- SBA 7(a) loans cap at $5M and require a 15% minimum equity injection on special-purpose gas stations, with real estate terms up to 25 years and June 2026 rates running roughly 9% to 11.5% APR variable.
- Conventional bank financing typically demands 30% to 40% down, and many banks avoid stores with underground storage tanks entirely because of CERCLA environmental liability.
- A Phase I Environmental Site Assessment is required on SBA fuel deals, costs $1,800 to $3,500, and must follow the ASTM E1527-21 standard.
- Business-only C-stores trade at 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA, combined business plus fuel at 4.0x to 7.0x, and stores with real estate near 8x, which sets how much debt a deal can carry.
- Seller financing fills the gap between your equity and bank debt, and can also serve as the required equity injection on SBA deals under specific structures.
- SBA closings run 30 to 90 days and conventional closings run 30 to 60 days, so the environmental and appraisal timeline drives your contract deadlines.
Convenience store financing comes down to three paths: SBA 7(a) loans, conventional bank debt, and seller financing. The right structure depends on whether you are buying the business only, the business plus real estate, and whether there are underground storage tanks in the ground. Tanks change everything. Many banks avoid them entirely because of CERCLA liability, which pushes most fuel deals toward the SBA, where a Phase I Environmental Site Assessment is required. This guide walks through how each financing path works in 2026, what lenders want, how down payments and rates actually look right now, and how to combine sources so you can close. Gas Station Trader is the fuel and C-store practice of Eagle Nest Property Group in Dallas, and we structure these deals every week.
Start With What You Are Actually Buying
Financing structure follows deal structure, so define the asset first. A business-only purchase means you are buying the operating company and inventory while the real estate stays with a landlord under a lease. Business-only C-stores trade at 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA, and smaller stores at 2.0x to 3.5x SDE. These deals are harder to finance because the bank has little collateral beyond goodwill and equipment.
A combined deal buys the business plus the fuel operation and trades at 4.0x to 7.0x EBITDA. Buying the real estate too pushes valuation to roughly 8x EBITDA, and 7x to 9x in premium markets. The real estate is what makes a deal bankable, because it gives the lender hard collateral with a 25-year useful life.
Before you talk to any lender, get a defensible value. Run the numbers through our gas station valuation calculator and read how to value a convenience store so your offer and your loan request are grounded in the same figure.
SBA 7(a): The Default Path for Fuel Deals
The SBA 7(a) program is the most common way C-stores with fuel get financed, and for good reason. It caps at $5M, allows real estate terms up to 25 years, and requires far less equity than a bank. Gas stations are classified as special-purpose property, so the SBA requires a 15% minimum equity injection, which in practice means 10% to 15% down depending on the deal and the borrower.
As of June 2026, 7(a) rates run roughly 9% to 11.5% APR variable, tied to prime plus a spread. Closings take 30 to 90 days, driven largely by the environmental and appraisal timeline. The longer real estate amortization keeps monthly debt service low, which matters when net fuel profit is only a few cents per gallon and most of your real margin comes from inside sales.
The catch is the environmental review, covered below. For a deeper walkthrough, see the SBA 7(a) loan gas station guide and how to get a gas station loan.
Conventional Bank Financing and the Tank Problem
Conventional bank loans exist for C-stores, but they are harder to land and cost more equity. Expect 30% to 40% down, shorter amortization than the SBA, and closings in 30 to 60 days. A conventional loan can make sense for a strong borrower buying a clean, high-volume site who wants to avoid SBA fees and paperwork.
The real obstacle is underground storage tanks. Many banks avoid USTs entirely because of CERCLA, the federal law that can hold a property owner liable for contamination even if they did not cause it. A lender that takes a contaminated site as collateral can inherit that exposure. This is the single biggest reason fuel deals route to the SBA, which has established protocols for handling tank risk.
If you are weighing the two, read SBA vs conventional gas station loan. To understand the underlying risk both lenders are pricing, see gas station underground storage tanks.
Seller Financing: Filling the Gap
Seller financing is the third path and often the most flexible. The seller carries a note for part of the purchase price, you pay it down over time, and the gap between your cash and your bank debt shrinks. On a business-only deal where bank collateral is thin, seller paper is sometimes the only way to bridge the valuation. Sellers who want to close, defer some tax, or signal confidence in the store's numbers are the most willing.
Seller financing also pairs with the SBA. Under specific structures, a seller note can count toward the required equity injection on a 7(a) deal, which reduces the cash you bring to closing. The note typically must be on full standby for a period, meaning no payments to the seller while the SBA loan amortizes.
Terms are negotiable: interest rate, amortization, balloon, and standby period are all on the table. For buyers short on cash, see how to buy a gas station with no money down and our overview of financing options.
The Phase I ESA Is Non-Negotiable on Fuel Deals
Every SBA fuel deal requires a Phase I Environmental Site Assessment. It costs $1,800 to $3,500 and must follow the ASTM E1527-21 standard, the current benchmark environmental professionals use to evaluate a site for contamination risk. The Phase I reviews historical use, regulatory records, and physical conditions. It does not involve drilling or soil sampling. That is a Phase II, triggered only if the Phase I flags a recognized environmental condition.
Order the Phase I early, because it is often the longest item on the closing timeline and a bad result can kill financing or force a price renegotiation. With underground storage tanks in the ground, the report's findings directly affect whether any lender will fund the deal.
Budget for it, build the timeline around it, and pair it with the right insurance. See Phase 1 environmental gas station and gas station environmental insurance before you sign a purchase agreement.
What Lenders Underwrite: Cash Flow, Not Just the Pumps
Lenders care about whether the store can service the debt, and that means understanding where the money actually comes from. Fuel is misleading. In 2025 fuel gross margins averaged 40-plus cents per gallon, but net fuel profit is only a few cents per gallon after credit card fees and operating costs. The inside store is the engine. In-store items carry 20% to 40% margins, and while the C-store is roughly 30% of revenue, it produces about 70% of profit.
That mix is why a busy urban station doing 100,000 to 150,000 gallons per month with strong inside sales underwrites better than a high-volume pumper with a weak store. A small-to-medium station owner often nets around $70K to $100K per year, rising to $100K to $500K by site.
Bring clean financials, fuel throughput records, and inside sales data. For context on the economics, see gas station profit margins and how much do gas station owners make.
Stacking Sources and Building the Timeline
Most C-store buyers do not use one financing source. A typical structure layers an SBA 7(a) loan covering the bulk of the price, a seller note covering part of the equity injection, and the buyer's cash filling the rest. On a combined deal valued near 8x EBITDA, this stack keeps your out-of-pocket cash manageable while giving the lender the real estate collateral it needs.
Sequence the timeline against your closing window. SBA deals close in 30 to 90 days and conventional deals in 30 to 60 days, so set purchase agreement deadlines accordingly. Order the Phase I and the appraisal immediately after going under contract, because they gate everything downstream.
Work backward from the closing process and the documents you will need at the table. Review the gas station due diligence checklist and the gas station closing process. When you are ready to find a financeable store, start with our buy-side services.