuel and C-store equipment is expensive to replace, and deferred maintenance becomes your problem the day you close. Inspect dispensers, point-of-sale systems, EMV-compliant card readers, canopy and lighting, walk-in coolers, freezers, HVAC, and any food-service or car-wash equipment. Each carries a replacement cost that should be priced into your offer.
Request maintenance and service records, equipment ages, and remaining warranties. Confirm dispensers are calibrated and certified by weights-and-measures authorities, and verify leak-detection and overfill-prevention systems are operational. Outdated card readers or failing refrigeration can mean tens of thousands in immediate capital.
Walk the site at multiple times of day to observe real traffic, fuel-buyer-to-store-conversion behavior, and the surrounding competitive set. A station may show strong gallons but weak in-store conversion, which limits the high-margin C-store income that drives roughly 70% of profit. For value-creation ideas after closing, see how to increase gas station value and how to run a gas station.
Fuel Volume and Sales Verification
Stated throughput is only as good as your verification of it. Reconcile claimed gallons against fuel-supplier delivery invoices, dispenser totalizer readings, and inventory reconciliation reports. A busy urban station moves 100,000 to 150,000 gallons per month, while the US average sits near 4,000 gallons per day, so understand where the site lands and why.
Fuel margins are deceptive. In 2025, fuel gross margins averaged 40-plus cents per gallon, but net fuel profit is only a few cents after card fees, freight, shrinkage, and labor. That is why valuation is sometimes expressed at 0.05 to 0.30 dollars per gallon of monthly throughput. The real money is inside the store, where items carry 20-40% margins.
Confirm the in-store sales mix from POS data, including tobacco, beverages, snacks, food service, and high-margin categories. Validate ancillary revenue from lottery, ATM, and car wash separately. Read gas station ROI and how much gas station owners make to translate verified volume into realistic returns.
Financing Contingency and Closing Diligence
Line up financing diligence in parallel so your contingency periods align. SBA 7(a) is the most common path, with a 5 million dollar maximum and a 15% minimum equity injection for special-purpose gas stations, meaning 10-15% down, real estate terms up to 25 years, and June 2026 rates roughly 9% to 11.5% APR variable. SBA closings typically run 30 to 90 days.
Conventional financing demands more, often 30-40% down, and many banks avoid USTs over CERCLA exposure, with closings in 30 to 60 days. Lenders will require your Phase I ESA, so order it early enough to avoid delaying the close.
During closing diligence, verify licenses and permits transfer, including fuel, tobacco, lottery, and alcohol, since these often require new-owner applications. Confirm employee and vendor obligations, prorate taxes and inventory, and secure environmental and liability insurance. Our guides on the SBA 7(a) loan for gas stations, SBA vs conventional financing, and the gas station closing process detail each step, and our financing service can help structure the deal.