TL;DR
- Buc-ee’s filed plans for its first Indiana store in Greenwood, targeting the I-65/Worthsville Road interchange that the city has been positioning with DDI work since 2015 and TIF moves in 2025. [1][7][6]
- The real story isn’t beaver nuggets; it’s how one mega travel center could redirect I-65 spend, test Greenwood’s Worthsville Road network, and push rivals Wally’s, Sheetz, and Wawa to adjust Greater Indy strategies in 2026–2028. [2][5]
- If Greenwood nails a development agreement that shares costs for Worthsville/CR 250E upgrades, the site can turn net-fiscal positive fast, given comparable Buc-ee’s are engineered for millions of annual visits. [4][11]
What the source said
WTHR reported that Buc-ee’s submitted plans for a Greenwood location near the Worthsville Road/I-65 interchange in Johnson County, advancing the project from rumor to formal filings. The piece notes a standard local review path—plan commission followed by possible council action—before construction starts. The report frames the move as a Midwest expansion milestone for the Texas brand but does not specify pump counts, square footage, or incentives. The emphasis is the public act of “plans submitted” in the Indianapolis metro’s south side. [1]
Why it matters
Greenwood taxpayers along the I-65 corridor already see weekend surges, while small retailers on U.S. 31 face a likely spend shift if Buc-ee’s concentrates demand near Worthsville Road. City leaders have been building toward this moment with the Diverging Diamond Interchange that opened in 2015 and an expanded Worthsville allocation area in 2025—this filing pressure-tests a decade of positioning. [7][6]
Buc-ee’s bans 18-wheelers, which makes its sites high-volume passenger-car magnets that can jam peak-hour approaches without turn-lane and signal work at CR 250E and Worthsville. Comparable proposals in Oak Creek, Wisconsin show why cities tie approvals to off-site road fixes and traffic-impact analyses. [14][11]
Original analysis
The Buc-ee’s Greenwood play
Consensus says, “It’s just a big gas station that brings traffic.” Contrarian read: Buc-ee’s is an interstate capture machine that, paired with pre-funded approach-lane and signal upgrades, becomes a recurring sales-tax engine anchored to I-65 mileposts 95–99. [7]
- Proven demand nearby. CSP Daily News reported an April 6 opening date for Huber Heights, Ohio, while Dayton Daily News detailed a proposed $46 million, 30-year TIF district for infrastructure around that site—municipalities see durable fiscal upside from these nodes. [10][13]
- Greenwood has laid groundwork. INDOT opened the Worthsville DDI in 2015, and the city expanded the Worthsville allocation area via a 2025 resolution to support corridor build-out with TIF—exactly the toolkit a mega-format requires. [7][6]
- Competitive context is peaking. Wally’s plans an 84-fuel-position, 54,000-square-foot site in Whitestown off I-65, while Sheetz and Wawa continue Indiana entries; a south-side Buc-ee’s counterbalances a north-side cluster. [5][2]
Back-of-envelope: what a Greenwood Buc-ee’s could throw off
Use an external benchmark for visit volume and standard industry basket math. Oak Creek planning materials cite around 5 million visitors per year at maturity for a comparable Buc-ee’s, and NACS pegs a 2023 average in-store basket at $7.80. Indiana’s statewide sales tax rate is 7%. [11][12][15]
- Assumptions
- Annual visits: 5,000,000 (Oak Creek benchmark). [11]
- Average in-store basket: $7.80 (2023 NACS). [12]
- Indiana sales tax: 7% statewide. [15]
- Math
- Gross in-store sales ≈ 5,000,000 × $7.80 = $39,000,000.
- Annual sales tax ≈ $39,000,000 × 0.07 = $2,730,000.
