Federal Communications Commission FCC 26-25 Before the FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION WASHINGTON, DC 20554 In the Matter of Review of the Commission’s Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2026 ) ) ) ) ) MD Docket No. 26-94 NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULEMAKING Adopted: April 27, 2026 Released: April 28, 2026 Comment Date: May 28, 2026 Reply Comment Date: June 12, 2026 By the Commission: TABLE OF CONTENTS Heading Paragraph # I. INTRODUCTION 1 II. BACKGROUND 4 III. NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULEMAKING 15 A. Assessment of Regulatory Fees 16 1. Methodology for Assessing Regulatory Fees 16 2. FTE Reallocations 17 3. Adjustment of Reallocations of Certain Indirect FTEs as Direct FTEs 19 B. Broadcast Television Stations 31 C. CMRS and Mobile Services Assessments 32 D. Improving the Regulatory Fee Process 35 IV. PROCEDURAL MATTERS 37 V. ORDERING CLAUSES 58 APPENDIX A—CALCULATION OF FY 2026 REVENUE REQUIREMENTS AND PRO-RATA FEES APPENDIX B—FY 2026 SCHEDULE OF REGULATORY FEES APPENDIX C—SOURCES OF PAYMENT UNIT ESTIMATES FOR FY 2026 APPENDIX D—FACTORS, MEASUREMENTS, AND CALCULATIONS THAT DETERMINE STATION SIGNAL CONTOURS AND ASSOCIATED POPULATION COVERAGES APPENDIX E—SPACE STATION SATELLITE CHARTS FOR FY 2026 REGULATORY FEES APPENDIX F—FY 2026 FULL-SERVICE BROADCAST TELEVISION STATIONS BY CALL SIGN APPENDIX G—FY 2025 SCHEDULE OF REGULATORY FEES APPENDIX H—INITIAL REGULATORY FLEXIBILITY ANALYSIS I. INTRODUCTION 1. Each fiscal year, the Commission must adopt a schedule of regulatory fees to be assessed and collected by the end of September in an amount that reasonably can be expected to total the Commission’s annual salaries and expenses (S&E) appropriation. Pursuant to section 9 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended (Communications Act or Act), 47 U.S.C. § 159 (requiring the Commission to assess and collect regulatory fees to recover the costs of carrying out its activities in the total amounts provided for in Appropriations Acts). and the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2026, the Commission must collect $416,112,000, which is an amount equal to its fiscal year (FY) 2026 salaries and expenses (S&E) appropriation. Title V — Independent Agencies, Federal Communications Commission, Salaries and Expenses Division of Division E — Financial Services and General Government Appropriations Act, 2026, of H.R. 7148 - Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2026, Pub. L. No. 119-75 (Feb. 3, 2026) (FY 2026 Consolidated Appropriations Act). 2. In this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM), we propose and seek comment on the regulatory fees and methodology to assess and collect $416,112,000 in congressionally required regulatory fees for FY 2026, as set forth in Appendices A and B. Consistent with the Commission’s long-standing regulatory fee methodology, staff has again undertaken a high-level, yet comprehensive, analysis of the work being performed by Commission employees to determine if identifiable full time equivalent (FTE) time is related to the oversight and regulation of fee payors such that it should be taken into consideration in applying our fee methodology. Based upon this analysis, we propose to reallocate a total of 59 FTEs as direct to the Commission’s core licensing bureaus. As described below, our proposals to increase the number of direct FTEs allocated to a core bureau—which are substantially similar to the Commission’s determinations in fiscal years 2023, 2024, and 2025—reflect our conclusion that we can determine with reasonable accuracy that certain FTE work in the Office of Economics and Analytics, the Office of General Counsel, and the Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau is sufficiently linked to the oversight and regulation of regulatory fee payors for regulatory fee purposes for FY 2026. 3. Moreover, using the Commission’s methodology of calculating television broadcaster regulatory fees based on population covered by the station’s contour as the Commission has since 2020, we propose full-service broadcast television regulatory fees as set forth in Appendix F. Finally, we seek comment on whether to continue to use Numbering Resource Utilization Forecast (NRUF) assigned number data as the basis for assessing regulatory fees on Commercial Mobile Radio Service (CMRS) providers. II. BACKGROUND 4. Section 9 of the Communications Act obligates the Commission to assess and collect regulatory fees each year, totaling an amount that can reasonably be expected to equal the amount of its annual S&E appropriation. FY 2026 started on October 1, 2025, and ends on September 30, 2026. The regulatory fee collection is guided by both the statutory authority in sections 6 and 9 of the Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. §§ 156, 159, and the explicit language of each fiscal year’s S&E appropriation directing the amount to be collected as an offsetting collection. FY 2026 Consolidated Appropriations Act (appropriating “[f]or necessary expenses of the Federal Communications Commission, as authorized by law, … $416,112,000, to remain