The Broadcasting Act of 1996 allows the introduction of national, regional and local commercial ensembles in the United Kingdom.[3]
1997
The first in-car DAB radios go on sale, at a cost of around £800.
1998
24 March – The Radio Authority advertises the first national commercial DAB multiplex. The Authority stipulates that the three analogue
Independent National Radio stations will have a guaranteed berth on the multiplex. The licence is awarded to the sole applicant, GWR Group and NTL Broadcast, to operate as Digital One.[4]
1 October –
Sky Digital launches and the new service carries a range of audio channels, including a number of radio stations. However rival digital television platform
OnDigital does not carry any radio services when it launches a few weeks later.
1999
10 May – The Radio Authority licenses the first local DAB multiplex. It for the Birmingham ensemble and is licensed to CE Digital. Each local multiplex operator has to carry the area's
BBC Local Radio station. However, the same guarantee is not given for the area's analogue commercial stations.[5] The Birmingham ensemble licence award is followed by awards for licences in
Manchester,
Greater London,
Glasgow and
South Yorkshire.
15 November – Britain's first national commercial
DAB digital radio multiplex,
Digital One, goes on air to England, and parts of Scotland and Wales. The stations carried at launch include the three national commercial AM/FM services –
Classic FM,
Virgin Radio (now Absolute) and
Talk Radio UK (now Talksport) – along with two new digital-first stations – fresh pop service
Core and adult classic rock station
Planet Rock, both then under the ownership of Classic FM's then parent (and Digital One shareholder)
GWR Group. Digital One would extend its station lineup and transmission area over subsequent years, and became available to Northern Ireland from 2013 (following the completion of digital television switchover in the UK and
Republic of Ireland the prior autumn).
The cost of digital radios falls below £100 for the first time following the launch of
Pure Digital's Evoke series of radios.
2003
1 January – A station named
The Hits, carrying the audio of
the Box Plus Network television channel of the same name, appears on DAB in London.
14 February –
BBC Radio 1,
Radio 2,
Radio 3 and
Radio 4 FM start broadcasting on
Freeview. They broadcast on multiplex A as there is not enough room for them on multiplex B, on which the other BBC stations are carried.[9]
1 April – The Hits on DAB switches away from the TV audio and becomes a dedicated radio stream, playing contemporary pop hits.
1 July – The rolling news service on
Digital One, provided by
ITN, stops broadcasting.
August –
Digital News Network is absorbed into
LBC by the then sole owner Chrysalis[10] and LBC is now heard on the MXR regional multiplexes. The service is reduced and moved from its Birmingham home and into Chrysalis London. Regional news bulletins on DAB continue until the end of 2008.
December – Ofcom begins advertising local DAB multiplexes as many areas of the UK still did not have a local multiplex, with the first to cover
Hertfordshire,
Bedfordshire and
Buckinghamshire.[11] These are the first new multiplexes to be offered since Ofcom took over as regulator of radio in the UK at the end of 2003 and ten further areas were advertised during 2007. However these multiplexes did not launch until the early 2010s.
Another of the original Digital One stations,
Core Radio, stops broadcasting.
12 January – The Forces Station
BFBS begins a trial period of broadcasting nationwide across the UK on
DAB from midnight. The trial ran until 23:59 on 31 March 2008, and audience research carried out during this time concluded that it was successful. BFBS subsequently returned to DAB Digital Radio on a permanent basis.[18]
31 March – Following its decision to exit digital broadcasting, GCap closes
theJazz and
Capital Life.[19] To compensate, for the next few months, two hours of jazz music are broadcast each night on
Classic FM.
12 July –
NME Radio stops broadcasting on Digital One.[22]
16 July –
Absolute Radio Extra begins broadcasting. It is a part time station broadcasting on Saturday afternoons as an alternative to football commentary.
