The list of radio stations in North Korea lists all the national and regional
radio stations in
North Korea.
Radio is the most commonly used broadcast media in North Korea. All stations are subject to the strict control of the government and carry no advertising. Some of the transmitters carry regional programmes in the afternoons, but usually relay the central programme from Pyongyang.
Pyongyang Broadcasting Station [
ko]: an "all-Korea" service primarily aimed at South Koreans and ethnic Koreans in China and Japan, broadcast on mediumwave and widely available on FM and shortwave
Echo of Unification / Tongil Voice: Propaganda station beamed to South Korea, Shortwave and FM frequencies close to the
DMZ.
Voice of Korea, a multi-lingual shortwave broadcaster aimed at audiences worldwide, also available on mediumwave in the Pyongyang area[2]
Noise jamming: blocking South Korean and other Korean language foreign broadcasts
Korean Central Broadcasting Station
Mediumwave
702 kHz, Chongjin (50 kW) (Shared with PBS during special programs, when VOK is on 621)
720 kHz, Kanggye (500 kW) (Shared with PBS overnight)
765 kHz, Hyesan (50 kW) (inactive)
810 kHz, Kaesong (50 kW) (Shared with PBS overnight, working with low power now)
819 kHz, Pyongyang (500 kW)
873 kHz, Sinuiju (250 kW) (Shared with PBS overnight)
882 kHz, Wonsan (250 kW)(irregular)
927 kHz, Sariwon (50 kW) (irregular)
999 kHz, Hamhung (250 kW)(irregular)
1080 kHz, Haeju (1500 kW)(inactive)
Shortwave
2350 kHz, Sariwon (5 kW) (inactive)
2850 kHz, Pyongyang (50 kW) (inactive as of May 2020)
The list of radio stations in North Korea lists all the national and regional
radio stations in
North Korea.
Radio is the most commonly used broadcast media in North Korea. All stations are subject to the strict control of the government and carry no advertising. Some of the transmitters carry regional programmes in the afternoons, but usually relay the central programme from Pyongyang.
Pyongyang Broadcasting Station [
ko]: an "all-Korea" service primarily aimed at South Koreans and ethnic Koreans in China and Japan, broadcast on mediumwave and widely available on FM and shortwave
Echo of Unification / Tongil Voice: Propaganda station beamed to South Korea, Shortwave and FM frequencies close to the
DMZ.
Voice of Korea, a multi-lingual shortwave broadcaster aimed at audiences worldwide, also available on mediumwave in the Pyongyang area[2]
Noise jamming: blocking South Korean and other Korean language foreign broadcasts
Korean Central Broadcasting Station
Mediumwave
702 kHz, Chongjin (50 kW) (Shared with PBS during special programs, when VOK is on 621)
720 kHz, Kanggye (500 kW) (Shared with PBS overnight)
765 kHz, Hyesan (50 kW) (inactive)
810 kHz, Kaesong (50 kW) (Shared with PBS overnight, working with low power now)
819 kHz, Pyongyang (500 kW)
873 kHz, Sinuiju (250 kW) (Shared with PBS overnight)
882 kHz, Wonsan (250 kW)(irregular)
927 kHz, Sariwon (50 kW) (irregular)
999 kHz, Hamhung (250 kW)(irregular)
1080 kHz, Haeju (1500 kW)(inactive)
Shortwave
2350 kHz, Sariwon (5 kW) (inactive)
2850 kHz, Pyongyang (50 kW) (inactive as of May 2020)