Background and early years Alexander Dash bodied
Dennis Dart in the original 'stripes' fleet livery The origins of Stagecoach Group can be traced back to 1976, at which point
Ann Gloag and her husband
Robin Gloag established a small
recreational vehicle and minibus hire business called
Gloagtrotter based in
Perth, Scotland. Ann's brother,
Brian Souter, an accountant, joined the firm and expanded the business into bus hire. In 1982, following the collapse of his marriage to Ann, Robin Gloag sold his ownership stake in the business and ceased any involvement. Around this time, the company would benefit greatly from the
deregulation of the British express coach market in the early 1980s; specifically, the
Transport Act 1980, which freed express services of 35 miles and over from regulation by the Traffic Commissioner, brought new opportunities for the company and services were launched from
Dundee to London using second-hand
Neoplan coaches. For a while, the company offered a very personal service with Brian Souter doing the driving and Ann Gloag preparing sandwiches and other snacks for the passengers. Between 1981 and 1985, the company grew significantly, successfully competing against the then state-owned
National Express Coaches and
Scottish Citylink. Stagecoach entered local bus operation with the acquisition of McLennan of Spittalfield, near Perth. Its early success allowed Stagecoach to take advantage of the privatisation of the national bus groups. Several firms were purchased from
London Regional Transport, the
National Bus Company,
Scottish Bus Group and various city councils. The company consolidated its operations during the 1990s by purchasing ex NBC and SBG bus companies that had been purchased via
management buyouts and
employee-owned corporations when privatised. In August 1989, Stagecoach withdrew from the long-distance express coach market, selling its operations to National Express, who rebranded the services as 'Caledonian Express'.
1990s During the
privatisation of British Rail,
Porterbrook was formed as one of three
rolling stock companies owning around a third of passenger railway locomotives, multiple units and coaching stock running on
Network Rail's system which is leased to various train operators. Porterbrook was privatised via a
management buyout before being purchased by Stagecoach for £825 million during August 1996. The acquisition garnered some public controversy and political criticism for the low value returned to the taxpayer. In April 2000, Stagecoach sold Porterbrook to the British banking group
Abbey National in exchange for £1.44 billion. In 1997, Stagecoach was awarded the franchise to operate the recently
privatised Sheffield Supertram system, from the
South Yorkshire Passenger Transport Executive, who owned the system. Stagecoach bought the remaining 27 years of a 30-year franchise in exchange for £1.15 million, which was substantially below the anticipated £80 million that the councils had hoped to raise to help pay off the accumulated debts to build the system. The franchise, which expired in March 2024, was operated under the Stagecoach Supertram brand, the company having responsibility for the operation and maintenance of the tram system. When Stagecoach took over the system, it was struggling, both financially and in terms of attracting passengers; patronage subsequently rose from 7.8 million recorded passenger journeys in 1996/97, to 15.0 million during 2011/12. In 1998, Stagecoach diversified into another transport sector via the purchase of Scotland's
Prestwick Airport in exchange for £41 million. By the summer of 1999, the company was rumoured to have been offered some £80 million for Prestwick. In January 2001, Stagecoach opted to sell the airport for £33 million to concentrate on surface transport.
2000s Plaxton Expressliner bodied
Volvo B10M in the group's 'beachball' livery In late 2000, Stagecoach UK's bus operations were rationalised into twelve subsidiary companies managed from the group's Perth headquarters. The group was also rebranded in December 2000, with a new 'beachball' logo designed by Edinburgh design house McKinstrie Wilde Millhouse and a new fleet livery designed by Ray Stenning's Best Impressions design company for the group's buses. The new livery for regional operations consisted of 'swoops' on a grey base that retained the previous livery's red, orange, blue and white colours, while Stagecoach London buses maintained base red with blue and orange 'swoops' to the rear of the bus. A blue-based standard interior for new buses was also introduced, with the first UK buses featuring the group's new identity entering service in January 2001. On 21 November 2005, Stagecoach announced the sale of its New Zealand operations to
Infratil. On 14 December 2005, Stagecoach purchased
Barnsley based
Traction Group for £26 million, also assuming the group's £11 million debt. The Traction Group operated 840 buses in
South and
West Yorkshire (
Yorkshire Traction, Barnsley & District,
Yorkshire Terrier),
Lincolnshire (
RoadCar) and
Angus (
Strathtay Scottish). The Traction Group was the largest remaining privately owned independent bus operator in the UK. Following the sale of its
London bus operations to
Macquarie Bank in 2006, Stagecoach UK Bus concentrated on the bus market outside the UK capital, focusing on organic growth and exploring acquisition options. In September 2005, following competition with its
Megabus coach operation, Stagecoach launched a joint venture with
Scottish Citylink coaches. During October 2006, a competition enquiry instructed Stagecoach to sell some of its Scottish coach services. Stagecoach was also active in the passenger rail market, having a 49% stake in
Virgin Rail Group. During 2007, the group were successful in their bid for the new
East Midlands franchise, which had been created by amalgamating the previous
Midland Mainline franchise with the eastern part of the former
Central Trains franchise.