1 November –
GMG Radio launches a dedicated station playing nothing but
Christmas music, under the brand "Smooth Christmas". The station had no news or advertisements but did promote Smooth Radio and broadcast until 27 December 2011.[23]
23 December – GMG Radio confirms plans to launch a station dedicated to music from the 1970s on trial basis and four days later
Smooth 70s replaces Smooth Christmas on the
Digital One platform.[24]
2012
15 May –
Amazing Radio leaves the DAB multiplex after a contractual dispute with Digital One owners Arqiva, but continues to broadcast online.[25]
25 June –
KMFM Extra closes and is replaced on DAB by the new-countywide KMFM.
27 July-12 August – The
2012 Summer Olympics take place and
BBC Radio 5 Live operates a temporary station – 5 Live Olympics Extra – to provide additional coverage of the Games.
25 September – It is announced that the MXR multiplexes will close between July and September 2013 after the shareholders
Global Radio &and
Arqiva decided not to renew the licences. Digital Radio UK stated that the released frequencies of the closed regional multiplexes will be reused for local DAB coverage roll-out.[26]
30 October – Smooth Radio confirms that Smooth Christmas will return, airing on the Digital One multiplex in the lead up to the festive season, giving the brand three stations on the platform.[27] It launches two days later.
27 December – Kiss 100 launches on the
Digital One national DAB multiplex.[28]
2013
3 January – It is reported that
Gaydar Radio owner QSoft Consulting will leave the radio business and hand its DAB licences to Manchester community station
Gaydio.[29]
27 August – The MXR regional digital radio multiplex for the West Midlands is switched off after 12 years on air.[35]
6 October –
Smooth 70s stops broadcasting to make way for the launch on Digital One by
Capital Xtra.
2014
1 January –
Jazz FM stops broadcasting on the
Digital One multiplex, but continues to be available on DAB in London, online and through satellite television.[36] Its Digital One slot is temporarily taken over by the return of
Birdsong Radio, with plans for a permanent replacement in February.[37]
May – The BBC broadcasts a pop-up digital radio service
BBC Radio 2 Eurovision to extend the BBC's coverage of the
Eurovision Song Contest. Returned in 2015 to provide coverage of the 2015 contest.
15 November –
Smooth Christmas returns to DAB in preparation for the launch of a new station with the Smooth brand.[38]
12 December –
Kisstory and
KissFresh start broadcasting on DAB for the first time when the appear on the Greater London I DAB multiplex. The stations had launched in May 2013 on
Freeview
Absolute Radio changes from broadcasting in stereo to mono to make way for Magic on DAB.[40]
January –
Kisstory launches on many more local multiplexes across the UK.[41]
19 January –
The Hits is split into a network of fresh-hits DAB stations in Bauer's heritage areas -
Bauer City 3 - with split localised news, branding and advertising, and shared programme content. This programming also remains available nationally on Freeview under The Hits Radio name.[42] The Hits is removed from DAB in London and Birmingham, the Birmingham space going to
Kisstory (then to
KissFresh after Kisstory's move to
Sound Digital in 2016).
3 February – Ofcom announces that two bids have been received for the second national digital multiplex.[43]
27 March – The Sound Digital consortium, which includes
UTV Media, wins the licence to launch the
Digital Two network in 2016. UTV Media will launch four new stations on the platform.[44]
29 June – The last of the five regional multiplexes in England and wales - Yorkshire - closes down.[45] The previous four regional multiplexes had closed in 2013. The regional multiplex covering Central Scotland continues to operate.
31 July – The first of ten multiplexes trialling small-scale DAB multiplexes launches in Brighton. Initially a nine-month trial, the multiplexes extended to March 2020 by Ofcom at the request of the Department of Culture, Media and Sport.[46]
21 September – XFM is relaunched as a national digital station called
Radio X on 21 September.[47]
Absolute 80s and
Planet Rock switch from Digital One to the new multiplex although they continue to broadcast on Digital One until the end of April.[48]
April –
BBC Radio 2 broadcasts its third pop-up station – BBC Radio 2 50s.
