Insights

Who Buys Gas Stations? The Buyer Types Every Seller Should Know

There is no single market for your station. There are 5, and the one you sell into decides your price.

Key takeaways
  • Gas stations sell to 5 buyer types, and each one values the same store differently: owner-operators, fuel jobbers, multi-site operators, and passive NNN investors all pay on different math.
  • Business-only deals trade at 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA, combined business-plus-real-estate deals at 4.0x to 7.0x, and pure NNN real estate at roughly 8x EBITDA (7x to 9x in premium markets).
  • Fuel jobbers pay a premium for gallons, valuing committed fuel supply at $0.05 to $0.30 per gallon of monthly throughput on top of the store's cash flow.
  • Passive NNN investors buy the dirt and the lease, not the operation, paying to a national average cap rate of about 5.6% that tightens to 4.83-5.20% for credit tenants like Wawa.

When owners ask who buys gas stations, they usually picture one buyer: another operator who wants to run the store. That buyer exists, but they are only one of 5 distinct pools, and they almost never pay the most. A first-time owner-operator, a fuel jobber, a regional multi-site chain, and a passive triple-net investor each value the same asset on a completely different math. One pays on cash flow to the working owner. Another pays on fuel gallons. A fourth ignores the business entirely and buys the dirt and the lease. Knowing which pool your station fits, and reaching all of them at once, is the difference between a 4x multiple and an 8x. This guide breaks down every buyer type, what each one pays for, and how to position for the highest bidder.

The 5 buyer types, ranked by what they pay

Gas station demand sorts into 5 pools, and they do not bid alike. From lowest typical price to highest:

  • First-time owner-operators. Buying a job and a business. They pay on SDE, often 2.0x to 3.5x for smaller stores, and lean on SBA debt.
  • Fuel jobbers. Branded fuel distributors who want your gallons under their supply contract. They underwrite on throughput, sometimes $0.05 to $0.30 per gallon of monthly volume.
  • Multi-site operators and chains. Regional players buying for scale and synergies. They pay 4.0x to 7.0x EBITDA on combined deals, more for high-volume branded sites.
  • Passive NNN investors. They buy the real estate and a long lease, not the operating headache, pricing on cap rate near 5.6% nationally.
  • Private equity and institutional roll-ups. Aggregating portfolios, often the top of the market on scale.

Most owners only ever meet pool 1. The job of a sell-side process is to put all 5 in the same room.

The owner-operator: buying a job, not just an asset

The owner-operator is the most common buyer for a single store and the one most sellers picture. This buyer intends to work the counter, manage staff, and live off the income. A small-to-medium station owner often nets $70K to $100K per year, rising to $100K to $500K on stronger sites, and that owner income is exactly what this buyer is purchasing.

Because they are buying a job, they value on Seller's Discretionary Earnings, typically 2.0x to 3.5x SDE for smaller stores, where add-backs for owner salary and perks matter. Most are first-timers funded by an SBA 7(a) loan, which caps at $5M and requires a 15% minimum equity injection on special-purpose fuel sites. That financing constraint sets a real ceiling on what they can offer. They are price-sensitive, due-diligence heavy, and slower to close, but they form the deep base of demand for any independent store priced under roughly $1M.

The fuel jobber: a buyer who pays for your gallons

The jobber is the buyer most sellers do not know to look for. A jobber is a branded fuel distributor who supplies stations under a long-term fuel supply agreement. They make money on the spread and rebates across every gallon they move, so they buy or invest in stations to lock up volume. A busy urban station does 100,000 to 150,000 gallons a month, and that throughput is the prize.

Jobbers underwrite differently from operators. Instead of an EBITDA multiple, they often think in cents per gallon of value, in the range of $0.05 to $0.30 per gallon of monthly throughput, plus the dealer margin on inside sales. A high-volume site with a strong location can fetch more from a jobber chasing gallons than from an operator chasing take-home pay. The catch is the strings: a jobber deal usually comes with a multi-year branded supply commitment. For the full trade-off, see branded vs unbranded. Our buyer network includes active jobbers across multiple brands.

The multi-site operator: scale, synergies, and a higher multiple

Regional chains and established multi-site operators are the buyers who push multiples up. With roughly 152,000 C-stores in the US and about 60% still single-store operators, the consolidators have a long runway, and they pay for it. On combined business-and-real-estate deals they typically transact at 4.0x to 7.0x EBITDA, with 6x to 7x for high-volume branded stores and closer to 4x for rural or unbranded sites.

They pay more because they extract more. Existing back-office, fuel-buying power, insurance, and supplier rebates mean your store is worth more inside their system than it is standalone. A multi-site buyer can also absorb a portfolio in one transaction, which is why owners with 2 or more stores should think about a packaged sale rather than picking sites off one at a time. If you are nearing the end, the exit and retirement strategy guide covers portfolio timing, and you can request a confidential valuation to see what a chain might pay.

