Insights

How to Get a Gas Station Loan: Qualify, Apply, and Close

A step-by-step playbook for qualifying for a gas station loan, choosing the right structure, and getting to a clean closing in 30 to 90 days.

Key takeaways
  • The SBA 7(a) is the workhorse loan for gas station deals, capped at a 5 million dollar maximum, with real-estate terms up to 25 years and a 15 percent minimum equity injection because fuel sites are classified special-purpose property.
  • Conventional gas station loans typically require 30 to 40 percent down, and many banks decline them outright due to CERCLA strict liability on underground storage tanks.
  • June 2026 SBA 7(a) rates run roughly 9 to 11.5 percent APR variable, and SBA closings take 30 to 90 days versus 30 to 60 days for conventional.
  • A Phase I Environmental Site Assessment (ASTM E1527-21) is required on SBA fuel deals, costs 1,800 to 3,500 dollars, and a clean report is non-negotiable for funding.
  • Lenders underwrite the in-store business hard: the C-store is roughly 30 percent of revenue but about 70 percent of profit, since net fuel margin is only a few cents per gallon while in-store items carry 20 to 40 percent margins.
  • Most stations trade at about 8x EBITDA with real estate included, so your loan request and down payment should be built off a defensible value, not the asking price.

A gas station loan is harder to land than most small-business financing, and the reason is the dirt under the canopy. Underground storage tanks carry strict environmental liability under CERCLA, so many conventional banks avoid fuel sites entirely or demand 30 to 40 percent down. The SBA 7(a) program fills that gap and is the most common path to a closing, but it treats stations as special-purpose property with extra rules on equity, environmental review, and collateral.

Getting approved is less about your credit score and more about how you package the deal. Lenders underwrite the cash flow, the fuel supply contract, the tank history, and your operating experience. This guide walks the full process, from pre-qualification through funding, so you can structure an offer that survives underwriting and closes on schedule. We broker and underwrite fuel and C-store deals to these exact standards.

Step 1: Pre-qualify before you make an offer

Underwriting starts with you, not the property. Lenders want to see a credit score generally above 680, liquid cash for the down payment and reserves, and ideally fuel or retail operating experience. First-time buyers can still get approved, but expect more scrutiny and a stronger management plan.

Run the numbers on the deal itself before you sign anything. The in-store business drives the approval: the C-store is about 30 percent of revenue but roughly 70 percent of profit, because net fuel margin is only a few cents per gallon while inside items carry 20 to 40 percent margins. A small-to-medium station owner often nets 70,000 to 100,000 dollars a year, and stronger sites reach 100,000 to 500,000 dollars. Pull two to three years of tax returns, the fuel supply agreement, and gallon throughput. Then size the loan off a real value using our gas station valuation calculator, since most sites trade near 8x EBITDA with real estate, not the asking price.

Step 2: Choose the right loan structure

Two paths dominate gas station financing, and the right one depends on your cash and the property. The SBA 7(a) loan is the most common, with a 5 million dollar maximum, real-estate terms up to 25 years, and a 15 percent minimum equity injection (10 to 15 percent down) because the SBA treats fuel sites as special-purpose. June 2026 rates run roughly 9 to 11.5 percent APR variable.

The conventional route demands more cash, with 30 to 40 percent down, and many banks avoid the asset class entirely because CERCLA imposes strict liability for tank contamination on the owner. Conventional closings are faster at 30 to 60 days versus 30 to 90 for SBA. If you have the equity and a bank willing to lend, conventional can be cheaper and quicker. If you need leverage, the SBA is usually the answer. Our SBA vs conventional comparison lays out the tradeoffs side by side.

Step 3: Plan for the equity injection and reserves

The down payment is the part that surprises most buyers. On an SBA 7(a) deal, the minimum equity injection is 15 percent for special-purpose property, which lands you in the 10 to 15 percent down range depending on lender overlays and whether real estate is included. On a 2 million dollar acquisition, that is 200,000 to 300,000 dollars of your own capital, and lenders want to see it sourced and seasoned, not borrowed at the last minute.

Build a reserve on top of that. Tank testing, canopy repairs, POS upgrades, and working capital all hit early. Conventional lenders push the equity requirement to 30 to 40 percent, which materially changes how much station you can afford. If you are short on cash, read our guide on buying with little or no money down before assuming the deal is dead, since seller financing and partner equity can fill part of the gap.