1 May – Following the transfer of
Kisstory to the semi-national
Sound Digital multiplex,
KissFresh takes over some of the local slots vacated by Kisstory.[50]
Spring – Magic broadcasts a temporary pop-up service called Magic ABBA, run as a commercial partnership with Mamma Mia!: the Musical It is replaced by Magic Summer Soul. Initially intended as another short-term pop-up, the station becomes permanent in the autumn and is renamed
Magic Soul.
19 January – The Armed Forces radio station
BFBS announces it will cease broadcasting on the
Digital One platform from March because of the cost of transmitting content through DAB.[51]
March – The small-scale Brighton multiplex becomes the UK's first multiplex to only broadcast via the newer
DAB+ format.[52]
10 July –
KissFresh launches nationally on the
Digital One multiplex. Its schedule and playlist is refreshed to differentiate it from the main Kiss station.[53]
29 August –
Awesome Radio stops broadcasting on the Sound Digital multiplex.[54]
1 September – The
Bauer City 3 network is disbanded, and
The Hits as a single national service returns to DAB in its place.[55]
18 September – The fourth roll-out of 164 new transmitters of the
BBC National DAB multiplex is completed. The programme, which had run for the past two years, increased the reach from 93% to more than 97% of the UK's population.[56]
28-30 September – As part of Radio 1's 50th birthday celebrations, the BBC operates a three-day pop-up station Radio 1 Vintage celebrating the station's presenters.[57]
2018
24 January –
BFBS returns to semi-national DAB broadcasting when it launches on the
Sound Digital multiplex.
15 May –
Sound Digital announces that it will add 19 transmitters to its network. They will launch in the South West, East Anglia, Wales and North of Scotland and will increase Sound Digital's coverage by nearly 4 million new listeners in more than 1.6m new households.[58]
22 December – Virgin Radio Anthems and Virgin Radio Chilled launch on the
Sound Digital multiplex.
2019
11 February –
Kisstory transfers from the Sound Digital multiplex to the Digital One multiplex.[59]
28 October – Global relaunches LBC London News as a national 24-hour rolling news channel called
LBC News.[71]
2020s
2020
12 March – Global closes the national digital stations
Heart Extra and Smooth Extra, replacing these on
Digital One with Heart UK and Smooth UK, which share all programming content with the London stations. Capital UK on Digital One switches to DAB+ at the same time.
March – The ten licenses trialling small-scale DAB multiplexes are extended again, this time until December 2021.[72]
12 March –
Boom Radio becomes available nationally on the
Sound Digital multiplex, having initially launched on some local DAB platforms and online.[76]
1 August - Digital radio broadcasts roll out in the crown dependencies of the
Channel Islands following the launch of a local DAB multiplex for the Channel Islands. All stations broadcast on DAB+, and this is the first local multiplex whose entire station line-up is only broadcast in the DAB+ standard.[77]
29 November – The first permanent small-scale DAB multiplex launches, covering
Tynemouth and
North Shields.
21 December –
GB News Radio appears on the
Digital One platform ahead of a planned launch of 4 January 2022. The service will be a simulcast of the
GB News TV channel.[78]
September –
Fun Kids is to leave the national
Sound Digital multiplex after seven years, and will instead join a series of local multiplexes.[84]
26 September – Bauer announces that it is switching its stations which broadcast on the
Sound Digital multiplex to the DAB+ format to make way for the launch seven more stations - - Absolute Radio Country, Absolute Classic Rock, Kerrang!, heat, Magic Chilled, Magic Soul, and Magic at the Musicals. The changes will happen later in the autumn.[85]
8 January –
Smooth Relax, launches.[87] The station occupies the space on
Digital One which had become available following the conversion of
Classic FM to DAB+.[88]
7 February – The BBC announces plans to launch four new radio stations on
DAB+, including a Radio 2 spin-off playing music from the 1950s, 60s and 70s, and a Radio 1 spin-off playing music from the past two decades.[89]
8 February – Nearly 15 years after launching on DAB,
Classic FM finally becomes available via digital radio in the Channel Islands.
