Fleets and job sites in Orlando share a fuel problem: equipment and vehicles burn diesel faster than anyone wants to manage, and every trip to a station is lost productive time. Bulk and on-site fueling solves it — fuel comes to the work instead of the work going to fuel.
This explains how bulk fuel delivery works for Orlando fleets and construction sites across Orange County: the delivery models, what gets delivered, scheduling, and how to size a program.
Bulk delivery vs. wet hosing
Two on-site models cover most Orlando operations. Bulk delivery fills an on-site tank — a fixed bulk tank at a yard or a portable tank on a job site — that your equipment and vehicles draw from. Wet hosing (also called direct fueling or fleet fueling) means the delivery truck fuels each vehicle or piece of equipment directly, no on-site tank required.
Job sites without storage often start with wet hosing; established yards usually run a bulk tank. Many Orlando operations use both.
What gets delivered to job sites
Construction sites in Orlando typically run on dyed off-road diesel for excavators, loaders, generators, light towers, and pumps — exempt from highway fuel tax. Clear ULSD covers on-road trucks. DEF supports modern Tier 4 emissions systems. Gasoline fuels light equipment and crew vehicles.
Getting the dyed-versus-clear split right is real money: dyed diesel where you qualify saves roughly $0.58 per gallon, and a good fuel partner confirms the right product for each use before delivery.
Scheduling around the work
Fleet and job-site fueling works best on a schedule built around how you operate. Many Orlando fleets take overnight or early-morning fills so vehicles start the day full. Job sites schedule fills to equipment burn rate so a crane or generator never stops on an empty tank.
The theme park corridor — anchored by Walt Disney World, Universal Orlando, and SeaWorld — generates staggering fuel consumption. Backup generators for resort complexes, fleet vehicles servicing parks, construction of new attractions (including Epic Universe), and the supporting hospitality infrastructure all require reliable, high-volume fuel delivery. The Orange County Convention Center, one of the largest in the country, adds another layer of demand for events and temporary power generation.
Sizing a bulk fuel program
Sizing starts with burn rate: how many gallons your Orlando fleet or site consumes weekly. That sets delivery frequency and tank size. Standard bulk minimums start around 500 gallons; larger and scheduled deliveries earn better per-gallon pricing.
Multi-site builders and fleets across Orange County can coordinate fills across locations to consolidate volume and pull pricing closer to the wholesale rack.
Keeping equipment running in Orlando
The hidden value of bulk delivery is uptime. An excavator idle on an empty tank is a crew standing around on the clock. A fleet that starts the day chasing fuel loses its first productive hour. On-site fueling removes both.
For the Central FL region, add storm exposure: a job site or fleet yard with a full bulk tank and a priority arrangement keeps working when retail supply tightens.
Getting started
Setting up bulk fuel for a Orlando fleet or site is quick: confirm the model (bulk tank or wet hosing), estimate weekly burn, identify products (clear, dyed, DEF, gasoline), and get a quote priced off the rack.
BettyJet coordinates bulk and on-site fueling for fleets and job sites across Orange County, sourcing competitively across licensed distributors so supply holds even when one line tightens.