PORTUGUESE RADIO

Portuguese-language radio spans two continents and very different music cultures — Brazilian stations with samba, forró, and sertanejo versus Portuguese fado and pop. Lusophone African radio (Angola, Mozambique, Cape Verde) adds further dimensions. The language connects over 250 million speakers with distinct radio identities.

Broadcasting from Brazil, Portugal, Angola, Mozambique, Cape Verde.

ALL PORTUGUESE STATIONS

104 (Porto Alegre)Brazil, Rio Grande do Sul
CamoesRadio.com - Toronto, ONCanada, Ontario
BRAZILIAN POPETHNICPORTUGUESE POP
Melodia FM 97.5Brazil, Rio de Janeiro
GOSPEL
Difusora Manaus 96,9Brazil, Amazonas
JORNALISMO
Rádio Vida FM 97.1Portugal, Lisbon
LOCAL MUSICVARIETY
NativaBrazil, Rio Grande do Sul
LOCAL MUSIC
RST Radio RockBrazil, Parana
HARD ROCKPROGRESSIVE ROCK
Radio Hot 97.7Brazil
BRAZILIAN MUSICHITSPOP
Jovem Pan FM - OsórioBrazil, Rio Grande do Sul
ELECTRONICPOP ROCK
Radio PutzgrilaBrazil, Rio Grande do Sul
ALTERNATIVE ROCKCLASSIC ROCKROCK N ROLL
Rádio Antena MinhoPortugal, Braga
NEWSSPORTWORLD MUSIC
Ultra FMPortugal, Lisbon
GOSPELMIXOLDIES
Espiritismo BHBrazil, Minas Gerais Brasil
ESPIRITISMO
Rádio TeomidiaBrazil, Sao Paulo
GOSPEL
Radio Casa 8000Brazil, São Paulo
ANOS 80OLD SCHOOLTHE BEST OF 80'S
Uniao FMBrazil, Rio Grande do Sul
MPBPOP
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DOMANDE FREQUENTI

How does Brazilian radio differ from Portuguese radio?

Brazilian radio is music-heavy, loud, and personality-driven, reflecting genres like sertanejo, funk, and pagode. Portuguese radio tends to be calmer, with more European pop and fado. The accent differences are significant — like comparing American and British English.

Is there Portuguese-language radio in Africa?

Yes — Angola, Mozambique, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, and São Tomé all have Portuguese-language radio stations. Angolan and Mozambican stations feature unique genres like kizomba, semba, and marrabenta alongside Portuguese-language pop and talk.

Can I find fado on Portuguese radio?

Fado appears on Portuguese radio stations, particularly from Lisbon. While it is not the dominant commercial format (Portuguese pop and international music are more common on mainstream stations), cultural stations and programs dedicated to fado exist.