SPANISH RADIO

Spanish-language radio connects over 500 million speakers across 20+ countries — each with distinct musical traditions, accents, and radio cultures. A Mexican norteño station sounds nothing like a Buenos Aires tango program or a Madrid talk show. The diversity within Spanish radio is immense.

Broadcasting from Mexico, Spain, Colombia, Argentina, Peru, Chile, United States.

ALL SPANISH STATIONS

La Nueva 106.9 FMThe Dominican Republic, Santiago de los Caballeros
BACHATAMERENGUENEWS
Monumental 100.3 FMThe Dominican Republic
DOMINICAN REPUBLICREPUBLICA DOMINICANASANTIAGO
Radio Folklorica UyuniBolivia, Potosí
BOLIVIAFOLKLOREMÚSICAALTA QUALITÀ
Radio eXtraThe Netherlands, Amsterdam
1990S POP MUSIC90S DANCE90S EURODANCEALTA QUALITÀ
Pure Ibiza RadioSpain, Ibiza
DANCEELECTRONIC MUSICIBIZA CLUBALTA QUALITÀ
Cope GranadaSpain, Granada
ENTRETENIMIENTOLOCAL NEWSNEWS
Radio Cumbia 90sBolivia, La Paz (Nuestra Señora de)
90SBAILABLECUMBIAALTA QUALITÀ
Big FM 91.9 RosarioArgentina, Santa Fe
CUARTETOCUMBIAHITS
MVS Noticias - 102.5 FM - XHMVS-FM - MVS Radio - Ciudad de MéxicoMexico, Ciudad de México
102.5102.5 FMAUTO Y MÁSALTA QUALITÀ
XY 90.5 FM - Tegucigalpa, HondurasHonduras, Tegucigalpa
90.5 FMAMÉRICACENTROAMÉRICA
RNE MurciaSpain, Región de Murcia
Radio One 103.7Argentina, Ciudad autonoma de Buenos Aires
DANCEPOP
PREVIOUSPAGE 11 OF 82NEXT

DOMANDE FREQUENTI

How does Spanish radio differ between Latin America and Spain?

Latin American Spanish radio tends to be more music-heavy, with regional genres (cumbia, reggaeton, norteño, vallenato) dominating. Spanish radio from Spain has more talk and debate (tertulias), and the music leans toward European pop alongside flamenco-influenced styles.

Which Latin American countries have the most radio stations?

Mexico, Colombia, Argentina, and Brazil (Portuguese, not Spanish) have the largest radio markets in Latin America. Mexico alone has thousands of stations, many playing regional Mexican genres that are unique to specific states.

Is US Spanish-language radio different from Latin American radio?

Yes — US Spanish radio caters to a bilingual, bicultural audience with a mix of Latin urban music (reggaeton, Latin trap), regional Mexican, and bilingual talk shows. The format reflects the diaspora experience and often blends English and Spanish.