How Do I Budget a Gas Station or Convenience Store Buildout?
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 1200 340" role="img" aria-label="How Do I Budget a Gas Station or Convenience Store Buildout? — PULSE Buildouts"><rect width="1200" height="340" fill="#EBE9DE"/><rect width="14" height="340" fill="#C0531F"/><text x="58" y="116" font-family="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif" font-size="32" font-weight="800" letter-spacing="3" fill="#C0531F">PULSE BUILDOUTS · COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE</text><text x="56" y="198" font-family="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif" font-size="60" font-weight="800" fill="#2b2b2b">Save money.
Don’t get screwed.</text><text x="58" y="258" font-family="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif" font-size="30" font-weight="600" fill="#6b5b4d">Gas station & c-store buildouts — fuel, USTs & canopy, priced right</text><g transform="translate(1010,86)" fill="none" stroke="#C0531F" stroke-width="9" stroke-linejoin="round"><rect x="20" y="40" width="150" height="130"/><line x1="20" y1="40" x2="95" y2="6"/><line x1="170" y1="40" x2="95" y2="6"/><rect x="50" y="80" width="36" height="36"/><rect x="104" y="80" width="36" height="36"/><rect x="74" y="128" width="42" height="42"/></g></svg>
How Do I Budget a Gas Station or Convenience Store Buildout?
Direct Answer
The money move with a gas station is to separate the fuel system from the building in your budget and never let a contractor or seller blur the two — because the fuel infrastructure is where the catastrophic cost surprises live. A full ground-up gas station with a c-store runs $1.5 million to $4 million all-in: the convenience store building itself lands at $150–$300 per square foot on a typical 2,500–5,000 sq ft footprint, the fuel canopy and dispensers run $150,000–$400,000, and the underground storage tanks (USTs) with piping, monitoring, and dispensers add $250,000–$600,000 for a standard double-walled fiberglass setup.
The single biggest landmine is environmental liability: never buy or lease a site with existing USTs without a Phase I environmental site assessment ($2,500–$5,000) and, if there's any red flag, a Phase II ($10,000–$50,000+). A contaminated site can carry $100,000 to over $1 million in remediation, and under EPA and state rules the *current* owner/operator can inherit that liability.
Budget $50,000–$150,000 for tank monitoring, leak detection, and the spill/overfill prevention the EPA requires, plus $15,000–$40,000 for the double-walled tank upgrades mandated since the 1998 deadline. If you're a tenant, make the landlord carry the USTs and the environmental indemnity in writing — that one clause can save you a seven-figure cleanup you didn't cause.
The Real Cost Stack — Fuel Versus Store
Price every piece separately so no one can hide a markup inside a blended number:
- C-store building shell + interior: $150–$300 per square foot. A 3,000 sq ft store is $450,000–$900,000.
- Underground storage tanks (USTs): $250,000–$600,000 for two to four double-walled fiberglass tanks (10,000–20,000 gallons each) with piping and excavation.
- Fuel canopy: $60,000–$150,000 depending on size and lighting.
- Dispensers (pumps): $20,000–$35,000 each; a typical 4–8 dispenser station is $80,000–$280,000.
- POS + fuel management system: $30,000–$80,000 (forecourt controller, tank gauging, EMV card readers).
- EMV-compliant card readers: non-negotiable — non-compliant pumps eat 100% of fraud chargebacks.
- Coolers / walk-in: $30,000–$80,000 for beverage and beer caves, which drive the highest c-store margins.
- Site work, paving, signage, MEP: $200,000–$500,000.
Soft costs — permits, environmental, design, financing carry — run 15–25% of hard cost and people forget them every single time.
The Underground Tank Trap
USTs are the part of a gas station that can quietly bankrupt you, so treat them as their own project with their own due diligence:
- Always pull a Phase I before you sign. It's $2,500–$5,000 and it reads the site's environmental history. Skipping it to save a few thousand dollars is the most expensive decision a buyer makes.
- Demand records of past releases. State UST databases track reported leaks. A site with a documented release may have an open corrective-action case that follows the property.
