Walmart To Add Convenience Stores and Gas Stations To Locations In 34 States

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Walmart gas station with cars refueling.

If you’ve spent much time on the Interstate, you already know the golden rule of road trips: a good stop can make your day, and a bad one can ruin your schedule, your mood, or both. That’s why Walmart’s move to expand its fuel and convenience offerings along major routes in 34 states is worth your attention as a highway traveler.

Over the next few years, Walmart plans to build a network of fuel stations paired with modern convenience stores adjacent to many of its Supercenters and Neighborhood Markets, with an eye toward locations close to Interstate exits and key regional corridors. For drivers, that could mean one more reliable option for fueling up, grabbing food, and restocking road-trip essentials at a familiar brand.

What Walmart Is Building

Walmart already operates or partners with fuel stations at many of its existing stores. The new push goes further: larger, stand-alone convenience stores with expanded food and beverage choices, better restrooms, and more services specifically geared toward motorists.

Here’s what the typical site is expected to include:

  • Multiple fueling lanes for gasoline, with select locations offering diesel
  • A modern c‑store with hot and cold grab‑and‑go meals, snacks, and drinks
  • Basic travel supplies: phone chargers, wiper fluid, oil, coolant, and road snacks
  • Clean, well-lit restrooms maintained to big-box retail standards
  • Extended hours, with many locations aiming for late-night or 24‑hour operation

In some markets, Walmart is also exploring EV charging partnerships, which could put fast chargers in the same parking lots where you buy groceries and fuel.

Why This Matters for Interstate Travelers

For anyone who spends long stretches on I-5I‑10I‑75I‑80I‑95, or other major routes, stop quality matters as much as stop frequency. Walmart is betting that travelers value consistency, price, and convenience.

Key advantages for road trippers:

1. One-stop “mega break”
Instead of making separate stops for fuel, food, and a forgotten toiletry, you can often do everything in one place: gas at the forecourt, snacks and drinks in the c‑store, and a wider range of items—like a cooler, a rain jacket, or a pack of socks—inside the main Walmart store.

2. Leveraging Walmart pricing
While fuel prices will still vary by market, Walmart’s brand is built on competing hard on cost. The presence of a Walmart station at a busy exit can put downward pressure on nearby fuel prices. And if you walk into the main store, grocery and travel-item prices are often lower than at typical travel plazas.

3. Familiarity and predictability
On a cross-country run through unfamiliar towns, a known chain can be reassuring. Walmart’s move adds another predictable option alongside the major truck stop and travel plaza brands you already know.

Where You’ll See Them

The rollout covers 34 states, heavily concentrated along major travel corridors. Expect the densest clusters in:

  • The Southeast (Florida, Georgia, Alabama, the Carolinas)
  • Texas and the Gulf Coast
  • The Midwest (Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri)
  • Key Western routes (Arizona, New Mexico, parts of California and Nevada)

Most new sites will be near existing Supercenters close to Interstate exits or major U.S. highways, making them easy on/easy off stops when you’re watching both time and fuel range.

What This Means for Different Types of Travelers

Family road trips:
Parents may appreciate the combination of cheaper groceries, access to a full store, and reasonably priced fuel. A longer “reset stop” at a Walmart complex can cover bathrooms, lunch, a few minutes in the toy aisle, and a restock of snacks in one go.

Solo and business travelers:
Fast in-and-out convenience is key. The new c‑stores aim to offer quicker fuel islands and grab‑and‑go food choices—useful when you’re trying to make time between cities.

RV owners and vanlifers:
Walmart is already part of many RV itineraries, often as an overnight parking option where allowed. Adding more fuel and convenience locations—plus possible future EV and RV-friendly services—could make certain exits even more appealing as multi-purpose stops.

Professional drivers:
While these sites won’t replace full-scale truck plazas, drivers of smaller commercial vehicles and hotshot rigs will likely welcome another place to fuel, pick up supplies, and park for a break.

As this network builds out, you’ll see more Walmart-branded canopies joining the familiar mix of truck stops and travel centers along the Interstate. For travelers who value a recognizable name, consistent prices, and the ability to get nearly anything in one stop, Walmart’s push into fuel and convenience could quietly become a fixture of your long-haul routine.


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