Tech

Booster Fuels designed a truck that can squeeze through parking lots to refill your car while you work

Booster Fuels wants to be the Amazon Prime of gasoline
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Booster Fuels wants to be the Amazon Prime of gasoline
Key Points
  • Booster Fuels lets drivers have their cars filled up where they work so they don't have to make trips to the gas station.
  • Facebook, PayPal and Pepsi are among companies offering Booster Fuels to employees.
  • Booster designed its tanker trucks to be able to load up on fuel, and deliver it, from a single vehicle.

If Booster Fuels CEO Frank Mycroft has his way, gas stations will one day be obsolete.

His start-up, founded in 2014, is filling up cars in parking lots, so drivers don't have to wait in lines or make extra trips. Booster is now operating across twenty U.S. cities, and in the parking lots of at least 300 different companies, Mycroft said. The service is available in Orange County, the San Francisco Bay Area and the Dallas - Fort Worth region.

Booster generates $180,000 in revenue daily, according to Mycroft, and has already delivered fuel more than 1 million times to customer cars.

To make delivery possible, Booster designed a tanker truck that can navigate the tight lanes of parking lots. The trucks can both load up fuel and deliver it, cutting out the costs of the middle man and allowing the start-up to procure fuel wholesale from providers like Exxon and Shell.

Facebook, PayPal, Pepsi and others offer the service for employees. They give the company access to their employee parking lots, and help make sure their workers know about the service.

Booster Fuels service proĀ Chris Rivas fills a car with gasoline

To make money, Booster charges users for each fuel delivery. Customers can order a refill at work using the Booster app. They have to leave the gas cap on their cars accessible wherever they've parked to get the service.

Mycroft, an ex-Boeing spacecraft engineer, recently took CNBC for a ride in one of the company's specially designed trucks.

"The innovation really happens at the intersection of everything," Mycroft said. "It's hardware with embedded systems, with software that's communicating to the cloud, it's procurement of fuel, it's pricing the customers."

Booster has raised around $32 million in venture funding from firms including Conversion Capital, Madrona and Maveron. It plans to use some of that capital to expand over the next year into new company lots and at least three more states.