- Fuel is a traffic driver, not a profit center. 2025 fuel gross margins averaged 40+ cents per gallon but net fuel profit is only a few cents per gallon after card fees and freight.
- The store is the business. The C-store is about 30% of revenue but roughly 70% of profit, with inside items carrying 20% to 40% gross margins.
- Volume sets the ceiling. A busy urban station does 100,000 to 150,000 gallons per month while the US average site runs about 4,000 gallons per day.
- Labor is the largest controllable expense after fuel cost, so schedule to traffic curves and protect the front counter at peak hours.
- Shrink quietly eats net profit. Tighten cash handling, lottery, and high-theft categories before chasing more sales.
- Track profit per gallon and inside basket size, not topline revenue. Owners who manage to those two numbers net 70K to 100K dollars a year on a typical site.
Learning how to run a gas station profitably starts with one uncomfortable fact: you do not make your money on fuel. In 2025 fuel gross margins averaged 40+ cents per gallon, but after credit card fees, freight, and shrink the net fuel profit is only a few cents per gallon. The store carries the business. The C-store is about 30% of revenue but roughly 70% of profit, and inside items run 20% to 40% gross margin against fuel's razor edge. That is why a disciplined operator nets 70K to 100K dollars a year on a small-to-medium site, and 100K to 500K on a strong one, while the operator next door grinds at break-even. This playbook covers the levers you actually control day to day: fuel pricing and credit fees, inside category mix, labor scheduling, shrink and theft, and the metrics that tell you which lever to pull next.
Run the numbers that actually drive profit
Topline revenue lies. A station can pump huge gallons and still lose money, because fuel net profit is only a few cents per gallon after credit card interchange and freight. Manage to a short list of operating metrics instead.
- Net cents per gallon (CPG): fuel gross margin minus card fees, freight, and shrink. This is your real fuel profit, not the posted spread.
- Inside gross margin: in-store items run 20% to 40%, so a few points of mix shift moves more dollars than a penny of fuel.
- Inside basket size: average dollars per inside transaction, the cleanest measure of whether fuel traffic converts.
- Labor as a percent of inside gross profit: keep payroll measured against the profit it generates, not against total sales.
Benchmark against volume. A busy urban store does 100,000 to 150,000 gallons per month while the US average is about 4,000 gallons per day. If your gallons are healthy but profit is thin, the problem is almost always inside mix, labor, or shrink, not your street price. Model the full picture in our gas station profit margins guide and run your own numbers in the valuation calculator.
Price fuel to drive traffic, not to win the street
The most common operator mistake is pricing fuel as if cheap gas is the goal. It is not. Fuel exists to pull cars onto the lot so customers walk inside, where margins are 10x higher. Price to be competitive within a few cents of your immediate competitors, then let the store earn the profit.
Watch credit card fees closely. Interchange is one of your largest fuel-side costs and scales directly with pump price, so a cash-discount or dual-pricing program can recover a meaningful slice of net CPG. Reprice daily against your two or three nearest competitors, not the whole market, and protect margin on slow days when a penny holds more value than volume.
If you buy fuel under a branded jobber contract, your supply cost, image obligations, and pricing flexibility are set by that agreement, so read it before you sign. Compare supply structures in our guides on jobber fuel supply agreements and branded vs unbranded stations. The right fuel strategy feeds the store rather than starving it.
Build the inside sale, where 70% of profit lives
The C-store is about 30% of revenue but roughly 70% of profit. Every operating decision should bend toward converting fuel customers into inside buyers and lifting their basket. Inside items carry 20% to 40% gross margins, so mix discipline pays faster than any fuel move.
Lead with the highest-margin, highest-velocity categories: prepared food and roller-grill, packaged beverages, coffee, snacks, and tobacco where legal. Foodservice in particular carries strong margins and gives customers a reason to choose your store over the identical pumps across the street. Merchandise the path from door to register so impulse items sit in the customer's line of sight, and keep cold vault and coffee stations full and clean at peak hours.