LBC also launches in the Channel islands at the same time.[90]
The Broadcasting Act of 1996 allows the introduction of national, regional and local commercial ensembles in the United Kingdom.[3]
1997
The first in-car DAB radios go on sale, at a cost of around £800.
1998
24 March – The Radio Authority advertises the first national commercial DAB multiplex. The Authority stipulates that the three analogue
Independent National Radio stations will have a guaranteed berth on the multiplex. The licence is awarded to the sole applicant, GWR Group and NTL Broadcast, to operate as Digital One.[4]
1 October –
Sky Digital launches and the new service carries a range of audio channels, including a number of radio stations. However rival digital television platform
OnDigital does not carry any radio services when it launches a few weeks later.
1999
10 May – The Radio Authority licenses the first local DAB multiplex. It for the Birmingham ensemble and is licensed to CE Digital. Each local multiplex operator has to carry the area's
BBC Local Radio station. However, the same guarantee is not given for the area's analogue commercial stations.[5] The Birmingham ensemble licence award is followed by awards for licences in
Manchester,
Greater London,
Glasgow and
South Yorkshire.
15 November – Britain's first national commercial
DAB digital radio multiplex,
Digital One, goes on air to England, and parts of Scotland and Wales. The stations carried at launch include the three national commercial AM/FM services –
Classic FM,
Virgin Radio (now Absolute) and
Talk Radio UK (now Talksport) – along with two new digital-first stations – fresh pop service
Core and adult classic rock station
Planet Rock, both then under the ownership of Classic FM's then parent (and Digital One shareholder)
GWR Group. Digital One would extend its station lineup and transmission area over subsequent years, and became available to Northern Ireland from 2013 (following the completion of digital television switchover in the UK and
Republic of Ireland the prior autumn).
The cost of digital radios falls below £100 for the first time following the launch of
Pure Digital's Evoke series of radios.
2003
1 January – A station named
The Hits, carrying the audio of
the Box Plus Network television channel of the same name, appears on DAB in London.
14 February –
BBC Radio 1,
Radio 2,
Radio 3 and
Radio 4 FM start broadcasting on
Freeview. They broadcast on multiplex A as there is not enough room for them on multiplex B, on which the other BBC stations are carried.[9]
1 April – The Hits on DAB switches away from the TV audio and becomes a dedicated radio stream, playing contemporary pop hits.
1 July – The rolling news service on
Digital One, provided by
ITN, stops broadcasting.
August –
Digital News Network is absorbed into
LBC by the then sole owner Chrysalis[10] and LBC is now heard on the MXR regional multiplexes. The service is reduced and moved from its Birmingham home and into Chrysalis London. Regional news bulletins on DAB continue until the end of 2008.
December – Ofcom begins advertising local DAB multiplexes as many areas of the UK still did not have a local multiplex, with the first to cover
Hertfordshire,
Bedfordshire and
Buckinghamshire.[11] These are the first new multiplexes to be offered since Ofcom took over as regulator of radio in the UK at the end of 2003 and ten further areas were advertised during 2007. However these multiplexes did not launch until the early 2010s.
Another of the original Digital One stations,
Core Radio, stops broadcasting.
12 January – The Forces Station
BFBS begins a trial period of broadcasting nationwide across the UK on
DAB from midnight. The trial ran until 23:59 on 31 March 2008, and audience research carried out during this time concluded that it was successful. BFBS subsequently returned to DAB Digital Radio on a permanent basis.[18]
31 March – Following its decision to exit digital broadcasting, GCap closes
theJazz and
Capital Life.[19] To compensate, for the next few months, two hours of jazz music are broadcast each night on
Classic FM.
12 July –
NME Radio stops broadcasting on Digital One.[22]
16 July –
Absolute Radio Extra begins broadcasting. It is a part time station broadcasting on Saturday afternoons as an alternative to football commentary.
