Malta Public Transport's fleet mainly consists of buses from the brands
Otokar and
King Long, however, Malta Public Transport has a fleet of 10 ex-
Heathrow Airport siding
Mercedes-Benz Citaro C1 facelifts as of 2025; some buses are currently being used as a driver trainer, some went back to the UK and others have gone to Cyprus for School bus services. One
Yutong E12 that was formerly used by Cyprus Public Transport and a
VDL Midicity. Between 2014 and 2015, Malta Public Transport also had buses from the United Kingdom to compensate for a small fleet,
Wright Eclipse 2s and
Optare Solo SRs were leased from Dawson Group. The most common buses in Malta are the
Otokar Kent C which make up most of the fleet, and the King Long B12, of which the first batch of 30 arrived in March 2024, and a batch of 100 arrived in May 2025. There were also some other notable buses in the fleet, such as ex-Arriva Optare Solos and locally built "Scarnif SLFs" in the early days of Malta Public Transport too. As of 2025, The diesel fleet is entirely made up of Euro 6 compliant engines, with the last batch of former Arriva King Long XMQ6127j Euro 5 buses being retired in June 2025.
Electric buses In 2019, Malta Public Transport started experimenting with electric buses by ordering one electric bus by Slovenian manufacturer TAM registered as BUS-500. It entered public service in January 2020 on a special route dubbed the X122 that was an express version of the 122 route (
Valletta - St Luke's Hospital (
Gwardamanġa) -
Mater Dei Hospital). However, due to COVID-19 restrictions, testing of the electric bus had to be cut short as the company had to purge some of its fleet. The bus remained abandoned until early 2022 at the Floriana Ditch depot. Around the summer of 2020, the Ministry of Gozo, with the help of
European Union funds, ordered six 12-meter buses from Chinese manufacturer
Foton for use on the Port of Mġarr - Ta' Xħajma Park and Ride service to help reduce traffic in the area. The buses landed on Maltese shores in the summer of 2020 and entered service over a year later on November 10, 2021, because there were delays from the charger company and COVID-19 pandemic restrictions. In January 2022, an order of two 12-meter electric buses was made from Chinese manufacturer
King Long, specifically, their PEV12 model (named "Amigo" for the Maltese market). On the 27th of April 2022, these two electric buses were inaugurated into service and plated BUS-400 and BUS-401, however they did not appear until a month later with BUS-200 and BUS-201. In June 2022, BUS-201 was re-numbered as BUS-232 and sent to Gozo for testing on route 301, while BUS-200 stayed on the mainland and was tested on the three busiest northern routes, those being 13A, 31 and 48. These buses feature a 300 km range when fully charged, and by the start of 2023, were trialed on more busy northern routes such as the 41, 14 and 45. In January 2023, Malta Public Transport received an order of 30 new fully-electric buses, which slowly entered in service in early summer of the same year. The first three to be registered, BUS-202, BUS-203 and BUS-204 were sent to Gozo somewhere around June, replacing earlier-batch BUS-201 that was testing on the island. These three units were the first out of thirty to be launched into public service running on Gozo's busiest route, the 301. Meanwhile, around early-mid summer 2023, some other electric buses started rolling into service, most notably on high demand routes such as the 13A and the 48 and were even trialed on routes that did not serve Valletta, such as the 222 and the 212 during the same summer. On September 14, 2023, the thirty new electric buses were inaugurated into service at a ceremony held at a new electric bus depot situated between the towns of
Floriana,
Pietà and
Marsa which was formerly a park and ride site. The site was mounted with charges by Finnish company Kempower. The electric buses were launched on the 13 busiest bus routes on the island (13A, TD13, 13, 14, 31, 41–43, 45–49, 300) and a promise of 120 new electric buses by the end of 2025 was made. Along with 30 electric buses, one six-meter
King Long PEV6 bus was brought over to the island and registered, BUS-295. In the first few months of service, the bus was specifically being used on the "Talinja on Demand" service and entered in complete public service in early 2024 on the Central Business District (CBD) park and ride service, which connect the industrial zone of
Mriehel to the nearby towns of
Birkirkara and
Santa Venera and on the Castile Shuttle, a park and ride service launched by the
Valletta local council. Between March and April 2024, the bus was tested on low and high frequency routes. During March, it was tested on Route 106, a low-frequency route that connects the main hospital of
Mater Dei Hospital and the town of
Attard and in April of the same year on Route 41, a pivotal route between the port area of
Ċirkewwa and the capital city. As of 2025 and the discontinuation of the Talinja on demand service during weekdays, the bus is being used on the CBD shuttle and as a feeder on the high-demand Route 16 between the capital city and the town of
Swieqi. In late 2024, the government announced that it will be redirecting EU funds away from public transport in favor of private electric transport, breaking a one-year promise to make most of the fleet electric, however, around October 2024, one electric bus made its way to Malta that was formerly a part of the Cyprus Public Transport fleet, one twelve-meter
Yutong E12 that was delivered new to the Cyprus Public Transport (CPT)
Nicosia depot in summer 2023 and formerly registered as PNE-102 (fleet no. 1330). The bus stood still for around one month at the bus station, getting coated in green and white, and entered service around late November, 2024, to ease off demand on routes 13A, 31 and 48, however the bus has been trialed on routes 14, 41 and 45. Around April 2025, the King Long Amigo electric buses started operation on busy southern routes (Routes 90, 91, 92, 93 and 94) for better usage of the buses bringing up the total number of served routes to 18 and one-off/rare trials/sightings have been spotted mainly on the 50s range of routes (most notably 52 and 56). In August 2025, two new
King Long PEV9s registered BUS-296 and 297 arrived on Maltese shores and entered in service on Monday, 8th September 2025 on routes serving the
San Ġwann and
Ta' Xbiex areas. They are the first 9-meter electric busses in Malta. used by Zarb Coaches Other than Malta Public Transport, the only other company to invest in electric buses is a private coach company, Zarb Coaches, which ordered a batch of four twelve-meter
Yutong ICe12 coaches in April 2024 and one other in around late 2024. These coaches can be often found at the Electric Bus charging depot, the same one used by buses in public service. ==Open-top buses==