Most Jacksonville operations fuel one of two ways: drivers swipe a fleet card at retail stations, or fuel is delivered on-site to tanks and equipment. The right answer is not the same for every business — but the cost gap is bigger than most owners assume.
This is a straight comparison for Jacksonville and Duval County operations: where each model wins, where each one quietly bleeds money, and how to tell which one fits your fleet.
How fleet cards actually price fuel
Fleet cards are convenient and give you per-vehicle reporting — real advantages. But every gallon is bought at the retail pump, which carries the full retail markup over the wholesale rack. On top of that, you pay in labor: every fueling stop is paid driver time and paid vehicle time, plus the miles driven to and from the station.
For a small fleet that ranges widely, that convenience can be worth it. For a fleet that returns to a yard, or equipment that never leaves a site, you are paying retail markup plus labor for no reason.
How on-site delivery prices fuel
On-site delivery brings fuel to your Jacksonville yard, tanks, or equipment, priced off the wholesale rack plus transparent freight and margin — not retail. Drivers start their day with full tanks. Equipment gets fueled where it sits. Nobody drives to a station.
The trade-off: you need somewhere to put the fuel (a bulk tank or direct-to-equipment fueling) and enough volume to clear delivery minimums, typically around 500 gallons.
The real cost comparison
Compare honestly and count both lines. Fleet cards: retail price per gallon + driver labor per stop + vehicle time + detour miles. On-site delivery: wholesale-plus price per gallon + tank cost (one-time or amortized) + your time scheduling fills.
Across a Jacksonville fleet of any real size, delivered fuel typically wins on per-gallon price by $0.20–$0.50 versus retail, and the labor savings often matter more than the gallons. The more your vehicles or equipment cluster at a yard or job site, the more decisively on-site delivery wins.
Control, compliance, and dyed diesel
On-site delivery gives you something fleet cards cannot: access to dyed off-road diesel. Equipment that qualifies — generators, excavators, irrigation pumps — can run on dyed diesel and skip roughly $0.58 per gallon in highway tax. You cannot buy dyed diesel at a retail pump.
Delivery also tightens control: known volumes, scheduled fills, one consolidated relationship, and accurate records for tax and accounting.
Which model fits Jacksonville operations
Jacksonville's healthcare sector, anchored by Mayo Clinic Florida, Baptist Health, and UF Health Jacksonville, requires backup generator fuel contracts with fast response times. The city's exposure to Atlantic hurricanes makes emergency fuel planning essential. BettyJet's dual-supplier model and 24/7 emergency line ensure that hospitals, government facilities, and critical infrastructure in the Jacksonville metro have fuel when they need it most.
A rule of thumb for Jacksonville: if your vehicles return to a yard, or you run off-road equipment, or you operate generators, on-site delivery almost always wins. If you run a small fleet of vehicles that roam the North FL region with no home base, fleet cards may still fit — or a hybrid: delivered fuel for the yard and equipment, cards for the road.
Making the switch
Moving to on-site delivery in Jacksonville is not complicated. Confirm where fuel will go (bulk tank or direct-to-equipment), estimate monthly volume, and get a quote priced off the rack. Many operations run a hybrid for a month, compare invoices and labor, and let the numbers decide.
BettyJet quotes both clear and dyed diesel, gasoline, and DEF delivered to Duval County sites, and can model the comparison against what you pay on cards today.