- Check tank age and material. Single-walled steel tanks are obsolete and a liability; double-walled fiberglass or composite is the modern standard. Replacing a tank field is $250,000–$600,000.
- Verify the leak-detection and monitoring system. The EPA mandates release detection, spill prevention, and overfill prevention; missing equipment means fines and forced upgrades.
- Know your state cleanup fund. Many states run a UST trust fund that reimburses qualifying cleanup costs above a deductible — but only if you've paid tank fees and stayed compliant.
How Not To Get Screwed By The Landlord Or Seller
Whether you're buying the dirt or leasing a pad, the fuel business has industry-specific traps:
- The environmental indemnity dodge. Sellers love to sell "as-is" and walk away from contamination. Insist on a seller environmental indemnity plus environmental insurance for pre-existing conditions. As a tenant, the landlord must indemnify you for any release predating your lease.
- The fuel-supply tie-in. Many "deals" come bundled with a branded fuel supply agreement (Shell, BP, Exxon, Marathon) that locks you into above-market wholesale pricing or volume minimums for 10–15 years. Read the image and supply contract before you fall in love with the brand. A bad supply agreement costs more than the building.
- The image-upgrade clawback. Branded jobbers often fund canopy and signage image upgrades — then claw the money back if you fall short of gallon volume. Know the recapture schedule.
- The TI shell game. On a leased pad, landlords sometimes push canopy or tank costs into your tenant improvement (TI) scope. Get a written base-building definition that puts the fuel infrastructure on the landlord.
- The restoration clause. Some leases require you to remove tanks at lease end — a $50,000–$150,000 decommissioning cost. Negotiate it out or cap it.
A Quick Budgeting Framework
- Phase I environmental first, always, before any LOI or purchase contract.
- Price fuel and building as two separate stacks so no contractor blends a markup.
- Vet the fuel-supply agreement as hard as the construction budget — it's a decade-plus obligation.
- Confirm double-walled tanks and full leak detection to avoid forced upgrades and fines.
- Hold 10–15% contingency specifically for environmental surprises.
FAQ
How much does it cost to build a gas station with a convenience store? A full ground-up build runs $1.5 million to $4 million all-in. The c-store building is $150–$300 per square foot, the canopy and dispensers add $150,000–$400,000, and the underground tank system runs $250,000–$600,000.
Add 15–25% in soft costs and a 10–15% contingency for environmental risk.
Why are underground storage tanks such a big risk? Because contamination liability can attach to the current owner or operator regardless of who caused it, and remediation can run $100,000 to over $1 million. A Phase I assessment at $2,500–$5,000 is the cheapest insurance you'll ever buy before signing.
Should I sign a branded fuel-supply agreement? Only after you've modeled the wholesale pricing and volume minimums. Branded agreements (Shell, BP, Marathon) often run 10–15 years and can cost you more than the building over their term. The image-upgrade funding usually comes with a gallon-volume clawback, so read the recapture schedule.
What is EMV compliance and why does it matter at the pump? EMV is the chip-card standard. Non-compliant dispensers make the station — not the card issuer — liable for 100% of fraud chargebacks, which can run thousands of dollars per skimming incident. Budget $30,000–$80,000 to bring the forecourt EMV-compliant.
As a tenant, how do I protect myself from tank liability? Make the landlord carry the USTs, the environmental indemnity, and any decommissioning cost in writing. Add an environmental indemnity for pre-existing conditions and confirm the landlord — not your TI allowance — pays for the fuel infrastructure as base building.
Sources
- CBRE — Net Lease and Single-Tenant Retail (fuel/c-store) investment and cost reports.
- JLL — Retail and Gas Station/Convenience valuation and capital-markets briefs.
- Cushman & Wakefield — Retail Development and net-lease advisory research.
- RSMeans (Gordian) — Commercial construction unit-cost data for retail and site work.
- U.S. EPA — Underground Storage Tank (UST) regulations, release detection, and double-wall requirements.
- NACS (National Association of Convenience Stores) — c-store buildout and operations cost benchmarks.
- NAIOP (Commercial Real Estate Development Association) — retail development pro forma research.
- The Appraisal Institute — environmental obsolescence and contaminated-property valuation methodology.