AnsaldoBreda T-68 tram at
Whitefield tram stop During July 2007, Stagecoach commenced operating the
Manchester Metrolink tram network. In January 2009, Stagecoach purchased
Preston Bus, a former rival in the
Lancashire area. In November 2009, the
Competition Commission intervened, ordering Stagecoach to sell Preston Bus after it had adversely affected competition in the area.
2010s In October 2010, Stagecoach expanded further by re-acquiring
East London and
Selkent, Stagecoach's former London bus operations. During August 2011, Stagecoach sold its
Manchester Metrolink concession to
RATP Group halfway through its ten-year contract to operate the network. In December 2013, Stagecoach bought
King's Lynn based
Norfolk Green. During March 2015,
Virgin Trains East Coast, in which Stagecoach held a 90% shareholding, commenced operating the
InterCity East Coast franchise. The East Coast franchise was terminated on 23 June 2018 after it was revealed that Stagecoach had overbid and were thus unable to make the agreed franchise payments. During December 2018, it was announced that private equity house Variant would acquire Stagecoach Group's US division in exchange for $271 million; the sale was completed in April 2019. In April 2019, Stagecoach was disqualified from participating in three rail franchise competitions by the
Department for Transport after it submitted non-compliant bids for the
East Midlands,
South Eastern and
West Coast Partnership franchises. One month later, the company announced that it would legally challenge the disqualification.
2020s The Stagecoach Group rebranded its operations again in February 2020, with a new simplified 'beachball' logo introduced and a new set of liveries introduced for regional bus fleets. Three individual colour schemes were initially developed to distinguish bus services: • Local services - white with azure blue • Longer distance - amber yellow • Specialist services - white with ocean green (this includes park and ride, university and tourist services) A slogan, 'Proud to Serve', was also introduced across the group. Another rebranding of the Stagecoach Group's regional bus operations began to take effect during 2024, with buses repainted into a single-colour 'steel blue' livery and the 'Proud to Serve' slogan replaced by 'We've got you'. During September 2021, it was reported that rival company
National Express entered into talks to acquire Stagecoach Group. In December 2021, a deal was agreed between the boards of the two companies: however, it was subject to both shareholder approval and regulatory scrutiny. To satisfy the
Competition & Markets Authority, Stagecoach had planned to sell Megabus, its 35% shareholding in Scottish Citylink and the Falcon Coaches part of
Stagecoach South West to
ComfortDelGro. Having originally recommended shareholders accept the National Express offer, in March 2022 the board of directors withdrew the recommendation in favour of a takeover offer from a
DWS managed investment fund. Following this, Stagecoach instead sold Megabus and Falcon Coaches to Scottish Citylink and increased its shareholding in the joint venture to 37.5% in return. In June 2022, Stagecoach purchased London bus operator
Tower Transit's Lea Interchange garage, with
Stagecoach London taking on 150 buses and 11
Transport for London bus route contracts; operations from Lea Interchange are managed under the Lea Interchange Bus Company Limited license. Later in August, Stagecoach acquired the London operations of the
HCT Group after the company had fallen into
administration, with Stagecoach acquiring a further 160 buses, 17 TfL route contracts and two bus garages from the acquisition. In September 2024, Stagecoach was announced as the winning bidder to operate the Buses.gg brand in
Guernsey, taking over 20 public services as well as 24 school bus services and a fleet of 42 buses from existing operator Tower Transit, who themselves took over from the HCT Group. Services on Guernsey commenced from 1 April 2025, with the Buses.gg name and livery retained, two
Optare Solo SRs delivered to Guernsey on loan, and funding provision made for the delivery of six new buses, two of these being
battery electric buses. ==Operations==