THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA RADIO

The United States has the world's largest and most diverse radio landscape — over 15,000 stations spanning commercial, public, college, and community formats. From NPR's journalism to Nashville country, New York hip-hop to Appalachian bluegrass, American radio reflects the country's cultural breadth.

US radio culture is deeply local — stations serve individual cities and communities. College and public radio (NPR) often provide the most adventurous programming.

Dominant genres: country, hip-hop, pop, rock, news, sports, talk.

ALL THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA STATIONS

KPISS.FMThe United States Of America, Brooklyn, New York
COMMUNITY RADIOFREEFORM
Practice Room RadioThe United States Of America, New York
CONCERT RECORDINGSPIANOPRACTICE
WCOM- LP 103.5 Carrboro, NCThe United States Of America, North Carolina
CARRBOROCOMMUNITY RADIO
Radio Zion 540 AMThe United States Of America, California
CHRISTIANCRISTIANA
ACB Media 4 – CaféThe United States Of America
ACBACB MEDIAAMERICAN COUNCIL OF THE BLIND
KNNZ 89.1 Ken's FMThe United States Of America, North Dakota
LOCAL MUSICMODERN ROCK
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LANGUAGES IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

DOMANDE FREQUENTI

What makes US radio unique?

The sheer scale and format diversity. The US has dedicated stations for extremely specific niches — all-jazz, all-blues, Korean-language pop, Haitian Creole talk radio. No other country fragments its radio spectrum this finely.

What is the difference between NPR and commercial radio?

NPR (National Public Radio) is listener-funded and ad-light, known for in-depth journalism and cultural programming. Commercial stations are advertiser-funded and tend toward tighter, more formatted playlists. Both are part of the US radio ecosystem.

Is Spanish-language radio big in the US?

Yes — Spanish-language radio is one of the fastest-growing formats in the US, especially in Texas, California, Florida, and New York. It includes music (regional Mexican, reggaeton, Latin pop), news, and talk programming.