available until September 30, 2029: Provided, That $416,112,000, of offsetting collections shall be assessed and collected pursuant to section 9 of title I of the Communications Act of 1934, shall be retained and used for necessary expenses and shall remain available until September 30, 2029: Provided further, That the sum herein appropriated shall be reduced as such offsetting collections are received during fiscal year 2026 so as to result in a final fiscal year 2026 appropriation estimated at $0”). Thus, the Commission has no discretion regarding the amount of fees to be collected in any given fiscal year. Regulatory fees cover all of the Commission’s non-auctions direct, Direct costs are those such as salaries and expenses. See, e.g., Review of the Commission’s Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees; Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2024, MD Docket Nos. 24-85 and 24-86, Second Report and Order, 39 FCC Rcd 10140, 10143-44, para. 5 (2024) (FY 2024 Second Report and Order). indirect, Indirect costs are those such as overhead functions. Id. and support Support costs include those such as rent, utilities, and equipment. Id. costs, including costs to cover statutorily required tasks that do not directly equate with oversight and regulation of a particular fee payor, but instead benefit the Commission and the industry as a whole. Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2021, MD Docket No. 21-190, Report and Order and Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 36 FCC Rcd 12900, 12991, para. 2 (2021) (FY 2021 Report and Order). Since regulatory fees must recover the total amount of the Commission’s S&E appropriation, they also must cover the costs incurred in oversight and regulation of: (1) entities that are statutorily exempt from paying regulatory fees; Entities that are exempt from paying regulatory fees include governmental and nonprofit entities, amateur radio operators, and noncommercial radio and television stations. 47 U.S.C. § 159(e)(1); 47 CFR § 1.1162. (2) entities whose total assessed annual regulatory fees fall below the annual de minimis threshold; 47 U.S.C. § 159(e)(2). and (3) entities whose regulatory fees are waived. Id. § 159(d); 47 CFR § 1.1166. 5. Congress has prescribed a method for the Commission to collect an amount equal to the full S&E appropriation in section 9 of the Communications Act, by keying our regulatory fee assessment to our FTE burden. See 47 U.S.C. § 159(d). One FTE, a “Full Time Equivalent” or “Full Time Employee,” is a unit of measure equal to the work performed annually by a full-time person (working a 40-hour workweek for a full year) assigned to the particular job, and subject to agency personnel staffing limitations established by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget. See generally Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget, Circular No. A-11, Preparation, Submission, and Execution of the Budget (August 2025). See section 85.5(c) for a detailed explanation of how FTEs are calculated. Thus, in this proceeding, if we state 1.5 FTEs work on a particular subject matter, that might mean three individuals spend 50% of their time on that area. Moreover, in this NPRM, when we discuss FTEs and any change in allocation, it is solely for regulatory fee purposes and does not reflect proposals for the change of personnel in the various organizational work units. The methodology for assessing regulatory fees must “reflect the full-time equivalent number of employees within the bureaus and offices of the Commission, adjusted to take into account factors that are reasonably related to the benefits provided to the payor of the fee by the Commission’s activities.” 47 U.S.C. § 159(d). Thus, the fee assigned to each regulatory fee category relates to the FTE burden associated with oversight and regulation of each regulatory fee category by the relevant core bureaus The phrase “core bureaus” was first used in 2012 by the Commission to explain that, under (prior) section 9(b)(1)(A) of the Communications Act, the Commission was instructed to calculate the regulatory fees by determining the FTEs performing the activities enumerated in section 9(a)(1) of the Communications Act within the Private Radio Bureau, Mass Media Bureau, Common Carrier Bureau, and other offices of the Commission. Procedures for Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2008, MD Docket Nos. 12-201 and 08-65, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 27 FCC Rcd 8458, 8460, para. 5 & n.5 (2012) (FY 2012 Regulatory Fee Reform NPRM). While the functions of oversight and regulation remain the same, the names of the core bureaus have changed with time. (i.e., the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau, the Media Bureau, most of the Wireline Competition Bureau, In 2017, the Commission concluded that allocating the work of FTEs in the Wireline Competition Bureau devoted to non-high-cost Universal Service Fund programs as indirect FTEs is consistent with how FTEs working for programs that benefit consumers and the American public are treated elsewhere in the Commission. See Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2017, Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 32 FCC Rcd 7057, 7061-64, paras. 