- Gas stations sell 3 ways: business-only deals run 225K to 600K at 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA, business-plus-real-estate sits around a 450K median and rises into 7 figures at about 8x EBITDA, and stabilized NNN investment stations price off cap rate near a 5.6% national average.
- For NNN stations, the tenant sets the price, with cap rates of 4.83% to 5.20% for Wawa, 5.00% to 5.40% for 7-Eleven, about 5.13% for Murphy USA, and 5.35% to 5.65% for Circle K, and Florida the tightest state near 5.11%.
- Brokers value going concerns on throughput at 0.05 to 0.30 dollars per gallon of monthly volume, where a busy urban station moves 100,000 to 150,000 gallons a month against a US average near 4,000 gallons a day.
- SBA 7(a) financing caps at 5M and requires a 15% minimum equity injection for special-purpose gas stations, with terms up to 25 years and June 2026 rates around 9% to 11.5% APR, while conventional buyers face 30% to 40% down because many banks avoid underground storage tanks under CERCLA.
The honest answer to how much it costs to buy a gas station is that the price depends almost entirely on one question: are you buying the business, the business plus the real estate, or a passive income stream backed by a corporate lease. Those 3 paths produce 3 very different numbers. A business-only deal can change hands for around 225,000 dollars. A leased-investment property carrying a national brand can clear 2.75 million dollars or more. The national median for an owner-operator station with real estate lands near 450,000 dollars. This guide breaks down what you actually pay by deal type, the valuation math behind each number, and the closing costs that most first-time buyers forget to budget for.
The 3 Ways to Buy, and Why Price Swings So Wildly
Every gas station purchase falls into 1 of 3 structures, and the structure sets the price more than the location does.
- Business-only. You buy the fuel and store operation and lease the dirt from a landlord. This is the cheapest entry point, often 225,000 dollars to a few hundred thousand, because you are buying cash flow, not land.
- Business plus real estate. You own everything: the lot, the canopy, the tanks, and the going concern. National median for an owner-operator deal here is around 450,000 dollars, and strong sites run well past 1 million dollars.
- Net-lease investment (NNN). You buy a building leased to an operator and collect rent. Pricing is driven by cap rate, not sweat equity, and premium branded assets reach 2.75 million dollars and up.
Before you shop, decide which buyer you are. An owner-operator and a passive investor looking at the same corner will value it completely differently. Start with our complete buyer's guide if you are still choosing a lane.
Business-Only Deals: 225K to 600K and the Multiples Behind Them
When you lease the ground and buy only the operation, you pay a multiple of profit, not a real estate price. Smaller stores trade on SDE (seller's discretionary earnings) at 2.0x to 3.5x. Larger or cleaner operations trade on EBITDA at 2.5x to 4.0x.
The logic is simple. A buyer is paying for the in-store gross profit and the few cents of net fuel margin the site throws off, with no land to fall back on if the business stumbles. That risk caps the multiple. A station netting an owner 75,000 dollars in SDE at a 3x multiple is a 225,000 dollar business. The same store at 4x EBITDA on stronger, recast numbers might fetch 300,000 dollars or more.
Two things move this number fast: the remaining ground-lease term and the fuel-supply (jobber) contract. A short lease or a locked-in unbranded supply deal compresses the price. Learn how the math works in our gas station valuation guide, then run your own figures in the valuation calculator.
Business Plus Real Estate: The 450K Median and the 7-Figure Sites
Owning the real estate is where most owner-operators want to be, and it is where the national median of roughly 450,000 dollars sits. When land, building, MPDs, tanks, and the going concern are all included, deals typically price at 4.0x to 7.0x EBITDA. Rural or unbranded sites land near the bottom of that range around 4x. High-volume branded stores command 6x to 7x.
Why the spread. A station pumping 100,000 to 150,000 gallons a month with a busy C-store earns a premium because fuel volume and inside sales are both proven. The U.S. average station moves about 4,000 gallons a day, and anything well above that, paired with strong inside margins, pushes you toward the top multiple and into 7-figure territory.
Remember that the C-store is roughly 30 percent of revenue but about 70 percent of profit, so a site with a real merchandising operation is worth far more than a pure fuel stop on the same corner. See the income side in is owning a gas station profitable.
NNN Investment Stations: Where Cap Rate Sets the Price
If you want rent instead of a register, you are buying a net-lease asset and the price is dictated by cap rate. The formula is direct: annual net operating income divided by cap rate equals value. Lower cap rate, higher price.
