Picking a fuel supplier in St. Petersburg looks simple until a delivery is late, a price creeps up unexplained, or a storm exposes how thin a supply chain really is. The cheapest quote on day one is often not the lowest cost over a year.
Here are the seven criteria that actually matter when a Pinellas County business evaluates a fuel partner — and the questions to ask before you commit.
1. Pricing transparency
Ask how the price is built. A good answer references a published benchmark — the Gulf Coast rack or an OPIS index — plus a stated margin and freight. A vague "market price" answer means the markup is invisible and can drift upward.
For St. Petersburg buyers, index-based "rack-plus" pricing is the standard to push for: you see the benchmark, you see the margin, and you benefit immediately when wholesale prices fall.
2. Terminal sourcing and freight
Freight from terminal to your St. Petersburg site is real money — $0.08 to $0.25+ per gallon depending on distance. A supplier locked to one branded terminal cannot optimize it. A broker who sources from the closest terminal to your delivery point can.
Ask: which terminals can you source from, and which is closest to my site?
3. Supply reliability and redundancy
Single-supplier chains have a single point of failure. When a terminal goes to allocation during a storm, or a refinery turnaround tightens supply, a one-source supplier simply tells you "no."
A broker working across multiple licensed distributors has alternatives. For St. Petersburg operations where a fuel gap stops work, redundancy is not a luxury — it is the product.
4. Emergency and after-hours coverage
Tanks run dry at inconvenient times. Ask what genuine emergency coverage looks like: is there a real 24/7 line, what is realistic emergency response time in Pinellas County, and how does priority delivery work during a storm?
A supplier that only operates business hours is a supplier you will eventually be stuck without.
5. Product range and tax handling
Confirm the supplier handles every product you need — clear ULSD, dyed off-road diesel, gasoline, DEF — and handles tax status correctly. Dyed diesel must be matched to qualifying equipment; getting it wrong costs you tax you did not owe, or creates a compliance violation.
A partner who proactively confirms the right product for each tank is protecting your margin and your compliance.
6. Scheduling and account management
Good fuel partners make fuel boring — it shows up. Ask about scheduled recurring delivery, how reorders work, whether you get a consistent point of contact, and how delivery documentation and invoicing are handled.
St. Petersburg sits on a peninsula between Tampa Bay and the Gulf of Mexico, making it a critical node in the Tampa Bay metro area's fuel delivery network. BettyJet serves St. Petersburg and all of Pinellas County — the most densely populated county in Florida — with diesel, gasoline, DEF, and emergency fuel delivery. Our 48-hour standard turnaround and proximity to our Tampa headquarters ensure fast, reliable service.
7. Local knowledge of St. Petersburg
A supplier who knows St. Petersburg — the access constraints, the terminal map, the seasonal demand from Healthcare, Construction, and Government & Military, the storm exposure of the Gulf Coast region — will route, schedule, and price better than one treating your site as a dot on a map.
BettyJet coordinates fuel across Pinellas County and the Gulf Coast region with exactly this local lens, sourcing competitively rather than locking you to one branded supply chain.