If your business runs equipment, vehicles, or generators in Miami, fuel is one of your largest controllable costs — and one of the easiest to get wrong. Whether you manage a job site, a fleet, a marina, or a backup power system, the difference between a reliable fuel program and an ad-hoc one shows up directly in your operating margin.
This guide explains how commercial fuel delivery works in Miami and across Miami-Dade County: the fuel types you can have delivered, what drives pricing, how scheduling and minimums work, and how to evaluate a supplier. BettyJet brokers and coordinates fuel delivery throughout the South FL region — this is the playbook we walk every new Miami customer through.
Why Miami businesses use on-site fuel delivery
Sending crews or drivers to a retail station burns labor hours, fuel, and time — and retail pump pricing is the most expensive way to buy. On-site (or "bulk") fuel delivery brings clear diesel, dyed off-road diesel, gasoline, or DEF directly to your tanks, equipment, or fleet in Miami, priced off the wholesale rack rather than the retail pump.
Miami is Florida's largest metropolitan market and one of the most fuel-intensive cities in the southeastern United States. Port Miami — the world's number one cruise port and a top container cargo hub — drives massive demand for marine fuel, diesel for terminal operations, and gasoline for the thousands of fleet vehicles supporting port logistics. BettyJet delivers all fuel types across Miami-Dade County with 48-hour standard turnaround and 24/7 emergency availability.
For operations of any real size, the math is straightforward: every gallon delivered to your site is a gallon your people did not have to drive to a station to get. The bigger your monthly volume, the more a delivered-fuel program saves.
Fuel types available for delivery in Miami
Commercial customers in Miami-Dade County typically order one or more of the following: clear ultra-low-sulfur diesel (ULSD) for on-road trucks and fleets; dyed diesel for off-road equipment, generators, and agricultural use, which is exempt from highway fuel tax; gasoline for light fleets and small equipment; and diesel exhaust fluid (DEF) for modern emissions systems.
Choosing correctly matters. Using clear diesel in equipment that qualifies for dyed fuel means paying roughly $0.58 per gallon in highway tax you never owed. Using dyed diesel in an on-road vehicle is a federal and state violation. A good fuel partner confirms the right product for each tank before the first delivery.
What drives fuel pricing in the South FL region
Florida fuel pricing starts at the Gulf Coast wholesale rack and adds last-mile freight from the nearest terminal. Delivered pricing in Miami is shaped by four things: the Gulf Coast benchmark (which moves with refinery output and crude markets), the distance from terminal to your site, your order volume, and seasonal demand.
Volume is the single biggest lever you control. A 500-gallon drop carries far more fixed cost per gallon than a 3,000- or 8,000-gallon delivery, because dispatch, driver time, and terminal loading are spread across fewer gallons. Consolidating orders and committing to a scheduled cadence routinely moves Miami customers $0.10–$0.20 per gallon closer to wholesale.
Scheduling, lead times, and minimums
Standard scheduled delivery in Miami runs on a 24–72 hour lead time. Many operations move to a recurring schedule — weekly or biweekly fills sized to consumption — so fuel simply shows up and nobody has to think about it. Emergency and same-day delivery is available when a tank runs dry or a storm is inbound.
Minimum orders typically start around 500 gallons for bulk delivery. Below that, per-gallon economics weaken; above it, they improve quickly. Multi-site operators in Miami-Dade County can coordinate fills across locations to hit better volume pricing.
How Miami's key industries use delivered fuel
Demand in Miami is concentrated in a handful of sectors: Construction, Marine, Healthcare, Data Centers, and Fleet Management. The construction boom in Miami shows no signs of slowing. Brickell, Wynwood, Edgewater, and the Design District are undergoing transformational development with dozens of high-rise residential and mixed-use projects under construction simultaneously. Each of these job sites requires reliable off-road diesel delivery for cranes, excavators, concrete pumps, and generators. BettyJet's dual-supplier model ensures that even in a tight supply market, Miami construction projects receive fuel on schedule.
Each of these has a different fuel profile — a construction site needs dyed diesel for excavators and generators, a fleet needs clear ULSD and DEF, a marine operation needs dock or vessel fueling — and a fuel partner who understands the local mix can match supply, scheduling, and product to how you actually operate.
How to choose a fuel supplier
The best fuel arrangement for a Miami business is rarely the first branded supplier in the phone book. Look for transparent, index-based pricing tied to a published rack; sourcing from the closest terminal to your site to minimize freight; reliable scheduling with real emergency coverage; and correct handling of tax status and dyed-fuel rules.
BettyJet works as a fuel broker — we source competitively across multiple licensed distributors and terminals rather than locking you to one branded supply chain, then coordinate delivery to your Miami site. If one supply line tightens, your fuel still arrives.