barton baird wrote:
I believe about 75% is tax,no doubt someone will put me right.When I was delivering to petrol stations the garage itself made about 1 pence per litre.More profit was made in the shop,believe it or not.
The general word is that a typical averagely busy urban garage makes around 3p a litre. I believe they actually make more, in many cases, certainly out of town ones do as they charge clearly a few pence at least more than you would pay in a city.
I fill up at Morrisons and they seem to have queues at the pumps most of the time. Getting out my fag packet, 16 pumps selling (say) 50 litres every 5 minutes for 16 hours.
Roughly 150,000 litres, allowing 8 hours of zero sales (though its open 24/7)
1p - 3p means £1500 - £4500 profit a day.
Despite the back of a fag packet calculation, there's clearly money to be made. Last year Shell made £1.6m per HOUR. Granted sales of the stuff don't make up the majority of that but the fact they won't actually say how much they make from fuels sales tells its own story doesn't it?
When I see a boarded up petrol station I reckon that the problem is most likely to be the prohibitive permanent cost, given the hike in fuel prices, of the purchase price of the petrol station, and the buying in cost of your stock ie the fuel in your storage tanks.
I have just googled "petrol stations for sale" and looked at only the top of the first page of results, and found "MID GLAMORGAN- SUBSTANTIAL PETROL FORECOURT for sale - £2,000,000".
This does not sound like people think they're a bad investment, and that's before you even consider the huge amounts of money they must make on selling stuff from their inevitable and well stocked shops.