1 November –
GMG Radio launches a dedicated station playing nothing but
Christmas music, under the brand "Smooth Christmas". The station had no news or advertisements but did promote Smooth Radio and broadcast until 27 December 2011.[23]
23 December – GMG Radio confirms plans to launch a station dedicated to music from the 1970s on trial basis and four days later
Smooth 70s replaces Smooth Christmas on the
Digital One platform.[24]
2012
15 May –
Amazing Radio leaves the DAB multiplex after a contractual dispute with Digital One owners Arqiva, but continues to broadcast online.[25]
25 June –
KMFM Extra closes and is replaced on DAB by the new-countywide KMFM.
27 July-12 August – The
2012 Summer Olympics take place and
BBC Radio 5 Live operates a temporary station – 5 Live Olympics Extra – to provide additional coverage of the Games.
25 September – It is announced that the MXR multiplexes will close between July and September 2013 after the shareholders
Global Radio &and
Arqiva decided not to renew the licences. Digital Radio UK stated that the released frequencies of the closed regional multiplexes will be reused for local DAB coverage roll-out.[26]
30 October – Smooth Radio confirms that Smooth Christmas will return, airing on the Digital One multiplex in the lead up to the festive season, giving the brand three stations on the platform.[27] It launches two days later.
27 December – Kiss 100 launches on the
Digital One national DAB multiplex.[28]
2013
3 January – It is reported that
Gaydar Radio owner QSoft Consulting will leave the radio business and hand its DAB licences to Manchester community station
Gaydio.[29]
27 August – The MXR regional digital radio multiplex for the West Midlands is switched off after 12 years on air.[35]
6 October –
Smooth 70s stops broadcasting to make way for the launch on Digital One by
Capital Xtra.
2014
1 January –
Jazz FM stops broadcasting on the
Digital One multiplex, but continues to be available on DAB in London, online and through satellite television.[36] Its Digital One slot is temporarily taken over by the return of
Birdsong Radio, with plans for a permanent replacement in February.[37]
May – The BBC broadcasts a pop-up digital radio service
BBC Radio 2 Eurovision to extend the BBC's coverage of the
Eurovision Song Contest. Returned in 2015 to provide coverage of the 2015 contest.
15 November –
Smooth Christmas returns to DAB in preparation for the launch of a new station with the Smooth brand.[38]
12 December –
Kisstory and
KissFresh start broadcasting on DAB for the first time when the appear on the Greater London I DAB multiplex. The stations had launched in May 2013 on
Freeview
Absolute Radio changes from broadcasting in stereo to mono to make way for Magic on DAB.[40]
January –
Kisstory launches on many more local multiplexes across the UK.[41]
19 January –
The Hits is split into a network of fresh-hits DAB stations in Bauer's heritage areas -
Bauer City 3 - with split localised news, branding and advertising, and shared programme content. This programming also remains available nationally on Freeview under The Hits Radio name.[42] The Hits is removed from DAB in London and Birmingham, the Birmingham space going to
Kisstory (then to
KissFresh after Kisstory's move to
Sound Digital in 2016).
3 February – Ofcom announces that two bids have been received for the second national digital multiplex.[43]
27 March – The Sound Digital consortium, which includes
UTV Media, wins the licence to launch the
Digital Two network in 2016. UTV Media will launch four new stations on the platform.[44]
29 June – The last of the five regional multiplexes in England and wales - Yorkshire - closes down.[45] The previous four regional multiplexes had closed in 2013. The regional multiplex covering Central Scotland continues to operate.
31 July – The first of ten multiplexes trialling small-scale DAB multiplexes launches in Brighton. Initially a nine-month trial, the multiplexes extended to March 2020 by Ofcom at the request of the Department of Culture, Media and Sport.[46]
21 September – XFM is relaunched as a national digital station called
Radio X on 21 September.[47]
Absolute 80s and
Planet Rock switch from Digital One to the new multiplex although they continue to broadcast on Digital One until the end of April.[48]
April –
BBC Radio 2 broadcasts its third pop-up station – BBC Radio 2 50s.
