Gas stations and convenience stores are among the most complex commercial real estate deals to finance in Texas. They combine real estate, business operations, environmental liability, and equipment — and most conventional lenders view them as specialty assets requiring deep expertise to underwrite. Whether you are buying a single fueling station, refinancing a multi-site C-store chain, or acquiring a distressed property to reposition, here is how financing works for this asset class.
Why Gas Station Financing Is Different
A gas station loan is not just a real estate loan — it is part real estate, part business loan, part equipment financing, and part environmental assessment. Lenders have to think about all four components:
- Real estate: The land and building (canopy, kiosk, C-store) have their own appraised value
- Business value: Fuel volume, fuel margin, inside store revenue, and any quick-service restaurant (QSR) component all drive income
- Equipment: Underground storage tanks (USTs), dispensers, POS system, coolers, and fuel management systems are significant assets — and liabilities if they are aging
- Environmental: UST leaks and soil contamination are a major risk factor. Most lenders require Phase I and often Phase II environmental assessments before funding
Hard Money Gas Station Loans
Private hard money lenders are often the best option when you need to close fast on a gas station acquisition or refinance. Hard money underwriting focuses on the real estate collateral value rather than the operating income and environmental complexity that slows down banks. Typical terms:
- Loan amount: $500,000 to $10 million
- LTV: Up to 60–65% of appraised value (lower than standard commercial due to environmental risk)
- Rate: 10–13%
- Term: 6–24 months, interest-only
- Close time: 10–21 days (after clean Phase I received)
- No tax returns or income verification required
Hard money is ideal for gas station investors who are:
- Buying a station that needs rebranding or equipment upgrades before qualifying for bank financing
- Acquiring from a seller who needs a fast close (estate sale, foreclosure, motivated seller)
- Self-employed or have complex income that does not underwrite cleanly to conventional standards
- Bridge-financing into a longer-term SBA or conventional loan once the station is stabilized
SBA Loans for Gas Stations
SBA 7(a) loans are the most commonly used financing tool for owner-operator gas station purchases in Texas. An SBA 7(a) loan can fund the real estate, equipment, working capital, and even a portion of goodwill — all in one package. Key features:
- Down payment: 10–20% (lower than conventional)
- Loan amount: Up to $5 million
- Term: Up to 25 years on real estate, 10 years on equipment/business
- Rates: Prime + 2.75% or similar (variable)
- Timeline: 60–120 days
The downside: SBA underwriting is thorough. You will need 2–3 years of business tax returns showing adequate income, a business plan for new acquisitions, full environmental clearance, and franchise or supply agreement documentation if applicable.
Environmental Issues and How They Affect Financing
Underground storage tanks (USTs) are the biggest wildcard in gas station financing. Older tanks — especially single-wall steel tanks from the 1970s–1990s — are prone to corrosion and leakage, which can contaminate soil and groundwater. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) maintains a database of known tank releases.
Here is how environmental issues affect the loan:
- Clean Phase I: No recognized environmental conditions (RECs) — lender can move forward
- Phase I flags a REC: Lender orders Phase II (soil/groundwater sampling) — adds cost and 2–4 weeks
- Active contamination: Most lenders will not fund until remediation is complete or a cleanup plan is in place. TCEQ’s Petroleum Storage Tank (PST) program may provide remediation cost reimbursement.
- Newer double-wall fiberglass tanks: Much lower environmental risk, lenders are more comfortable
Budget $2,000–$5,000 for a Phase I and $10,000–$30,000+ for a Phase II depending on site conditions and the number of USTs.
Branded vs Unbranded Stations
Whether a gas station carries a major fuel brand (Shell, Chevron, ExxonMobil, Valero, etc.) or is unbranded/independent affects financing in a few ways:
- Branded stations: Typically higher volume, more recognized collateral, but come with supply agreements that may have lease terms or change-of-ownership restrictions
- Unbranded stations: More operating flexibility, but potentially lower volume and fewer brand-mandated renovation requirements
- Dealer-owned vs company-operated: The ownership structure affects whether the fuel supply agreement runs with the property or the operator
Hard money lenders are generally agnostic on brand status — the collateral value is the collateral value. SBA and conventional lenders pay closer attention to the supply agreement terms.
Texas Gas Station Markets
We finance gas stations across Texas, with particularly active deal flow in:
- Houston: High density, strong fuel volumes, active acquisition market
- DFW: Suburban growth corridors with high traffic counts
- South Texas: I-35 corridor, border towns, oil patch areas (Permian Basin, Eagle Ford)
- Gulf Coast: High truck traffic near Port of Houston, Beaumont, and Corpus Christi
Get a Gas Station Loan Quote
If you are buying, refinancing, or rebranding a gas station or C-store in Texas, call us at (877) 695-3034 or submit your deal using the form below. We can issue a hard money term sheet within 24 hours of receiving the property address and basic deal details — no income verification, no tax returns required.