Measure conversion: what percent of fuel-only customers buy inside, and what is the average basket. Small gains compound, because the traffic is already on your lot at no extra acquisition cost. For the full operating-to-value connection, see how to increase gas station value and how to value a convenience store.
Schedule labor to the traffic curve
Labor is the largest controllable expense after cost of goods, and the easiest place to either bleed cash or build margin. The mistake is staffing flat across the day. Traffic is not flat. Schedule to the curve.
Map your transaction volume hour by hour for a full week, then build the schedule on top of it. Morning coffee and fuel rush, lunch foodservice, and the evening commute carry most of your inside dollars, so protect the front counter and foodservice during those windows. Overnight and mid-afternoon often run lean and can be single-covered where safe and legal.
Hold labor accountable to the profit it produces, not to sales. Measure payroll against inside gross profit, because that is where labor actually earns its keep. Cross-train staff so one person can run register, restock the cold vault, and prep foodservice during slow stretches. Turnover is expensive in this industry, so the operators who keep good people, pay fairly, and set clear shift standards quietly out-earn the ones constantly rehiring. Absentee owners feel labor risk most, which is why those sites need either a higher-volume base or a proven manager. See absentee gas station ownership.
Attack shrink before you chase more sales
Shrink is the silent margin killer. Because inside profit is where the business lives, every dollar of theft, spoilage, or cash error comes straight off net profit, not off revenue. Plugging shrink is often the fastest profit improvement available because it requires no new customers.
Work it on three fronts. External theft: position high-value, easily concealed items where staff can see them, keep tobacco and other targets behind the counter, and use working cameras at the register and fuel court. Internal loss: tight cash controls, register accountability by shift, and audited voids and no-sales close the most common leak. Spoilage: order foodservice and perishables to actual sell-through, rotate stock, and track waste so you are not buying profit you throw away.
Reconcile cash, lottery, and fuel inventory daily, not weekly. Fuel inventory variance can also signal a tank or meter problem worth catching early. If you are buying a store, build shrink and inventory controls into diligence using our due diligence checklist, and understand tank monitoring obligations in underground storage tanks.
Control the fixed costs that survive a slow month
Fuel and inside margin get the attention, but fixed and semi-fixed costs decide whether you survive a soft quarter. These are the line items that show up whether or not a single car pulls in.
- Card processing: negotiate interchange and processor fees, and consider cash discounting since fees scale with fuel price.
- Utilities: lighting, refrigeration, and coolers run constantly, so LED retrofits and tight refrigeration maintenance pay back fast.
- Environmental and compliance: tank monitoring, testing, and recordkeeping are not optional, and a lapse is far more expensive than the upkeep. Carry the right coverage, covered in environmental insurance.
- Maintenance: pumps, canopy lighting, restrooms, and the cold vault. Deferred maintenance shows up directly in lost inside sales.
If you own the real estate, your fixed cost stack is different from a lessee-dealer paying ground rent, which changes how you read profitability. Understand the structures in dealer vs lessee-dealer vs commission. Disciplined cost control is what turns a 4,000-gallon-a-day average site into one that reliably nets 70K to 100K dollars a year.
Manage the store as an asset, not just a job
The best operators run the store today while building its value for tomorrow. Profitability and salability are the same discipline, because clean books, strong inside margins, and documented systems are exactly what raises both your monthly take and your exit price.
Keep records a buyer or lender could trust on day one: clean P&Ls, separated fuel and inside performance, fuel volume history, and current environmental compliance. That documentation is what supports a real estate-inclusive valuation, which often runs about 8x EBITDA, versus a business-only deal at 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA. The operating improvements in this playbook, lifting inside margin, tightening labor, and cutting shrink, flow straight into EBITDA and therefore into value.
Think about the exit while you operate. Owners who manage to profit per gallon and basket size build a station that sells well, finances cleanly, and can support a future sale-leaseback or exit plan. When you are ready, our team can help you position the store to sell at its strongest number.