1 May – Following the transfer of
Kisstory to the semi-national
Sound Digital multiplex,
KissFresh takes over some of the local slots vacated by Kisstory.[50]
Spring – Magic broadcasts a temporary pop-up service called Magic ABBA, run as a commercial partnership with Mamma Mia!: the Musical It is replaced by Magic Summer Soul. Initially intended as another short-term pop-up, the station becomes permanent in the autumn and is renamed
Magic Soul.
19 January – The Armed Forces radio station
BFBS announces it will cease broadcasting on the
Digital One platform from March because of the cost of transmitting content through DAB.[51]
March – The small-scale Brighton multiplex becomes the UK's first multiplex to only broadcast via the newer
DAB+ format.[52]
10 July –
KissFresh launches nationally on the
Digital One multiplex. Its schedule and playlist is refreshed to differentiate it from the main Kiss station.[53]
29 August –
Awesome Radio stops broadcasting on the Sound Digital multiplex.[54]
1 September – The
Bauer City 3 network is disbanded, and
The Hits as a single national service returns to DAB in its place.[55]
18 September – The fourth roll-out of 164 new transmitters of the
BBC National DAB multiplex is completed. The programme, which had run for the past two years, increased the reach from 93% to more than 97% of the UK's population.[56]
28-30 September – As part of Radio 1's 50th birthday celebrations, the BBC operates a three-day pop-up station Radio 1 Vintage celebrating the station's presenters.[57]
2018
24 January –
BFBS returns to semi-national DAB broadcasting when it launches on the
Sound Digital multiplex.
15 May –
Sound Digital announces that it will add 19 transmitters to its network. They will launch in the South West, East Anglia, Wales and North of Scotland and will increase Sound Digital's coverage by nearly 4 million new listeners in more than 1.6m new households.[58]
22 December – Virgin Radio Anthems and Virgin Radio Chilled launch on the
Sound Digital multiplex.
2019
11 February –
Kisstory transfers from the Sound Digital multiplex to the Digital One multiplex.[59]
28 October – Global relaunches LBC London News as a national 24-hour rolling news channel called
LBC News.[71]
2020s
2020
12 March – Global closes the national digital stations
Heart Extra and Smooth Extra, replacing these on
Digital One with Heart UK and Smooth UK, which share all programming content with the London stations. Capital UK on Digital One switches to DAB+ at the same time.
March – The ten licenses trialling small-scale DAB multiplexes are extended again, this time until December 2021.[72]
12 March –
Boom Radio becomes available nationally on the
Sound Digital multiplex, having initially launched on some local DAB platforms and online.[76]
1 August - Digital radio broadcasts roll out in the crown dependencies of the
Channel Islands following the launch of a local DAB multiplex for the Channel Islands. All stations broadcast on DAB+, and this is the first local multiplex whose entire station line-up is only broadcast in the DAB+ standard.[77]
29 November – The first permanent small-scale DAB multiplex launches, covering
Tynemouth and
North Shields.
21 December –
GB News Radio appears on the
Digital One platform ahead of a planned launch of 4 January 2022. The service will be a simulcast of the
GB News TV channel.[78]
September –
Fun Kids is to leave the national
Sound Digital multiplex after seven years, and will instead join a series of local multiplexes.[84]
26 September – Bauer announces that it is switching its stations which broadcast on the
Sound Digital multiplex to the DAB+ format to make way for the launch seven more stations - - Absolute Radio Country, Absolute Classic Rock, Kerrang!, heat, Magic Chilled, Magic Soul, and Magic at the Musicals. The changes will happen later in the autumn.[85]
8 January –
Smooth Relax, launches.[87] The station occupies the space on
Digital One which had become available following the conversion of
Classic FM to DAB+.[88]
7 February – The BBC announces plans to launch four new radio stations on
DAB+, including a Radio 2 spin-off playing music from the 1950s, 60s and 70s, and a Radio 1 spin-off playing music from the past two decades.[89]
8 February – Nearly 15 years after launching on DAB,
Classic FM finally becomes available via digital radio in the Channel Islands.
LBC also launches in the Channel islands at the same time.[90]