Prehistory and early years (1933–2004) The name "McGill's Bus Services" first came into use in 1933. This company was based in
Barrhead and was owned by the McGill family. It expanded significantly during the years leading up to bus deregulation, but in July 1997, sold out to the major operator in the area,
Clydeside 2000, in the face of significant competition from independent minibus operators. McGill's initially retained its identity, but was later rebranded as
Arriva Scotland West. Another company,
Greenock based Ashton Coaches (trading as GMS), was also acquired by Clydeside in the same month. In July 2001, Arriva decided to withdraw from its
Inverclyde operations, which were loss-making and was facing significant competition from independent operators. Its Greenock depot was sold to former GMS owner Alex Kean and the Easdale family with each owning 50%. Arriva had retained a separate operating licence for McGill's, and this was used as the basis for the sale. The McGill's Bus Services name was revived by the new company and a new livery of blue, white, and gold was introduced. The fleet initially consisted of 33
Mercedes-Benz minibuses hired from Arriva; services were operated from a large depot on the Easdale Industrial Estate. Early in its existence, the new company began operating services in competition with Harte Buses, mainly between McGill's 507 and Harte Buses 603, with the purpose of serving Midton in Gourock. In September 2004, Harte withdrew from two routes, leaving McGill's as the sole operator in the town. In October 2004, Kean sold his shares in the company to the Easdale family, who quickly replaced the hired minibuses with new low-floor vehicles, leading to increases in passenger numbers.
Consolidation & expansion (2005–2020) bodied
Volvo B7RLE painted in traditional McGill's colours in August 2012 Between 2005 and 2008, McGill's introduced a number of new longer-distance routes connecting Inverclyde and
Glasgow to
Largs, and in May 2005, began operating a series of day excursions branded as Smoothiecruisers. In July 2008, McGill's purchased the stage carriage routes and goodwill of four routes centred on Greenock which had previously been run by Slaemuir Coaches. In the same month, the firm established a second depot in Barrhead on the site of the garage used by the original McGill's Bus Services, which had been vacated by Arriva in 2002. The new operation traded as United Buses using Greenock and District Omnibuses, with vehicles on hire from ABC Taxis, which also had an o-licence and capitalised on the revocation of the operating licences held by local operator John Walker to move onto four routes previously served by his group of companies. Twenty step-entrance buses were initially used, but these were largely replaced by low-floor vehicles after four months. The United name was replaced by that of McGill's in September 2009; the same month saw the company introducing the express service X23 between Glasgow and
Erskine. By the beginning of 2010, McGill's had become the largest independent bus operator in Scotland, and the fourth largest operator of any type. A new service linking Greenock and
Larkfield was introduced in early 2010 to replace a route withdrawn by Wilson's Coaches. May 2010 saw McGill's expand its services from
Dunoon and Greenock to Braehead to cover for the withdrawal of Harte Buses' Braehead Express. In July 2010, the company was fined £60,000 by the
Traffic Commissioner for failing to operate some services as timetabled, although it was permitted to expand its fleet from 110 to 150 vehicles. The Smoothiecrusisers network was withdrawn in August 2010. The company acquired the operations and vehicles of large independent operator Gibson's Direct in September 2010, expanding the size of its fleet by around 70%. In February 2011, two small operators based in the Paisley area, Fairway Coaches and Travel Direct, were purchased by McGill's, although no vehicles were acquired. Two further acquisitions, of Renfrewshire-based Ferenze Travel and Phoenix Travel, were announced in March 2011. In the same month, Dickson's of Erskine sold its key route 38, a Glasgow to Paisley service operated in competition with both Arriva Scotland West and
First Glasgow, to McGill's, who converted the route to low-floor operation and increased its frequency at a cost of £1.5 million. In March 2012, McGill's purchased the remaining Arriva Scotland West operation. The sale included 165 vehicles, 380 staff, and depots at
Inchinnan and