National cap rates run about 5.6 percent, closer to 5.58 percent on fuel-included deals and 6.87 percent without fuel. The tenant matters more than anything. Wawa-leased properties trade at 4.83 to 5.20 percent, 7-Eleven at 5.00 to 5.40 percent, Murphy USA near 5.13 percent, and Circle K at 5.35 to 5.65 percent. Geography matters too: Florida is tightest near 5.11 percent, Texas runs about 5.63 percent, the Carolinas 5.0 to 5.5 percent, Tennessee 5.4 to 5.75 percent, and weaker markets like Mississippi 6.0 to 6.5 percent and up.
A site throwing off 150,000 dollars of NOI at a 5.45 percent cap rate is a 2.75 million dollar asset. The same income in a 6.5 percent market is worth about 2.3 million dollars. Compare yields with the cap rate calculator and go deeper in our NNN gas station investing guide.
The Per-Gallon and With-Real-Estate Benchmarks Brokers Actually Use
Beyond multiples, two quick sanity checks tell you whether a price is sane.
- Per-gallon of throughput. Stations often trade at 0.05 to 0.30 dollars per gallon of monthly volume as a value indicator on the fuel side. A site pumping 120,000 gallons a month at the high end of that range carries meaningful fuel value before you even count the store.
- With-real-estate EBITDA multiple. Premium deals where the dirt is included can reach about 8x EBITDA, ranging 7x to 9x in the strongest markets. This is the number to watch on trophy sites with new tanks, heavy traffic, and a clean environmental file.
Use these as cross-checks, not as the whole appraisal. A station can look cheap per gallon but expensive on EBITDA if its inside sales are thin, or vice versa. The right offer reconciles all 3 lenses: multiple, per-gallon, and, for investors, cap rate. When the methods disagree sharply, that gap usually points to a real risk in the deal, often the tanks or the lease.
Financing the Purchase: How Much Cash You Actually Need
The sticker price is not your check at closing. Two main paths exist, with very different down payments.
- SBA 7(a). The most common route for owner-operators. The program caps at 5 million dollars, and because gas stations are special-purpose properties, lenders require a 15 percent minimum equity injection, commonly 10 to 15 percent down. Real estate terms run up to 25 years, and June 2026 rates are roughly 9 to 11.5 percent APR variable. Closings take 30 to 90 days. See our SBA 7(a) gas station loan guide.
- Conventional. Typically 30 to 40 percent down, and many banks avoid sites with underground storage tanks because of CERCLA strict liability. Closings are faster at 30 to 60 days. Compare both in SBA vs conventional.
On a 450,000 dollar deal, plan for roughly 45,000 to 68,000 dollars down on an SBA structure or 135,000 to 180,000 dollars conventional. Explore lender options through our financing service.
Closing Costs and Environmental Diligence: Budget Past the Price
First-time buyers routinely under-budget the costs that sit on top of the purchase price.
- Phase I Environmental Site Assessment. Required on virtually every SBA fuel deal and standard on conventional ones. It costs 1,800 to 3,500 dollars, with gas stations at the high end, and follows the ASTM E1527-21 standard. If it flags concerns, a Phase II adds cost and time. Details in our Phase I ESA guide.
- Underground storage tanks. Tank age, testing, and registration directly affect price and financeability. Old steel tanks can sink a deal. Read buying a station with USTs before you sign.
- Broker, legal, title, and franchise fees. Business-broker commissions run 10 to 20 percent on business-only deals and about 6 to 10 percent on real-estate-inclusive deals, typically paid by the seller, but expect your own legal, title, and lender costs.
Overall sale timelines run 3 to 6 months, sometimes 6 to 12. Budget the diligence early so a bad tank report does not blow up your financing late.
What an Owner Actually Takes Home, and What That Means for Price
Price only makes sense against income. A small-to-medium station owner often nets about 70,000 to 100,000 dollars a year, with stronger or multi-pump sites ranging from 100,000 to 500,000 dollars depending on volume, location, and how the C-store is run.
The margin structure explains why. In 2025 fuel gross margins averaged more than 40 cents per gallon, but net fuel profit is only a few cents per gallon after card fees and operating costs. Inside the store, items carry 20 to 40 percent margins. That is why the C-store, roughly 30 percent of revenue, drives about 70 percent of profit. A buyer is really pricing the inside business and the traffic that feeds it.
Work backward. If a station nets 90,000 dollars and trades around 5x EBITDA with real estate, the math points to a price near 450,000 dollars, right at the national median. To stress-test the fuel side of any deal, run the numbers in our fuel margin breakeven calculator and review how much gas stations make.