Fashion labels dominate the neighbor set for Clean Energy, a gas station brand — with footwear, luxury houses, and streetwear accounting for the majority of the top 10 by subcategory, and no other gas station appearing among them.
The shape is broad: scores run from 0.76 down to 0.70 with no single neighbor pulling far ahead of the rest. Shoe Palace leads at 0.76, a footwear retailer, followed by Gucci (social) at 0.74 and Lacoste (social) at 0.73 — both Fashion subcategory. Jack in the Box at 0.73 is the lone QSR in the top 10, and Huawei at 0.72 (Telecommunications) is the only tech brand. Dior (social) at 0.72 and Valentino at 0.71 extend the luxury fashion cluster further. Rounding out the top 10 are H&M USA at 0.71 (Fashion), Complex at 0.70 (Magazines), and T-Mobile at 0.70 (Telecommunications).
Tallying the top 10: six neighbors fall under Fashion or Footwear subcategories, two under Telecommunications, one QSR, and one Magazine. No other Gas Station appears in the top 10. The cross-kind pattern here is the defining structural fact — Clean Energy's audience shape aligns most closely with streetwear-adjacent fashion and luxury brands, not with convenience fuel competitors.
This broad, fashion-heavy neighbor set suggests Clean Energy draws an audience whose consumption patterns overlap substantially with style- and brand-conscious consumers rather than with the utility-driven audiences typical of fuel retail.