
Sell a Gas Station or Convenience Store
Fuel and convenience properties carry realities a normal listing handles badly — tanks, environmental history, branding agreements, and a narrow buyer pool. We review them with those realities in view from the start.
Who this page is for
Owners of an operating or closed station, a dealer ending a franchise, or someone who inherited a site and doesn’t want to run it — especially where USTs (underground storage tanks) or environmental questions are in play.
What we review
- The real estate vs. the business and fuel contracts.
- Underground tanks, age, and compliance.
- Environmental history (past releases, monitoring, Phase I/II status).
- Branding or supply agreements.
- The C-store income and any QSR or car-wash component.
- Access, traffic counts, and the corridor.
Environmental questions don’t have to be a dead end
They affect what a site is worth and how it can close, so they’re part of the review rather than an automatic no.
Why a direct sale can fit
The conventional buyer pool for fuel sites is small and financing is harder; a direct, as-is purchase removes the listing and financing uncertainty.
Gas-station questions owners ask
Will you buy a closed station or one with environmental concerns?
We review them case by case. A closed site or one with tank/environmental questions is often exactly why owners come to a direct buyer.
Do you buy the business or just the real estate?
Primarily the real estate; we’ll review any in-place income and agreements as part of the picture.
I inherited a station I don’t want to operate. Can you help?
Yes — an inherited fuel or convenience site is a common direct-sale situation.
Where owners go from here
Have a station or C-store to sell?
Tell us about the site, the tanks, and the situation. The review is free, confidential, and carries no obligation.
