The business went on to state that the expectations were that its regional bus division, which also includes key services Oxford and Manchester, would deliver a higher profit than the previous two years when Covid restrictions dented passenger numbers.
Regional bus passenger volumes have now reached 85% of pre-Covid levels.
Christian Schreyer, CEO of Go-Ahead, said: “Passenger numbers on public transport have continued to recover from the pandemic and in certain parts of the UK. Our buses are as busy as they were before COVID-19.
In June, Go-Ahead accepted a £650 million cash takeover bid from a consortium of the Australian bus operator Kinetic and the infrastructure specialists Globalvia.
Last year, the company was ordered to pay £51.3 million to the government over its failures in running the Southeastern rail service.
It has a fleet of more than 6,000 buses across England and runs a quarter of London’s buses for Transport for London (TfL).
In the UK, it also runs the country’s largest passenger contract, GTR, which includes the Southern, Gatwick Express, Great Northern and Thameslink networks.