LATIN RADIO

Latin radio is one of the most diverse and fast-growing formats in broadcasting. Stations cover salsa, reggaeton, cumbia, bachata, bossa nova, regional Mexican, Latin trap, and more. The format crosses language and geography — you will find Latin stations not just in Latin America but in major US, Spanish, and European cities.

Covering salsa, reggaeton, cumbia, bachata, bossa nova, regional Mexican, Latin trap, merengue.

ALL LATIN STATIONS

Radio Mujer 92.7Mexico, Guadalajara, Jalisco
FAMILYLATINPOP
Chocolate FMSpain, Málaga
CHRDANCEESPAÑOLALTA QUALIDADE
UbuntuFMSouth Africa
AFROPOPAFROSOULDANCEHALLALTA QUALIDADE
Chocolate FM HDSpain
CHRDANCEESPAÑOLALTA QUALIDADE
Durisima Radio OnlineColombia, Cali, Valle del Cauca
GUAGUNCOLATINMONTUNO
Latina ReggaetonFrance
LATINREGGAETONALTA QUALIDADE
Radio CostaPuerto Rico, San Juan PR
FUSIONLATINLATINA
Deejay GasolinaItaly, Lombardia
LATINLATIN MUSICLATIN POP
Radio Vaticana BulgariaThe Holy See
CATHOLICCATHOLIC RADIOCATHOLIC TALK
Jazz Radio Latin JazzFrance
JAZZLATINLATIN JAZZALTA QUALIDADE
LatinaFrance
LATINALTA QUALIDADE
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PERGUNTAS FREQUENTES

What genres fall under Latin radio?

Latin radio is an umbrella covering salsa, reggaeton, cumbia, bachata, merengue, bossa nova, Latin trap, regional Mexican (norteño, banda, corridos), Latin pop, and more. Most stations specialize in one or two styles rather than covering all of them.

Is Latin radio only in Spanish?

No — Latin radio includes Portuguese-language stations (especially from Brazil), as well as bilingual English-Spanish stations in the US. You will also find Latin music programming in French (from the Caribbean) and indigenous languages.

Where is Latin radio most popular?

Latin radio dominates in Mexico, Colombia, Puerto Rico, and across Central America. In the US, Spanish-language radio is the fastest-growing format, especially in Texas, California, Florida, and New York.