Interpretation: Even with conservative inputs, a Greenwood Buc-ee’s could remit low- to mid-seven figures in annual sales tax at maturity, before fuel margins, property tax increment, and adjacent pad-site spillover add to the ledger. Prior Worthsville corridor investments—like the $17 million project celebrated in 2016—position the area to capture secondary spend. [8][11]
Named-stakeholder breakdown
- City of Greenwood: Lock a development agreement that funds Worthsville/CR 250E turn lanes, signal timing, and signage before ribbon-cutting; the expanded Worthsville TIF is the mechanism. [4][6]
- Buc-ee’s: Gains the Indianapolis metro’s south gateway with a passenger-car-only model that preserves throughput and restroom standards by excluding 18-wheelers. [14]
- Wally’s/Sheetz/Wawa: Indiana shifts from beachhead to battleground; expect foodservice price signaling and site selection along I-65/I-69 to bookend Buc-ee’s. [5][2]
- INDOT: The 2015 DDI reduces conflict points, but holiday peaks will likely require channelization tweaks or added storage near the ramps, not a full interchange rebuild. [7]
- EV networks: Mercedes-Benz High-Power Charging (HPC) is co-locating hubs at Buc-ee’s sites; if Greenwood lands one, the node becomes a “charge-and-spend” anchor on I-65’s south side. [9]
A 2x2: “Format gravity” vs “Infrastructure readiness”
- High gravity / High readiness: Greenwood (if its development agreement funds approach lanes and signals) → fastest ramp to net-positive tax flow.
- High gravity / Low readiness: Oak Creek–style debates over cost sharing and traffic studies → delays and conditions. [11][16]
- Low gravity / High readiness: Smaller c-stores along Worthsville that ride spillover without clogging the interchange.
- Low gravity / Low readiness: Rural exits where gridlock sparks political backlash with limited fiscal return.
What others are missing
EV dwell economics will set the winner’s margin. Mercedes-Benz’s 2023 partnership indicates 350–400 kW-class HPC at Buc-ee’s sites, which shifts stop lengths from quick restroom breaks to multi-minute visits that lift baskets beyond NACS’s $7.80 average via hot food and merch. If Greenwood secures on-site HPC, the store converts charging time into taxable receipts rather than handing that spend to I-465 or downtown Indianapolis. [9][12]
What to watch next
- By December 2026, Greenwood advances a development agreement that includes defined funding for Worthsville Road/CR 250 East intersection improvements tied to Buc-ee’s traffic impacts. [4][6]
- By June 2027, Buc-ee’s or Mercedes-Benz HPC files permits for a fast-charging hub on or adjacent to the Greenwood site; absent filings by then, expect weaker non-fuel capture versus EV-enabled peers. [9]
- By Q4 2028, the Greenwood Buc-ee’s opens; if not, expect the delay to trace to off-site roadwork sequencing and TIA conditions rather than vertical construction, as seen in Oak Creek–type cases. [11][16]
My take
Build it—smartly. Greenwood should greenlight Buc-ee’s only with a tight infrastructure and signage package that protects the DDI’s peak-hour flow and bakes in EV charging upside. Tie approvals to phasing—turn lanes and signals before opening day, EV hubs early, and a holiday operations plan—and the city keeps I-65 dollars local while setting a 2026–2028 template that rivals on the north side must answer. The south side can turn one store into a clean fiscal engine if the agreement matches the format’s gravity. [7][9]
Sources
[1] Plans submitted to build first Buc-ee’s in Indiana — WTHR (https://www.wthr.com/article/news/local/bucees-travel-center-gas-station-shopping-greenwood-indiana-beaver-nuggets/531-837efe6f-8afc-4318-9825-8f34b676d39b) — Confirms filing for a Greenwood location near I-65/Worthsville.
[2] UPDATE: Buc-ee’s eyes Indianapolis area for first Indiana location — Indianapolis Business Journal (https://www.ibj.com/articles/buc-ees-plans-first-indiana-location-in-greenwood) — Adds market context and competitor posture (Sheetz/Wawa) in Central Indiana.