Step 4: Order the Phase I environmental review early

The Phase I Environmental Site Assessment is the single most common reason gas station loans stall. The SBA requires one on fuel deals, it must follow the ASTM E1527-21 standard, and it costs 1,800 to 3,500 dollars. A Phase I reviews records, prior uses, and tank history to flag any recognized environmental condition.

Order it the moment you are under contract. If the Phase I turns up a concern, the lender will require a Phase II with soil and groundwater sampling, which adds weeks and cost and can renegotiate or kill the deal. Tank age, leak history, and registration status all matter here, so do not treat this as a formality. Read our deep dives on the Phase I process and on underground storage tanks so you know what a clean report looks like and how to negotiate around a dirty one.

Step 5: Build a lender-ready loan package

Approval speed comes down to how complete your file is on day one. A strong gas station loan package includes three years of business tax returns and profit-and-loss statements, the current fuel supply or jobber agreement, gallon throughput history, inside-sales breakdown, a copy of the purchase contract, and your personal financial statement.

Add a business plan that shows you understand the operation. Lenders fund operators, not spectators, so spell out staffing, hours, fuel branding, and how you will protect margin. Throughput matters: a busy urban station moves 100,000 to 150,000 gallons a month against a US average near 4,000 gallons a day, and the lender will stress-test whether that volume services the debt. Use our gas station business plan guide to assemble the narrative, and check your debt-service math against a value built in the valuation calculator.

Step 6: Underwriting, appraisal, and conditions

Once your package is in, the lender orders an appraisal and works through conditions. A gas station appraisal blends the business value and the real estate, and most sites land near 8x EBITDA with the dirt included, ranging from 7x to 9x in premium markets. Business-only value is lower, typically 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA. If the appraisal comes in under the contract price, you either renegotiate or cover the gap with more cash.

Expect the lender to verify your equity source, confirm the Phase I is clean, validate the fuel contract, and check licensing. This is also where cap rate matters: national fuel-site cap rates sit near 5.6 percent, so a buyer paying a sub-5 percent cap on a Wawa-anchored site needs the cash flow to support the debt. Our appraisal guide explains what the appraiser looks for and how to defend your number.

Step 7: Close, fund, and take over operations

SBA closings run 30 to 90 days from a complete file, conventional run 30 to 60. The final stretch is documentation: tank transfer and registration, environmental insurance, fuel brand assignment, license transfers, and the closing of any seller note. Line these up in parallel so they do not become the bottleneck after underwriting clears.

Do not skip a full diligence pass before funding. Verify deferred maintenance, confirm the supply contract transfers on the terms you underwrote, and re-check the environmental file. Use our due diligence checklist and read the closing process guide so nothing surfaces at the table. If you want help structuring the financing or sourcing the deal itself, our finance team and acquisition desk work these transactions every week.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

There is no fixed cutoff, but most SBA 7(a) and conventional lenders want a personal credit score above 680, clean recent payment history, and no unresolved tax liens. Strong cash flow on the property and relevant operating experience matter more than the score alone. The SBA 7(a) is the most common approval path because it lets banks lend on fuel sites they would otherwise decline.
On an SBA 7(a) deal, gas stations are special-purpose property, so the minimum equity injection is 15 percent, which puts most buyers in the 10 to 15 percent down range. Conventional lenders typically require 30 to 40 percent down because many avoid underground storage tank liability. Plan for reserves on top of the down payment for tank testing, repairs, and working capital.
Underground storage tanks trigger strict environmental liability under CERCLA, meaning the owner can be held responsible for contamination regardless of fault. That risk leads many conventional banks to decline fuel sites or demand 30 to 40 percent down. The SBA 7(a) program shares the risk, which gives lenders cover to fund deals they would otherwise pass on.
SBA 7(a) closings typically take 30 to 90 days from a complete application, while conventional loans run 30 to 60 days. The Phase I environmental review, appraisal, tank documentation, and license transfers are the usual sources of delay. Ordering the Phase I as soon as you are under contract is the single best way to keep the timeline on track.
As of June 2026, SBA 7(a) rates on gas station deals run roughly 9 to 11.5 percent APR variable, with real-estate-secured terms up to 25 years. Conventional rates and terms vary by bank and your equity, but conventional loans usually carry shorter amortizations and require more cash down. A longer SBA term keeps the monthly payment low enough that thin fuel margins plus 20 to 40 percent in-store margins can service the debt.
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