Johnstone. The deal expanded the McGill's a fleet to over 350 buses. In June 2013, four new routes in the Paisley area were introduced by the company to replace those of Riverside Transport. In January 2014, McGill's was linked with a bid to operate the 360-bus network on the Mediterranean island of
Malta following the end of
Arriva's operations there. A month later, the company pulled out of the bid citing a lack of transparency on the part of the island's government. In October 2014 McGill's Coaches bought Henderson Travel after it suddenly ceased business, resulting in the company expanding in North Lanarkshire and becoming the dominant operator in the
Monklands area by early 2016. An open-top bus tour of Inverclyde named the 'Local Highlights Tour' was introduced by the company in April 2015, while sometime in 2015, McGill's lost their Dunbartonshire contracts to Garelochhead Coaches. On 20 January 2016, McGill's announced its first acquisition in the
Monklands area of
Lanarkshire, when a deal was reached to purchase the bus routes of McNairn Coaches and JJ Travel for an undisclosed sum. The deal included 14 members of staff and a number of vehicles. Further acquisitions were made on 2 February 2015, with the routes of Arthur's Coaches and D.A. Coaches being bought out alongside three vehicles. On 30 May 2016, McGills purchased the routes and local service vehicles of Silverdale Coaches. On 29 August 2016, the company moved premises from a depot in
Blantyre Industrial Estate near
Hamilton,
South Lanarkshire to a new fully refurbished facility in
Coatbridge with all services and buses from the Hamilton depot transferring to the new facility.
Major acquisitions and FlixBus partnership (2021–) Volvo 9700 operated by McGill's at
Preston bus station in July 2022
Mercedes-Benz Citaro departing
Buchanan bus station in July 2024 On 1 January 2021, McGill's purchased
Xplore Dundee and Xplore More from
National Express. The business continues to trade under the Xplore Dundee brand for bus travel and Xplore More for coach travel. The sale involved 350 employees and a fleet of 120 buses at the time. McGill's commenced a partnership with German intercity coach operator
FlixBus in July 2021, operating an overnight coach service from Glasgow to
London via
Edinburgh,
Newcastle upon Tyne and
Sunderland using a fleet of
Volvo 9700 coaches. The network was expanded in 2022 with the addition of a service from Glasgow to
Manchester and an internal service between Glasgow and
Aberdeen, the latter becoming subject to a legal dispute in April 2023 between FlixBus and the
Stagecoach Group, with Flixbus submitting a complaint to the
Competition and Markets Authority accusing Stagecoach of a conflict of interest after their slot at Aberdeen's bus station was withdrawn. McGill's began to take delivery of the first of 18 more Volvo 9700 coaches in April 2023, which upon the completion of the order, would bring McGill's FlixBus fleet to a total 25 coaches. This order is planned to coincide with the introduction of new coach services operated by McGill's across Scotland, as well as some frequency increases on pre-existing services. On 6 September 2022, it was announced that McGill's had acquired the operations of
First Scotland East from the
FirstGroup. The company was rebranded to McGill's Scotland East, also trading as ''McGill's Midland Bluebird
and McGill's Eastern Scottish''. The sale, completed on 19 September 2022, saw McGill's take on 550 employees, four depots and a fleet of 257 buses from the FirstGroup, including the Bright Bus Tours
open top bus tour operation in Edinburgh. The Eastern Scottish operation, operating services in Edinburgh and
West Lothian, was gradually closed between October and December due to issues with driver recruitment and low passenger patronage, as well as traffic congestion and competition with the railways and
Lothian Buses rendering the operation unsustainable to operate. In October 2024, it was announced that McGill's would begin local operations in
Aberdeen from 25 November through taking over service X14, running between Aberdeen city centre and
Kingswells, from existing operator
Stagecoach Bluebird with the support of
Aberdeen City Council. From April 2025, McGill's began operating an
open top bus tour around Aberdeen, named the "Aberdeen Adventurer". The route starts and ends on
Broad Street and takes passengers around many popular landmarks in a loop around the city. McGill's announced plans in September 2025 for a new £25 million central Glasgow bus depot located on Kilbirnie Street in
Tradeston, with electric charging infrastructure planned from the offset and the potential for up to 850 jobs to be created when the garage opens by the end of 2026. ==Ownership and management==