10-15 (2017) (FY 2017 Report and Order); see also Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2023, Review of the Commission’s Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees, MD Docket Nos. 23-159 and 23-301, Report and Order, 38 FCC Rcd 8071, 8090, para. 50 (2023) (FY 2023 Report and Order). Moreover, in the non-high-cost universal service fund programs, the E-Rate, Lifeline, and Rural Health Care programs tie funding eligibility based on the beneficiary, i.e., a school, a library, a low-income individual or family, or a rural healthcare provider and not to Commission regulatory fee payors. See id. at 8090, para. 50. Thus, the burden of FTE time devoted to non-high-cost Universal Service Fund programs is properly categorized as indirect. See id. at 8092, para. 55. In 2022, the Commission further determined to exclude broadcasters from the fee burden associated with these indirect FTEs because broadcasters do not directly participate in the universal service program. Id. at 8090-92, paras. 50-55 (explaining that beginning in the FY 2022 Report and Order, “Media Services” licensees were excluded from recovery of the funds associated with the indirect FTEs who work on non-high-cost Universal Service Fund issues). In its annual analysis of FTE time, after excluding broadcasters, staff deducts the burden of this indirect FTE work from the calculation of the direct FTEs allocated to the Wireline Competition Bureau and apportions these indirect FTEs among all other fee payors. Id. at 8091, para. 51. part of the Office of International Affairs, and most of the Space Bureau In the FY 2024 regulatory fee proceeding, the Commission analyzed the reorganization of the International Bureau into the new Space Bureau and the Office of International Affairs (OIA) to determine whether any of their FTEs should be attributed directly to a particular category of regulatory fee payor. FY 2024 Second Report and Order, 39 FCC Rcd 10154-65, paras. 19-45. Historically, all but 28 of the FTEs of the International Bureau were considered indirect. See, e.g., Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2013, MD Docket Nos. 13-140, 12-201, and 08-65, Report and Order, 28 FCC Rcd 12351, 12355-56, para. 14 (2013) (FY 2013 Report and Order). In 2024, the Commission concluded that given the nature of their work, 48 of the 54 FTEs in the Space Bureau should be categorized as direct and six as indirect. FY 2024 Second Report and Order, 39 FCC Rcd at 10154, para. 20. The Commission further explained that, as was the case prior to reorganization, most of the work of OIA, including the work of the Global Strategies and Negotiation Division, does not benefit a specific fee payor, but rather the government as whole, and is therefore appropriately categorized as indirect. Id. at 10164, para. 43. However, the Commission continued to categorize as direct the FTE work of OIA concerning international bearer circuit issues, including the services provided over submarine cables, determining that there were eight FTEs within OIA whose work was direct on that basis. Id. at 10165, para. 45. In 2025, before reallocations, 49 FTEs in the Space Bureau were categorized as direct, as well as eight FTEs within OIA. See Review of the Commission’s Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2025, MD Docket No. 25-190, Report and Order, 40 FCC Rcd 7557, 7570, para. 35 (2025) (FY 2025 Report and Order), pet. for recon. pending. ). 6. The total amount of the offsetting collection generally changes each fiscal year. This means the regulatory fees due from payors also typically change as a mathematical consequence of the total amount that needs to be collected, the number of FTEs, and the projected unit estimates for each regulatory fee category. Section 9(c)(1)(B) of the Communications Act contemplates such changes to the fee schedule necessary to result in the collection of the amount required by subsection 159(b). 47 U.S.C. § 159(c)(1)(B). For example, if the number of units in a regulatory fee category increase, the amount due per unit may decrease, depending on other factors. This would also include proportionate increases in a given fee category to reflect an overall increase in the annual FY appropriation. It is rare, however, for the Commission to solely propose adjustments under section 9(c). Such changes under section 9(c) of the Communications Act fall under the section 9A(b)(1) congressional notification requirements. 47 U.S.C. §§ 159A(b)(1), 159(c). Since the Communication Act’s explicit language requires that fees must reflect FTEs, FTE counts are the most administrable starting point for regulatory fee allocations, Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2019, Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 34 FCC Rcd 8189, 8193, para. 8 (2019) (FY 2019 Report and Order). and regulatory fees are based on the direct FTEs in core bureaus. Id. at 8192-93, paras. 