Read this article in French German Italian Portuguese Spanish
Balfour Beatty hits UK margin target but troubled civils job weighs on US profit
13 August 2025
Balfour Beatty has hit its long-standing target to reach a 3% margin on its underlying profit from UK operations a year earlier than expected.

The news came as the contractor unveiled a “largely positive” set of half-year results for the year to 27 June.
Total revenue for the period increased to just under £5.2 billion (US$7 billion), while total pre-tax profit rose to £132 million ($178.8 million), up from £112 million ($151.7 million) in the same period a year before. Underlying pre-tax profit was flat at £95 million ($128.7 million).
The company’s order book also rose to £19.5 billion ($26.4 billion), up from £16.6 billion ($22.5 billion) at the end of the half-year 2024.
Balfour Beatty’s UK construction arm generated nearly £1.6 billion (US$2.2 billion) in revenue, representing an increase on just under £1.5 billion (US$2 billion) in the same period a year before. An underlying profit of £56 million ($75.9 million) for HY 2025 resulted in a profit margin of 3.6%, helping the company to reach its 3% target a year early.
Gammon, the company’s 50/50 joint venture based in Hong Kong, saw revenue decline to £547 million ($740.9 million), down from £714 million ($967.1 million) the year before.
US construction saw its revenue increase strongly to £2.1 billion ($2.8 billion), up from £1.7 billion ($2.3 billion). But it made an £11 million ($14.9 million) underlying loss, down from an £18 million ($24.4 million) profit in the half-year of 2024. The company’s chief executive Leo Quinn said that the decline in US profit was due to cost overruns on a highways project in Texas “for which recoveries are being pursued”.
Nonetheless, Quinn said the company’s outlook across its fourth strategic growth market – UK energy transition and security, UK transport, UK defence, and US buildings – has continued to strengthen.
In addition to the 6% growth in its order book, the company pointed to a ten-year, £20 billion ($27.1 billion) pipeline of additional work, including power transmission schemes and the Sizewell C nuclear power plant project in the UK, which has now been given the go-ahead by the government, and for which Balfour Beatty is undertaking one third of the civils work.
STAY CONNECTED




Receive the information you need when you need it through our world-leading magazines, newsletters and daily briefings.
CONNECT WITH THE TEAM


