In Orlando, hurricane season is not a hypothetical. Every business that depends on backup power, refrigeration, or vehicle access needs a fuel plan before a storm is named — because once a system is in the Gulf, fuel gets harder to buy and more expensive by the hour.
This guide lays out a practical hurricane fuel plan for Orlando and Orange County operations: how supply tightens before a storm, what to pre-position, and how priority delivery works when it matters most.
What happens to fuel supply before a storm
As a named storm approaches the Central FL region, three things happen fast. Retail stations run dry as the public tops off. Terminal operators in Tampa Bay, Port Everglades, and Jacksonville can move to allocation, capping pickup volumes per buyer. And spot pricing climbs — historically 25–60 cents per gallon during active threats.
The businesses that ride this out are the ones that secured fuel before the cone tightened. The ones that scramble pay the premium, if they can get fuel at all.
Who in Orlando cannot afford to lose power
Orlando's construction sector is booming across every category: commercial development along International Drive, high-rise residential in downtown, warehouse and distribution centers near Orlando International Airport, and the massive Brightline high-speed rail expansion. These projects consume thousands of gallons of off-road diesel daily, and BettyJet's 48-hour standard delivery keeps equipment running without costly idle time.
For Orlando, the operations where a fuel gap is unacceptable include healthcare facilities, data centers, cold storage, water and wastewater, telecom sites, property management portfolios, and any business with life-safety or spoilage exposure. If your generator is your continuity plan, your fuel plan is the part that actually keeps it running.
Pre-positioning: the core of the plan
Pre-positioning means topping off generator tanks, bulk tanks, and equipment before the season — and again when a storm enters the Gulf. Full tanks before a storm mean you are not competing for allocated supply during the event.
For Orlando businesses, a practical rhythm is: a full top-off at the start of June, a scheduled mid-season check, and a priority fill the moment a system threatens the Central FL coast.
Generator fuel quality and polishing
Diesel that sits in a generator tank for months degrades — water intrudes, microbial growth forms, and sediment settles. A generator that fails to start during an outage often fails on fuel quality, not mechanics. Fuel polishing (filtering and conditioning stored diesel) and periodic turnover keep stored fuel ready.
Build a stored-fuel check into your pre-season plan so the fuel that is supposed to save you is actually usable.
Priority and emergency delivery during an event
When roads reopen after a storm hits Orlando, demand is immediate and intense. Customers on a priority arrangement — known site, known tanks, known access — get served first because there is no setup friction. Emergency delivery is available around the clock, but a pre-existing relationship is what turns "available" into "fast."
A broker sourcing across multiple distributors also has more ways to find supply when any single terminal is constrained.
Your Orlando hurricane fuel checklist
Before June: confirm generator and bulk tank capacity, schedule a full top-off, polish or turn over stored fuel, and put a priority delivery arrangement in place. When a storm enters the Gulf: trigger a priority fill, top off fleet vehicles, and confirm site access details with your fuel partner. After the storm: report consumption and reschedule replenishment.
BettyJet builds storm-season fuel plans for Orange County businesses every year. The time to set one up is before the first advisory — not during it.