7-9. Our prior decisions to add to, delete from, or amend the regulatory fee schedule are instructive of the detailed analysis that generally accompanies a change to the FTE allocation as direct or indirect, the attribution of FTEs to a regulatory fee category, and the allocation of fees within a regulatory fee category based on the unit measure adopted. Thus, when considering changes, additions, or deletions to the regulatory fee schedule, we focus on the direct FTE cost burden related to each regulatory fee category within the core licensing bureaus. FY 2021 Report and Order, 36 FCC Rcd at 12999, para. 17. Changes under section 9(d) of the Communications Act fall under the section 9A(b)(2) 90-day notification to Congress. 47 U.S.C. §§ 159A(b)(2), 159(d). 7. FTEs within a bureau are not assigned to specific fee categories “by rote or at random, but rather in a manner that reflects the time spent by FTEs on a regulatory fee category, which is in itself a reflection of ‘benefit’ to the fee category.” Review of the Commission’s Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees, Report and Order and Notice of Inquiry, 37 FCC Rcd 10845, 10847, para. 3 & n. 18 (2022) (FY 2022 Report and Order) (citing Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2007, MD Docket No. 07-81, Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 22 FCC Rcd 15712, 15719, para. 19 (2007) (“Section 9 is clear, however, that regulatory fee assessments are based on the burden imposed on the Commission, not benefits realized by regulatees.”)). We apportion regulatory fees across fee categories based on the number of direct FTEs in each core bureau to take into account factors that are reasonably related to the payors’ benefits. FY 2019 Report and Order, 34 FCC Rcd at 8193, para. 9. Any decrease to the fees paid by one category of regulatory fee payors necessitates an increase in fees paid by other categories of regulatory fee payors, which means regulatory fees are a zero-sum game because the Commission must collect the full amount of its appropriation each fiscal year. Id. at 8195, para. 16. 8. The Commission allocates FTEs according to the nature of the work performed by its different organizational units. If the FTE work directly relates to the oversight and regulation of a regulatory fee category in one of the five core licensing bureaus then those FTEs are considered to be direct FTEs. Id. at 8195, para. 14 (“We have long relied on direct FTE allocations because the Commission has found those allocations best reflect the ‘benefits provided to the payor of the fee by the Commission’s activities.’”) (internal citation omitted); 2012 Regulatory Fee Reform NPRM, 27 FCC Rcd at 8461, para. 8 (“The Commission allocates FTEs according to the nature of the employees’ work. If the work performed by an employee can be assigned to a regulatory fee category in one of the four core licensing bureaus—Wireless Telecommunications, Media, Wireline Competition, and International—that employee’s time is counted as a direct FTE. If the work cannot be assigned to one of the bureau’s designated fee categories, the employee’s time is counted as an indirect FTE.”); FY 2014 Report and Order, 29 FCC Rcd at 10768, para. 2 (explaining the reliance on direct FTEs for purposes of determining regulatory fee calculations). Work that cannot be allocated to one of those regulatory fee categories counts as indirect FTE time. See, e.g., FY 2023 Report and Order, 38 FCC Rcd at 8076, para. 7. 9. Indirect FTE time includes work associated with a wide range of issues regarding services that are not specifically correlated with one core bureau, let alone one specific category of regulatory fee payors.Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2015, MD Docket No. 15-121, Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 30 FCC Rcd 10268, 10275-76, paras. 16-17 (2015) (FY 2015 Report and Order). Many Commission attorneys, economists, engineers, analysts, and other staff perform work during a single fiscal year, which generally benefits the telecommunications industry and the public as opposed to matters that are specific to any regulatory fee category. See FY 2021 Report and Order, 36 FCC Rcd at 13001, para. 22. The Commission has categorized FTE work conducted in the Enforcement, Consumer and Governmental Affairs, and Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureaus along with some of the work in the Wireline Competition Bureau, See supra note 14. the Space Bureau, and the Office of International Affairs The Commission reallocated all the authorities and functions of the (former) International Bureau to the new Space Bureau and a new Office of International Affairs (OIA). The Commission previously reallocated some of the FTEs in the former International Bureau and the Wireline Competition Bureau from direct to indirect for regulatory fee purposes due to the nature of their work assignments. See, e.g., Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2017, Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 32 FCC Rcd 7057, 7061-64, paras. 