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.

Covering Rock, Classical, Jazz, and more.

ALL THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA STATIONS

BAGeL RadioThe United States Of America
GARAGE ROCKGOTHY GLOOMY SYNTHY DANCEY STUFFINDIE ROCK
SomaFM Folk Forward (64k AAC)The United States Of America, California
ALT-FOLKINDIE FOLKOCCASIONAL FOLK CLASSICS
GooGeRaDiOThe United States Of America, California
COOLECLECTICMIXED
Ancient Faith Radio - English MusicThe United States Of America, Indiana
CHOIRCHRISTIAN ORTHODOXENGLISH WORSHIP RADIO
WKXP - 94.3 Lite FMThe United States Of America, Poughkeepsie, New York
ADULT CONTEMPORARY
2 Love RadioThe United States Of America, Oklahoma City OK
BALLADSHITS
KZHP-LP K-ZAPThe United States Of America, California
ADULT CONTEMPORARYADULT ROCKBLUES
American Road RadioThe United States Of America, Los Angeles, California
BLUES ROCKCLASSIC ROCKRHYTHM AND BLUES (1960S RANDB (EG. THE ROLLING STONES))
KAFMThe United States Of America, Colorado
COMMUNITY RADIOMUSIC
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LANGUAGES IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

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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.