- A C-store-only business typically sells for 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA, and smaller owner-operated stores trade on SDE at roughly 2.0x to 3.5x.
- The convenience store is about 30% of a typical site's revenue but roughly 70% of its profit, so in-store earnings carry most of the value.
- In-store merchandise runs 20% to 40% gross margins, far above the few cents of net profit a station actually keeps per gallon of fuel sold.
- Combined fuel-plus-store businesses run 4.0x to 7.0x EBITDA, and a deal that includes the real estate reaches about 8x EBITDA, 7x to 9x in premium markets.
- A small-to-medium store owner often nets about $70K to $100K per year, scaling to $100K to $500K depending on the site.
- Clean books, verifiable inventory turns, and a transferable franchise or supply position are what move a store from the bottom of the multiple range to the top.
Valuing a convenience store is not the same as valuing a gas station. When you price the store as a business on its own, you are buying a stream of in-store profit, not fuel margin or land. That distinction drives the math. A C-store-only operation trades on a multiple of earnings, expressed as SDE for smaller owner-run stores or EBITDA for larger ones, and the multiple you earn depends on how clean and provable that cash flow is. This guide walks through normalizing earnings, picking the right multiple, and the adjustments that move your number up or down. It also shows where store value sits inside a combined fuel-and-store deal, because most buyers and appraisers look at both. Run the numbers yourself in our gas station valuation calculator as you read.
Value the store as a business, not the whole site
The first decision is scope. A convenience store sitting on leased land with no fuel is a business-only asset. You are valuing the cash flow it produces, full stop. That is different from a fuel site, where buyers underwrite gallons, and different again from a property deal, where the dirt and building carry value on a cap rate.
Why this matters: the store is roughly 30% of a typical fueling site's revenue but about 70% of its profit. In-store items carry 20% to 40% margins, while fuel nets only a few cents per gallon after card fees and freight even though 2025 fuel gross margins averaged 40-plus cents per gallon. So when you isolate the store, you are isolating the most profitable part of the operation.
For C-store-only businesses the market pays 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA, with smaller owner-run stores valued on SDE at 2.0x to 3.5x. If your deal also includes fuel or the real estate, the math changes, and we cover that below and in our guide on how to value a gas station.
SDE vs EBITDA: which earnings number to use
The multiple you apply depends on which earnings figure you start from, and that depends on store size and how it is run.
SDE (sellers discretionary earnings) is the right base for a smaller, owner-operated store. It is net profit with the owner's salary, benefits, and one-time or personal expenses added back, because a buyer who runs the store themselves recaptures that income. SDE-based stores trade at roughly 2.0x to 3.5x.
EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization) is the right base for a larger store where a manager runs day-to-day operations and the owner's labor is not part of the return. C-store-only EBITDA multiples run 2.5x to 4.0x.
The practical rule: if the buyer will stand behind the counter, use SDE. If the buyer will hire that role, use EBITDA and keep the manager's full market salary in the expenses. Mixing the two, applying an EBITDA multiple to an SDE number, is the most common way owners overprice a store. Learn more in how much gas station owners make.
Normalize the earnings before you multiply
A multiple is only as good as the earnings it sits on. Before you apply 3x to anything, rebuild a clean 12-month earnings figure from the tax returns, the P&L, and the point-of-sale reports together. Buyers and SBA lenders will reconcile all three, so you should too.
Standard add-backs for SDE include one owner's salary, owner health insurance, personal vehicle or phone expenses run through the business, and genuine one-time costs like a roof repair or a legal settlement. Remove income that will not transfer, such as a lottery contract tied personally to the seller or rebates that expire at closing.
Then check the gross margin honestly. In-store merchandise should show 20% to 40% gross margins. If reported margins are far outside that band, either inventory shrink is hiding or the books are not capturing all cash sales. Underreported cash is real in this sector and it cuts both ways: it inflates true profit the seller cannot prove and it scares lenders. A store priced on income you cannot document on a tax return will not finance. See our due diligence checklist.
Pick the multiple that fits the store
Within the 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA range (or 2.0x to 3.5x SDE), where a specific store lands is a judgment about risk and durability. Higher multiples go to stores where the cash flow is clean, provable, and likely to continue under a new owner.
Factors that push toward the top of the range:
- Three years of clean, reconciled tax returns that match the P&L and POS
- A transferable franchise agreement or a solid jobber fuel supply position if fuel is attached
- Diversified high-margin revenue: foodservice, a deli or kitchen, lottery, ATM, and tobacco within legal limits
- A trained staff and a manager who stays, so the buyer is not buying a job
- A growing trade area with strong daytime population and traffic counts
Factors that push toward the bottom: heavy owner dependence, single-product concentration, declining sales, a short or non-transferable lease, or any deferred maintenance and environmental questions. For ways to earn a higher number before you sell, see how to increase gas station value.
Where store value sits in a combined deal
Most convenience stores do not sell purely on their own. They come attached to fuel, real estate, or both, and each layer adds value on a different basis.
Business only (store plus fuel operation): 4.0x to 7.0x EBITDA. The wide range reflects how much of the profit is durable in-store income versus thin fuel margin. Buyers also sanity-check fuel value at $0.05 to $0.30 per gallon of monthly throughput, where a busy urban site runs 100,000 to 150,000 gallons a month against a US average near 4,000 gallons a day.
Business plus real estate: about 8x EBITDA, reaching 7x to 9x in premium markets. When you own the dirt, the property also carries a cap rate. National cap rates run about 5.6% including fuel and 6.87% for the store component without fuel, so the real estate often gets valued separately on income and added to the business value. Model both with our cap rate calculator and read gas station cap rate trends.
Run a quick worked example
Here is the method end to end on a typical owner-operated store. Suppose the store shows $1.2M in annual sales and $850K in cost of goods, for roughly 29% gross margin, well inside the 20% to 40% band. After operating expenses, the P&L shows $40K in net profit.
Now normalize. Add back the owner's $65K salary, $12K in owner health insurance, $5K in personal vehicle and phone costs, and an $8K one-time roof repair. SDE comes to $130K. That is consistent with the sector, where small-to-medium owners often net $70K to $100K and stronger sites reach $100K to $500K.
Apply the SDE range. At 2.5x the store-only business is worth about $325K. At 3.5x, for a clean and growing store with diversified income, it is about $455K. If the deal includes the building and you own the land, you add the real estate value separately on a cap rate rather than stretching the business multiple. Pressure-test your own figures in the valuation calculator before you set an asking price.
What a calculator and a multiple cannot capture
A multiple gives you a starting number. It does not see the things that decide whether a deal closes at that number, and several of them are specific to this asset class.
Lease quality is first. A store on leased ground with a short remaining term or a landlord who can refuse assignment is worth less than the same earnings on a long, transferable lease. Franchise and supply terms are next: a buyer is also buying or re-qualifying for the brand agreement, and rebrand costs are real. Inventory is a working-capital item negotiated on top of the business price, usually at cost, not part of the multiple.
For any site with fuel, environmental status governs everything. Underground storage tanks carry CERCLA liability, which is why many banks avoid them and why SBA fuel deals require a Phase I ESA at $1,800 to $3,500 under ASTM E1527-21. A clean Phase I supports your price, while an open issue can erase it. See Phase I environmental and gas station appraisal for how the pros confirm a number.