10-15 (2017) (FY 2017 Report and Order); see also Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Rees for Fiscal Year 2020, Report and Order and Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 35 FCC Rcd 4976, 4991, para. 33 (2020) (FY 2020 NPRM), aff’d, Telesat Canada, et al. v. FCC, 999 F.3d 707 (D.C. Cir. 2021) (Telesat). as well as the work of those in the Office of the Chair and the Commissioners’ Offices and in the Offices of the Managing Director, General Counsel, Inspector General, Communications Business Opportunities, Engineering and Technology, Legislative Affairs, Workplace Diversity, Media Relations, Economics and Analytics, and Administrative Law Judges as indirect for regulatory fee purposes. See, e.g., FY 2021 Report and Order, 36 FCC Rcd at 12994, para. 8; see also FY 2025 Report and Order, 40 FCC Rcd at 7560, para. 6. 10. Following this framework, the Commission assesses the allocation of FTEs by first determining the number of direct non-auctions FTEs in each of the Commission’s core bureaus. See FY 2019 Report and Order, 34 FCC Rcd at 8193, paras. 8-9; FY 2021 Report and Order, 36 FCC Rcd at 12991-92, para. 3. Other factors the Commission takes into consideration include the annual S&E appropriation and the projected unit estimates. Early in each fiscal year, the Human Resources Management office identifies FTEs at the core bureau level. We then validate that data through consultation with the bureaus and offices to determine the number of direct FTEs allocated to each of the five core bureaus. Those numbers are then used to calculate the corresponding percentage of the total amount of regulatory fees to be collected for a given fiscal year from the fee payors of each core bureau. The percentage for each core bureau is the number of direct non-auction FTEs within the core bureau divided by the total number of direct non-auction FTEs in the Commission. 11. This means regulatory fees are initially apportioned across the regulatory fee categories based on the number of direct FTEs in each core bureau whose time is focused on a particular industry segment and then are adjusted “to take into account factors that are reasonably related to the benefits provided to the payor of the fee by the Commission’s activities.” FY 2019 Report and Order, 34 FCC Rcd at 8195, para. 14. Specifically, staff allocates appropriated amounts to be recovered proportionally based on the number of direct FTEs within each core bureau. As a general matter, there is no additional calculation to attribute indirect costs. Instead, the proportional allocation of the whole S&E appropriation based on the number of direct FTEs effectively attributes all indirect costs among the core bureaus so that the Commission can recover its entire appropriation each year. Those proportions are then subdivided and apportioned within each core bureau into fee categories among the regulatees being served based on the time spent on each fee category. Notably, the agency is not required to calculate its costs with “scientific precision.” Central & Southern Motor Freight Tariff Ass’n v. United States, 777 F.2d 722, 736 (D.C. Cir. 1985). Reasonable approximations will suffice. Id.; Mississippi Power & Light v. U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Comm’n, 601 F.2d 223, 232 (5th Cir. 1979); National Cable Television Ass’n v. FCC, 554 F.2d 1094, 1105 (D.C. Cir. 1976). See also FY 2024 Second Report and Order, 39 FCC Rcd at 10159, para. 31. To the extent that changes in FTE direct or indirect allocations impact our determinations of regulatory fee calculations with reasonable certainty for FY 2026, we will explain our actions in the Report and Order as we have done in past with respect to any organizational or FTE reallocations.  For example, the Commission reassigned staff to the Office of Economics and Analytics, effective December 11, 2018, resulting in the reassignment of 95 FTEs (of which 64 were not auctions-funded) as indirect FTEs.  See Establishment of the Office of Economics and Analytics, Order, 33 FCC Rcd 1539 (2018).  This reassignment resulted in a reduction in direct FTEs in the Wireline Competition Bureau, Wireless Telecommunications Bureau, and Media Bureau.  That same year, the Commission reassigned Equal Employment Opportunity enforcement staff from the Media Bureau to the Enforcement Bureau, effective March 15, 2019, resulting in a reduction of seven direct FTEs in the Media Bureau as reflected in the regulatory fee proceeding that year.  See Transfer of EEO Audit and Enforcement Responsibilities to Enforcement Bureau, Public Notice, 34 FCC Rcd 1370 (EB 2019); FY 2019 Report and Order, 34 FCC Rcd at 8194, para. 11.  The organizational changes in the Space Bureau and the Office of International Affairs became effective in the second half of FY 2023 on April 13, 2023, with the increase in direct FTEs in the Space Bureau first reflected in the FY 2024 regulatory fees for space and earth stations. FY 2024 Second Report and Order, 39 FCC Rcd at 10142-43, 10151-52, paras. 2, 16 (implementing for regulatory fee purposes the reallocation of FTEs from the former International Bureau to the Space Bureau and the Office of International Affairs, effective for FY 2024). Finally, within each regulatory fee category, the amount to be collected is divided by a unit count that allocates the regulatory fee payor’s proportionate share based on an objective measure. 