Retail & consumer
Energy is a bigger cost than most gas stations realize
Fuel stations run pumps, canopy lighting, refrigeration and increasingly EV chargers around the clock.
In a deregulated market, the supply charge — typically more than half your bill — is competitive. That’s the part USA Energy puts out to bid across 26+ suppliers, locking the lowest fixed rate for the longest sensible term while your utility keeps delivering the power. It costs you nothing: the supplier pays us, never you.
What it costs
What gas stations typically spend on power
A typical gas stations operation runs about 8,000–30,000 kWh per month. At the U.S. average commercial rate, that’s roughly $1,114–$4,176 in energy alone — before delivery and demand charges. The supply piece is what we shop.
Estimates at 13.92¢/kWh (latest EIA data). See average bills by business type and rates for your state.
What drives your bill
24/7 load and new EV demand
Pumps, coolers and canopy lighting run continuously, and adding EV fast-chargers can sharply raise demand charges. A fixed supply rate plus demand planning keeps costs predictable as your site evolves.
How it works
Lowering your gas stations energy cost, in three steps

Send one bill
A recent bill is all we need to read your usage, your delivery charges, and your current supply rate.

26+ suppliers compete
We put your account out to bid and normalize every offer to the same terms, so you compare like for like.

Lock a fixed rate
You pick the lowest fixed rate for the longest sensible term. No cost to you, no obligation to switch.
Common questions
Commercial energy for gas stations, answered
See what your gas stations business could save
Send us one recent bill and we’ll compare 26+ suppliers, then show you the lowest fixed rate for your gas stations operation — free, no obligation.


