The passive NNN investor: buying the dirt, not the day-to-day

The passive investor is a different animal entirely. They do not want to run a store. They want a check. In a triple-net lease structure, the investor owns the real estate while a tenant operates and covers taxes, insurance, and maintenance. The investor prices purely on cap rate, which runs near 5.6% nationally and tightens for strong credit tenants. Branded corporate leases price sharpest: Wawa around 4.83% to 5.20%, 7-Eleven 5.00% to 5.40%, Circle K 5.35% to 5.65%.

This pool opens up a powerful move for owner-operators: the sale-leaseback. You sell the real estate to an NNN investor at a low cap rate, sign a long lease, and keep running the business with the cash freed up. Because investors value the building plus lease near 8x EBITDA, sometimes 7x to 9x in premium markets, selling the real estate separately often beats selling the whole thing to an operator. Cap rates vary by state, detailed in our cap rate study.

How each buyer values the same store differently

One station, 5 prices. That is the core insight for any seller. The valuation method swings with the buyer:

  • Business only: 2.5x to 4.0x EBITDA, or 2.0x to 3.5x SDE on smaller stores. This is the operator buying just the going concern.
  • Business plus real estate: 4.0x to 7.0x EBITDA, the multi-site range.
  • With real estate, premium markets: around 8x EBITDA, ranging 7x to 9x.
  • Per gallon: $0.05 to $0.30 per gallon of monthly throughput, the jobber lens.
  • Cap rate: NOI divided by roughly 5.6%, the NNN investor lens.

The same NOI can produce wildly different prices depending on which formula a buyer applies. This is why pricing your station to one buyer type leaves money on the table. Run the numbers yourself with our valuation calculator and cap rate calculator, then read how to value a gas station for the full methodology.

Why fuel margins shape which buyer wants your store

Buyer interest tracks where the profit actually sits, and it is not the fuel. In 2025 fuel gross margins averaged 40+ cents per gallon, but after credit card fees, freight, and shrink, net fuel profit is only a few cents per gallon. The real money is inside: in-store items carry 20% to 40% margins, and the C-store is roughly 30% of revenue but about 70% of profit.

That split steers buyers. Jobbers chase the gallons because their money is in the fuel supply spread, not the store margin. Operators and chains chase strong inside sales because that is where net profit lives. A site doing high gallons but weak inside sales appeals to a jobber. A site with a thriving deli, lottery, and tobacco counter appeals to operators willing to pay an EBITDA premium. Knowing your own profit mix tells you which pool will compete hardest. For the underlying economics, see is owning a gas station profitable.

Reaching all 5 buyer pools at once

The single biggest pricing mistake is selling into one pool. List quietly to a neighbor, and you get an owner-operator's number. Run a real process, and you get the highest bid across every pool. That is the entire reason a deep buyer network matters. A specialist broker maintains active relationships with operators, jobbers, regional chains, and NNN capital sources at the same time, then creates competitive tension among them.

Gas Station Trader is a specialist gas station and C-store brokerage (Eagle Nest Property Group, Dallas TX) with $250 million plus transacted, covering buy, sell, sale-leaseback, and finance. We work with the largest NNN real estate buyers and providers of private capital in the US alongside our operator and jobber relationships, so your store is shown to every buyer type that could pay for it. Typical sale timelines run 3 to 6 months. Start with a confidential store evaluation, browse active listings to see comps, or call 469.949.6467 to talk through which buyers fit your site.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Five buyer pools: first-time owner-operators buying a business to run, fuel jobbers buying for gallons under a supply contract, multi-site operators and regional chains buying for scale, passive NNN investors buying the real estate and lease, and private equity roll-ups aggregating portfolios. Each values the same store on different math, so the highest bidder depends on which pool your site fits best.
A jobber is a branded fuel distributor who supplies stations under a long-term fuel supply agreement and earns on the spread and rebates across every gallon. They buy or invest in stations to lock up throughput, often valuing volume at $0.05 to $0.30 per gallon of monthly gallons. A high-volume site can fetch more from a jobber than from an operator, though the deal usually carries a multi-year branded supply commitment.
It depends on your store. High-volume branded sites with strong inside sales often draw the top price from multi-site operators at 4.0x to 7.0x EBITDA, or from NNN investors valuing the real estate near 8x EBITDA, sometimes 7x to 9x in premium markets. Owner-operators, constrained by SBA financing, usually pay the least. Running a competitive process across all pools is how you find the top number.
Yes, through a sale-leaseback. You sell the land and building to a passive NNN investor at a low cap rate, near 5.6% nationally, sign a long-term lease, and keep operating the store. Because investors value the real estate plus lease near 8x EBITDA, selling the dirt separately often nets more than selling the whole going concern to an operator.
You can sell to a neighbor on your own, but that reaches only one buyer pool and usually the lowest-paying one. A specialist broker maintains live relationships with operators, jobbers, chains, and NNN capital at once and creates competition among them. Gas Station Trader has transacted $250 million plus and runs that full-network process. Call 469.949.6467.
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