12. The FTE time devoted to developing and implementing the Commission’s spectrum auctions is not included in the calculation of regulatory fees and is not offset by the collection of regulatory fees. 47 U.S.C. § 309(j)(8)(B) (providing that “the salaries and expenses account of the Commission shall retain as an offsetting collection such sums as may be necessary from such proceeds for the costs of developing and implementing the program required by this subsection”). Each year, Congress provides a cap on such offsetting collection. FY 2026 Consolidated Appropriations Act (“That, notwithstanding 47 U.S.C. 309(j)(8)(B), proceeds from the use of a competitive bidding system that may be retained and made available for obligation shall not exceed $132,681,000 for fiscal year 2026:”). We are referring to spectrum auctions FTEs when we use the terms “auctions FTEs” and “non-auctions FTEs.” Thus, the Commission’s methodology excludes all spectrum auction-related FTEs and their overhead from the regulatory fee calculations. Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Rees for Fiscal Year 2019, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 34 FCC Rcd 3272, 3276-77, para. 10 (FY 2019 NPRM). To the extent that FTEs within the core bureaus spend a portion of their time on auctions issues and a portion of their time on appropriated issues, their time is split and only the non-auctions portion of their time is reflected in the relevant core bureau’s direct FTE count. See FY 2021 Report and Order, 36 FCC Rcd at 12999-13000, para. 20. 13. In order to collect regulatory fees in the amount required by its annual S&E appropriation, the Commission conducts a rulemaking proceeding each year to consider any necessary increases or decreases in the number of units subject to the payment of such fees and to reflect any adjustments needed to the prior year’s fees schedule. 47 U.S.C. § 159(c). For example, if the number of units in a regulatory fee category increases, the amount due per unit may decrease. This would also include proportionate increases in a given fee category to reflect an overall increase in the annual FY appropriation. Such changes are rarely the subject of dispute and are usually addressed in the more ministerial changes to the fee schedule. The Commission will propose amendments to the fee schedule “if it determines that changes are necessary for the fees to reflect the full-time equivalent number of employees within the bureaus and offices of the Commission, adjusted to take into account factors that are reasonably related to the benefits provided to the payor of the fee by the Commission’s activities.” Id. § 159(d). Pursuant to the Act, the Commission must notify Congress immediately upon adoption of any adjustment. Id. § 159A(b)(1). The Act also requires the Commission to notify Congress at least 90 days prior to making effective any amendments to the regulatory fee schedule. Id. § 159A(b)(2). 14. In implementing our statutory authority, we consider the adoption of a new regulatory fee category or a change in an existing regulatory fee category only when we develop a sufficient basis for making the change, ensuring that our assessment of regulatory fees is fair, administrable, and sustainable. Since 2012, the Commission has had the overarching goals that its regulatory fees be “fair, administrable, and sustainable.” Procedures for Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 27 FCC Rcd 8458, 8464-65, paras. 14-16 (2012) (first proposing the goals and providing explanations for the meaning of “fairness,” “administrability,” and “sustainability”); see also 2020 Application Fee Report and Order, 35 FCC Rcd at 15089-90, 15091-92, paras. 1, 6 & n.11. The concept of administrability includes the difficulty in collecting regulatory fees under a system that could have unpredictable dramatic shifts in assessed fees in certain categories from year to year. Application of our overarching program goals must comport with the language of the statute, and in adopting our fee schedule, we are mindful of other general limits of fee authority. See National Cable Television Ass’n v. United States, 415 U.S. 336, 340-41 (1974) (construing Independent Offices Appropriations Act (IOAA)); see also National Cable Television Ass’n v. FCC, 554 F.2d 1094, 1106 & n.42 (D.C. Cir. 1976). While IOAA no longer applies to the Commission, we remain cognizant of broader legal issues raised by user fee and/or regulatory fee precedent. See House of Representatives Report No. 99-453 (1985) at page 433 (noting the significance of National Cable and explaining that IOAA no longer applies to the Commission with the passage of other specific fee authority, application fees, in COBRA-85). The Commission will adopt new regulatory fee categories and new methodologies for calculating regulatory fees when there is a sufficient basis for doing so based on the record, and under the relevant statutory provisions and precedent. For example, in 2015, after reviewing the issue over several years, the Commission added Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS) as a subcategory of the cable television and Internet Protocol television (IPTV) fee category to the regulatory fee schedule, based on the oversight and regulation of this industry by Media Bureau FTEs. FY 2015 Report and Order, 30 FCC Rcd at 10276-77, paras. 