GO plc posted a profit of €20.7 million in the financial year that ended 31st December 2025, representing a record 31.8 per cent surge in profit growth from the previous 12 months.
The telecoms and tech group said in its financial statements that this improvement in profitability was the result of revenue growth and continued focus on operational efficiency.
Indeed, also posted a revenue of €254.4 million, representing a growth of 3.9 per cent year-on-year, while EBITDA reached €92 million, up 1.5 per cent – moderated by investment in infrastructure and service capabilities as well as continued inflationary pressures.
Following these results, the Board announced a final net dividend of €0.09 per share, slightly up from the €0.08 it had issued the previous financial year.
Coupled with the interim dividend of €0.07 per share paid in September 2025 (up from €0.05 in 2024), this brings the total net dividend for 2025 to €0.16 per share, up from €0.13 the previous year.
Looking back on 2025, GO singled out the deployment of True Fibre internet across the Maltese Islands as a “landmark achievement that places Malta among Europe’s leading nations for fibre-to-home connectivity”.
The company also launched its 10G internet product and became the first Maltese operator to offer Voice over WiFi (VoWiFi), ensuring seamless voice connectivity for all customers, including in areas of limited mobile coverage.
"Completing True Fibre across Malta is not just a network milestone but a national one," Group CEO Nikhil Patil said.
"When we committed to this investment, we committed to leaving no one behind. The 31.8% growth in profit we are reporting today is proof that doing the right thing for customers and doing the right thing for shareholders are not competing priorities, they are the same priority.”
“As we mark 50 years since our founding, we enter the next chapter with stronger foundations than ever.”
2025 was also a particularly significant year for GO as it marked its 50th anniversary since its origin as Telemalta Corporation, back then a government-owned telecommunications company.
It has since branched out beyond telecoms, including through subsidiaries like digital infrastructure providers BMIT Technologies, renewable energy solutions company AQS and tech retailer Klikk, and expanded to Cyprus through its Cablenet subsidiary.