The Economics of Owning a Gas Station

Most people walk past a gas station and assume the people behind the counter are getting rich. The trucks roll in twenty-four hours a day. The pumps never stop. The lights never go off. Somebody must be making a fortune. The reality is something almost nobody talks about. The gas itself, the entire reason your sign exists, barely makes anyone any money. Two pennies a gallon after the credit card company takes its cut. A million gallons sold and you've made twenty thousand dollars. The real business is the bottle of water sold for a dollar ninety-nine. The bag of jerky. The lottery ticket. The bathroom that gets a tired driver inside the door at three in the morning. And the person standing behind that counter, the one ringing you up while you complain about the price of gas, is almost certainly an immigrant working seventeen hours a day so their kid will never have to. This is the story of who actually owns America's gas stations. The Texas kid who built a billion-dollar empire by obsessing over clean bathrooms. The Indian family network that quietly took over half the industry without anyone noticing. The mafia scheme that stole three hundred million dollars in federal taxes. The twenty-billion-dollar environmental disaster nobody wants to clean up. And the Louisiana company that just went bankrupt in January 2026 because electric vehicle drivers stopped coming inside the store. By the end, you'll understand why the pumps were never the business. The store was. And why the man behind the counter is somebody's father, working through the night so somebody else can do something other than this. Subscribe and turn on notifications. New videos breaking down the economics of the businesses you never thought about owning. #GasStation #SmallBusiness #Economics #ConvenienceStore #BucEes #PatelMotel #Entrepreneurship #BusinessExplained #IndianAmerican #AmericanDream #PassiveIncome #MoneyExplained