19-20; Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2015, MD Docket No. 15-121, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 30 FCC Rcd 5354, 5358, para. 9 (2015) (FY 2015 NPRM); FY 2013 NPRM, 28 FCC Rcd at 7810-11, paras. 50-52. In the FY 2021 Report and Order, the Commission placed all DBS, cable television, and IPTV providers in the same fee category at the same per subscriber regulatory fee. See FY 2021 Report and Order, 36 FCC Rcd at 13004-05, para. 28. In 2020, the Commission included non-U.S. licensed space stations with U.S. market access grants in the existing “Space Stations” fee category. FY 2020 NPRM, 35 FCC Rcd at 4979-91, paras. 7-34. The Commission concluded that assessing the same regulatory fees on non-U.S. licensed space stations with U.S. market access as assessed on U.S. licensed space stations would better reflect the benefits received by these operators, i.e., the adjudicatory, enforcement, regulatory, and international coordination activities by the Commission’s FTEs in the International Bureau. Id. at 4980-81, paras. 10-11. On appeal, the D.C. Circuit upheld the Commission’s decision in Telesat, noting that “[i]t is undeniable that foreign satellites and their operators do benefit from the Commission’s regulation in much the same way as their U.S.-licensed counterparts” and the Commission “reviews petitions for market access by foreign-licensed satellites to ensure legal compliance with this carefully coordinated system” for all U.S. market participants. Telesat, 999 F.3d at 711. In particular, the D.C. Circuit noted that the Commission “devotes significant resources” to processing petitions from non-U.S. licensed space stations to access the U.S. market; that non-U.S. licensed space stations “benefit from the Commission’s oversight and regulation in the same manner” as U.S. licensed space stations; and that processing a petition from a non-U.S. licensed space station operator “requires evaluation of the same legal and technical information as required of U.S. licensed applicants.” Id. at 710-12. III. NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULEMAKING 15. In this NPRM, we propose to adopt a schedule of regulatory fees to be assessed and collected for FY 2026 and seek comment on those proposals as set forth in Appendices A and B. In this NPRM, we propose regulatory fee rates in Appendices A and B herein, based on our existing methodology. As discussed below, we propose to increase the number of FTEs that are allocated directly to the core licensing bureaus for FY 2026 based upon the determination that the burden of the FTE work is sufficiently linked to the oversight and regulation of certain regulatory fee payors. In particular, we propose to reallocate a total of 59 indirect FTEs as direct FTEs to the Commission’s core licensing bureaus from certain bureaus and offices, while we propose to allocate no such FTE work as direct from others as the Commission has done in the past. See Review of the Commission’s Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2025, MD Docket No. 24-86, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 40 FCC Rcd 4467, 4479, paras. 26-27 (2025) (FY 2025 NPRM). We also seek comment on our proposal to continue to calculate television broadcaster regulatory fees using the Commission’s methodology of population-based full-service broadcast television regulatory fees and whether to use a different data source for our assessment of fees on CMRS providers. A. Assessment of Regulatory Fees 1. Methodology for Assessing Regulatory Fees 16. For FY 2026, we propose to assess and collect $416,112,000 in regulatory fees, which is equal to our annual salaries and expenses (S&E) FY 2026 appropriation. See supra note 2. Section 9 of the Communications Act requires us to set regulatory fees to “reflect the full-time equivalent number of employees within the bureaus and offices of the Commission adjusted to take into account factors that are reasonably related to the benefits provided to the payor of the fee by the Commission’s activities.” 47 U.S.C. § 159(d). Our first step in establishing our regulatory fee schedule is identifying changes from the prior fiscal year regulatory fee proceeding, e.g., changes in the (i) FY S&E appropriation, (ii) FTE levels, and (iii) relevant unit measures for each regulatory fee category. Our second step is to identify the number of direct non-auction FTEs in each core bureau for purposes of the regulatory fee calculation. The remaining non-auction FTEs and other Commission costs are considered indirect. See supra note 33. After we determine the number of direct FTEs for each core bureau, we calculate the percentage of regulatory fees that we will need to collect for the given fiscal year from each regulatory fee category within each core bureau. These proportional calculations allocate all Commission non-auction related costs across all regulatory fee categories. 