- Fuel is the traffic driver, not the profit center. 2025 fuel gross margins averaged 40+ cents per gallon, but net fuel profit after card fees and costs is only a few cents per gallon.
- The inside store does the heavy lifting. The C-store is about 30% of revenue but roughly 70% of profit, with in-store items carrying 20% to 40% margins.
- Volume alone is misleading. A busy urban station runs 100,000 to 150,000 gallons a month and the US average is about 4,000 gallons a day, but gallons without inside sales do not equal income.
- Owner take-home varies widely by site. A small-to-medium station owner often nets about 70K to 100K dollars a year, and stronger sites run 100K to 500K depending on volume, inside sales, and whether the owner operates it.
- Margin dollars set the price. Business-only stations trade at 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA, combined business plus real estate at 4.0x to 7.0x, and roughly 8x when prime real estate is included.
- Per-gallon valuation is a fast sanity check. Stations often trade at $0.05 to $0.30 per gallon of monthly throughput, with the spread driven by inside sales and lease quality.
The single most expensive mistake in this sector is confusing volume with profit. Gas station profit margins do not work the way most first-time buyers assume. In 2025, fuel gross margins averaged 40 cents or more per gallon, but after credit card fees, freight, and rent, net fuel profit is only a few cents per gallon. The real money sits inside the building. The convenience store generates roughly 30% of revenue but close to 70% of profit, and inside items carry 20% to 40% margins versus pennies on a gallon. That is why a station doing 100,000 to 150,000 gallons a month can still struggle, while a smaller-volume site with a strong inside business prints cash. This guide breaks down both sides of the income statement, shows where margin actually accumulates, and explains how those margins translate into owner take-home and sale price. Run your own numbers with our gas station valuation calculator.
The two-margin model: fuel and inside are different businesses
A gas station is two businesses under one roof, and they earn money in opposite ways. The fuel business is high revenue and razor-thin margin. The inside business is lower revenue and high margin. Treating them as one number is how buyers overpay.
On fuel, gross margin in 2025 averaged 40 cents or more per gallon, which sounds healthy until you subtract the costs that come straight off that gross. Credit card interchange alone can run 8 to 12 cents on a gallon, then add freight, shrink, labor allocated to the forecourt, and rent. What survives is net fuel profit of only a few cents per gallon. That is the whole reason street prices swing daily: dealers are protecting a few cents.
Inside is the reverse. Items on the shelf and behind the counter carry 20% to 40% margins, and foodservice and fountain run higher still. The result is a store where the C-store side produces about 30% of revenue but close to 70% of profit. When you read a deal, separate the two streams and value the inside business for what it really is. Our guide on how to value a convenience store goes deeper on the inside number.
Why fuel margins look big and earn small
The 40-cents-per-gallon headline is a gross figure, and gross is not what an owner keeps. Three costs eat most of it.
- Card fees. Most fuel is bought on credit, and interchange is charged on the full pump price including tax. When prices spike, the fee per gallon rises with them, which is why high gas prices can compress dealer margins rather than help them.
- Cost of goods and freight. Branded supply through a jobber contract sets your wholesale price and can limit how aggressively you price at the street. Unbranded buyers chase the rack but carry their own supply risk.
- Operating drag. Forecourt labor, pump maintenance, environmental compliance, and rent all sit between gross and net.
Net it out and fuel profit lands at a few cents per gallon. At the US average of about 4,000 gallons a day, even a strong 5 cents net is roughly $200 a day from fuel before the inside store contributes a dollar. That math is why brokers underwrite the inside business so hard, and why two stations with identical gallons can be worth very different numbers. See how supply terms shape this in our jobber fuel supply agreement guide.
Where the money actually is: the inside store
If fuel pays the lights, the inside store pays the owner. In-store items carry 20% to 40% margins, and the highest-margin categories are the ones that turn a gas station into a real business.
- Foodservice and fountain. Prepared food, coffee, and fountain drinks carry the richest margins in the building and pull repeat traffic that has nothing to do with the price of gas.
- Tobacco and packaged beverages. High volume, dependable margin, and the categories that anchor most inside baskets.
- Snacks and grocery. Steady 20% to 40% contribution and easy to merchandise for impulse buys.
Because the C-store is about 30% of revenue but roughly 70% of profit, growing inside sales is the single most powerful lever an operator has. A site that converts fuel customers into inside buyers at a higher rate earns far more than a comparable site that just pumps gallons. That is also why the strongest operators, the Wawa and Sheetz model, win on foodservice rather than fuel price. If you own a store, our guide on how to increase gas station value covers the inside-sales moves that compound into price.
From margins to owner take-home
Margins are interesting, but owners care about what lands in the bank. Pulling the two streams together, a small-to-medium station owner often nets about 70K to 100K dollars a year, and stronger sites run from 100K to 500K depending on volume, inside sales, real estate, and whether the owner runs the store or pays a manager.
The variables that move take-home most are predictable. Higher inside sales lift the whole number because of the margin gap. Owning the real estate removes rent from the expense line. Operating the store yourself protects payroll, while an absentee setup needs a higher-volume site to carry management cost. Foodservice penetration, branded versus unbranded supply, and local competition each shift the result.
This is why two stations with the same gallon count can produce very different owner income. When you evaluate a deal, normalize the financials to owner-operator economics, then decide what you would actually keep. For the full income picture, read how much gas station owners make and is owning a gas station profitable.
How margins set the sale price
Margin dollars, not gallons, determine value. Buyers pay a multiple of normalized EBITDA, and the multiple itself reflects how durable those margins are.
- Business only: 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA, with smaller stores often quoted at 2.0x to 3.5x SDE.
- Business plus real estate: 4.0x to 7.0x EBITDA.
- With prime real estate: about 8x EBITDA, and 7x to 9x in premium markets.
A fast cross-check is per-gallon value. Stations often trade at $0.05 to $0.30 per gallon of monthly throughput, and the spread inside that range is almost entirely about inside sales and lease quality. A store at the top of the range has a strong inside business and a clean property; a store at the bottom is mostly pumping fuel. This is the same logic behind cap-rate pricing on leased deals. Test your numbers with our cap rate calculator and read what a good cap rate is for a gas station.
What margins do not show: risk that sits behind the number
A clean margin can hide a dirty problem. The most expensive risk in this sector is environmental. Underground storage tanks fall under CERCLA liability, which is why many conventional banks avoid fuel deals and why a Phase I Environmental Site Assessment, ASTM E1527-21, costing 1,800 to 3,500 dollars, is required on SBA fuel deals. A great-looking income statement means little if the tanks are a liability.
Other items that sit behind the margin: the jobber contract and its volume commitments, deferred maintenance on pumps and canopy, traffic-count trends, and how much of the inside number is real versus owner add-backs. Strong margins on a short lease or aging tanks are not the same as strong margins on a fee-simple site with clean Phase I results.
The discipline is simple. Verify the margins, then verify what could erase them. Work through our gas station due diligence checklist and gas station investment risks before you commit, and lean on a broker who underwrites fuel and C-store deals every week.