[3] Buc-ee’s is eyeing Indiana — CSP Daily News (https://www.cspdailynews.com/company-news/buc-ees-eyeing-indiana) — Trade press corroboration that Buc-ee’s circled Greenwood/Johnson County.
[4] Buc-ee’s eyes Greenwood area for first Indiana location — The Republic (Columbus, Ind.) (https://www.therepublic.com/2025/11/06/buc-ees-eyes-greenwood-area-for-first-indiana-location/) — Notes anticipated development agreement scope, including Worthsville/CR 250E design.
[5] Wally’s eyes June debut for first Indiana site — C-Store Dive (https://www.cstoredive.com/news/wallys-eyeing-mid-june-debut-for-first-indiana-site/817373/) — Details Whitestown site scale: 84 fueling positions and a 54,000-square-foot building on I-65.
[6] Resolution 2025-07 enlarging Worthsville Road allocation area — City of Greenwood (https://www.greenwood.in.gov/egov/apps/document/center.egov?id=10271&view=detail) — Shows Greenwood expanding TIF coverage for the Worthsville corridor in 2025.
[7] I-65 at Worthsville Road Diverging Diamond Interchange — INDOT (https://www.in.gov/indot/about-indot/central-office/welcome-to-the-seymour-district/i-65-at-worthsville-road/) — Confirms the DDI and its 2015 opening.
[8] City of Greenwood celebrates completion of $17M Worthsville Road project — Indy Chamber (https://indychamber.com/2016/09/20/city-greenwood-celebrates-completion-17-million-worthsville-road-project/) — Documents prior corridor investment that underpins current development.
[9] Mercedes-Benz announces EV charging partnership with Buc-ee’s — Business Wire (https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20231107930689/en/Mercedes-Benz-Announces-Strategic-Agreement-with-Buc-ees-to-Join-Forces-to-Deliver-Premium-EV-Charging-Experience-at-Buc-ees-Locations-Nationwide) — Establishes HPC co-location strategy at Buc-ee’s sites and charging capabilities.
[10] Ohio’s first Buc-ee’s to open April 6 in Huber Heights — CSP Daily News (https://www.cspdailynews.com/company-news/buc-ees-sets-opening-date-its-first-ohio-travel-center) — Verifies a reported April 6 opening date for the Huber Heights, Ohio store.
[11] Oak Creek Plan Commission report (Buc-ee’s tourism volumes and conditions) — City of Oak Creek (https://www.oakcreekwi.gov/home/showpublisheddocument/20209/638938786958070000) — Provides benchmark annual and peak daily visit counts and site plan conditions.
[12] U.S. convenience in-store sales top $340B; average basket $7.80 in 2023 — NACS (https://www.convenience.org/Media/Daily/2024/April/4/1-US-C-Store-Sales-Hit-860-Billion_Research) — Supplies industry basket size used in the revenue estimate.
[13] Buc-ee’s TIF district could generate $46M for infrastructure — Dayton Daily News (https://www.daytondailynews.com/local/buc-ees-proposed-tif-district-could-generate-46m-over-30-years-for-infrastructure-work/KTELRRTXBZFX5CFX4CXG6TEQUQ/) — Details a proposed 30-year, $46 million TIF for Huber Heights infrastructure.
[14] Buc-ee’s truck policy excludes 18-wheelers — Houston Chronicle (https://www.chron.com/texas/article/bucees-truckers-parking-texas-22218226.php) — Confirms the passenger-car focus and no-semis rule.
[15] Indiana Sales Tax Rate — SalesTaxAPI (https://www.salestaxapi.io/sales-tax-by-state/indiana) — Confirms the statewide 7% sales tax rate used in the calculation.
[16] Oak Creek plan approvals and conditions — Citizen Portal (https://citizenportal.ai/articles/6465174/Oak-Creek/Milwaukee-County/Wisconsin/Plan-Commission-approves-final-site-plans-for-Buc-ees-travel-center-with-conditions) — Summarizes plan commission actions and conditions relevant to infrastructure readiness.
