Post Office branches, along with the
Royal Mail delivery service, were formerly part of the
General Post Office. After the passage of the
Post Office Act 1969 the Post Office became a
statutory corporation, with a network of almost 25,000 post office branches, including 1,765 Crown branches. Post Office Counters Limited was created as a wholly owned subsidiary of the Post Office in 1987. The first managing director of Post Office Counters was John Roberts, who took up the post in 1987. In 1989, Crown branches began to be franchised to reduce costs, and the Crown network fell from 1,493 to 606 by 1997. A moratorium on further franchising was imposed by the
New Labour government, but this was lifted the following year on the condition that 15% of revenue came from the Crown network. A former civil servant, Richard Dykes, took over as managing director of Post Office Counters in September 1993. Dykes was succeeded in May 1996 by Stuart Sweetman, who continued to serve in that role until his retirement in November 2001. As part of the
Postal Services Act 2000, the Post Office statutory corporation was changed to a state-owned
public limited company, Consignia plc, in 2001, although the name was unpopular and was changed to Royal Mail Group just a year later. Post Office Counters Limited became Post Office Limited In October 2002, a three-year recovery plan was agreed, including the closure 3,000 urban sub-post offices from an overall network of almost 18,000 branches. Mills stepped down at the end of 2005. His successor, Alan Cook, was appointed with the title of managing director in January 2006. Cook had previously been chief executive of
National Savings & Investments. With declining mail usage, the Post Office had chronic losses, leading to a reported £102 million lost in 2006, raising concerns in the media regarding its ability as a company to operate efficiently. Minutes of a board meeting in April 2006 state that the company was insolvent and unable to meet its future debts. Plans to cut the £150m-a-year subsidy for rural post offices led to the announcement that 2,500 local post offices were to be closed during 2007, with the 14,000-branch network considered unsustainable. In 2007, the government gave a £1.7 billion subsidy to Royal Mail Group so that it could turn a profit by 2011. This was to be used to invest across the whole network of Royal Mail, the Post Office, and
Parcelforce. 85 Crown post offices were closed, 70 of which were sold to
WHSmith. This followed a trial of 6 Post Office outlets in WHSmith stores. WHSmith was expected to make up to £2.5 million extra in annual profit. 2,500 sub-post offices closed between 2008 and 2009. Redundancy packages were provided from public funding (subpostmasters were paid over 20 months salary, roughly £65,000 each). In 2010, David Smith succeeded Alan Cook as managing director. Smith had previously been managing director of Parcelforce, another Royal Mail subsidiary. In November 2010, the government committed £1.34 billion of funding for 2011 to 2015 to the Post Office to enable it to modernise the Post Office network, with an agreement that the network would continue to have at least 11,500 branches. As part of the
Postal Services Act 2011, the Post Office became independent of Royal Mail Group on 1 April 2012. A ten-year inter-business agreement was signed between Royal Mail and the Post Office to allow post offices to continue issuing stamps, and handling letters and parcels for Royal Mail. The Act also contained the option for the Post Office to become a
mutual organisation in the future. In April 2012,
Paula Vennells was appointed as chief executive; she had been with the Post Office since 2007 as the network director. The first chair of the board of the new company was
Alice Perkins, who had for a time led human resources management in the
Civil Service. In February 2013, the Post Office announced it was planning to move around 70 of its Crown post offices into shops. This would reduce the Crown network, which it stated was losing £40 million a year, to around 300. In November 2013, the government committed an additional £640 million of funding for 2015 to 2018 to allow the Post Office to complete its network modernisation. In June 2015, the Post Office launched a
mobile virtual network operator service, Post Office Mobile. However, in August 2016 it decided "to conclude the trial as the results did not give us sufficient confidence that mobile will contribute to our goal of commercial sustainability". Perkins stood down as chair in July 2015 and was replaced in October of that year by
Tim Parker, a businessman who had led and restructured a number of companies. He at first worked one-and-a-half days a week, reducing to two days a month in November 2017. Speaking in 2024, Parker described a business in "deep crisis": In January 2016, the Post Office announced plans to franchise 39 Crown branches and close 3 more. In April 2016, the Post Office agreed to hand over up to 61 more branches to WHSmith in a 10-year deal. The deal was condemned as "blatant back-door privatisation" by the
Communications Workers Union. In January 2017, the Post Office announced it was to close and franchise another 37 Crown branches. In December 2017, the government agreed a £370 million funding deal for 2018 to 2021 to further modernise the Post Office network and protect rural branches. In June 2018, the Post Office agreed to acquire
Payzone's UK bill payment business after it was split from
Payzone Ireland, to expand its bill payment network. In October 2018, the Post Office announced that 74 more Crown branches would be franchised to WHSmith, including the 33 branches already operating in the company's stores under the 2016 agreement. In February 2019, the Post Office announced that Vennells would leave her role as CEO to become chair of the
Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust. It was subsequently confirmed that the new CEO would be
Nick Read, who had held senior roles at several customer-facing businesses and had been CEO of the
Nisa convenience store group. Read promoted "click and collect" services for retailers, alongside parcel drop-off services. In February 2021, the Post Office agreed to sell its broadband and home phone services to
Shell Energy and exit the telecoms market. The purchase price was around £80million, with around 500,000 customers transferring to the new provider. Parker completed a second term as chair in September 2022. He was replaced in December by
Henry Staunton, who had held senior board roles at a number of companies and had chaired
WHSmith until June of that year. He was removed on 27 January 2024, following disagreements with the Business Secretary
Kemi Badenoch on matters including the appointment of a new independent director. In April 2024, CEO Read was "exonerated of all the misconduct allegations" in relation to claims made by a whistleblower, revealed in Parliament. This followed an investigation by an external barrister.
Nigel Railton, previously CEO of
Camelot UK, was appointed interim chair in May 2024 for a 12-month term. In September 2024, it was announced Read would step down as CEO and leave the Post Office in March 2025. He was replaced by Neil Brocklehurst as acting CEO, with the role being made permanent in April 2025. Railton was subsequently given a full three-year term as chair beginning in May 2025. In November 2024, as part of a strategic review led by Railton, the Post Office announced it was considering the future of its Crown network, equating to up to 115 post office branches or around one per cent of the company's retail footprint. with the franchising process being announced as complete in November 2025. ==Services==