2. FTE Reallocations 17. Using the Commission’s long-standing methodology to assess regulatory fees, staff conducted a high-level analysis of the time utilized in the oversight and regulation of certain segments of the telecommunications industry to propose regulatory fees for FY 2026, which reflect the full-time equivalent number of employees within the Commission’s bureaus and offices, adjusted to take into account factors that are reasonably related to the benefits provided to the payor of the fee by the Commission’s activities. Our proposals to reallocate certain indirect FTEs as direct to one of the Commission’s core bureaus reflect our conclusion that we can determine, with reasonable accuracy for this fiscal year, that certain FTE time from the Office of General Counsel, the Office of Economics and Analytics, and the Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau is devoted to work that is sufficiently linked to the oversight and regulation of regulatory fee payors such that the FTE burden of that work should be allocated as direct to a core bureau for regulatory fee purposes. See, e.g., FY 2023 Report and Order, 38 FCC Rcd at 8080-81, para. 21; FY 2024 Second Report and Order, 39 FCC Rcd at 10151-52, paras. 14-16. As the Commission has explained, it will continue to evaluate whether any FTEs should be reallocated for regulatory fee purposes each year when reviewing and validating the FTE data. The Commission, however, will exercise its discretion regarding where to focus its analytical efforts each year to best respond to changes in the Commission’s substantive work and organization, and changes in the telecommunications industry itself. FY 2023 Report and Order, 38 FCC Rcd at 8080, para. 19; see also Review of the Commission’s Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees; Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2024, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 39 FCC Rcd 7173, 7181-82, para. 15 (FY 2024 NPRM). Thus, the Commission ensures it conducts its annual review in a manner that is fair, administrable, and sustainable. 18. Any commenter seeking a change or modification to our proposed methodology for FY 2026 should include a thorough analysis showing a sufficient basis for making the change and provide alternative options for the Commission to meet its statutory obligation to collect the full amount of the appropriation by the end of the fiscal year. Commenters should also explain how their proposal is fair, administrable, and sustainable. 3. Adjustment of Reallocations of Certain Indirect FTEs as Direct FTEs 19. According to information provided by our Human Resources Management office, at the start of FY 2026, there were 317.5 direct non-auctions FTEs distributed among the core licensing bureaus. With respect to the FTE time in the non-core bureaus and offices, as we have done in prior years, staff has undertaken a high-level, yet comprehensive analysis of the work being performed by non-auctions FTEs in the Office of Economics and Analytics, Office of General Counsel, and the Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau, as well as the Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau, the Enforcement Bureau, and the Office of Engineering and Technology (and other bureaus and offices) to determine if identifiable FTE time in those organizational units is related to the oversight and regulation of fee payors such that it should be taken into consideration in applying our fee methodology. In other words, staff has examined and validated the data to determine the proposals regarding whether any FTE time in the non-core bureaus and offices should be reallocated to be considered as direct FTE time to a core bureau. 20. The Commission has previously concluded that the majority of FTE work being performed in the non-core bureaus and offices should be categorized as indirect because it benefits the Commission and the entire telecommunications industry generally and does not specifically focus on regulatory fee payors. FY 2023 Report and Order, 38 FCC Rcd at 8092-99, paras. 57-76; see also FY 2025 Report and Order, 40 FCC Rcd at 7567-68, para. 25. We do not revisit this general determination on an annual basis because doing so is not administrable as it would require the Commission to expend considerable resources to attempt to calculate the constantly shifting work of its FTEs within these organizational units. We nonetheless acknowledge that our consideration of whether the work of our FTEs is direct or indirect can change over time based on the priority of the Commission’s work assignments, fluctuations within industry segments, and needs of specific regulatory fee payors. After analyzing the data for FY 2026, we tentatively conclude that the FTE burden associated with the majority of the work in the Commission’s non-core bureaus and offices remains indirect because it cannot be attributed to specific categories of fee payors and it broadly benefits the Commission, the entire communications industry, and the general public. 21. Nevertheless, as the Commission has found in the past three fiscal years, the data for FY 2026 do support a conclusion that some measurable time is being spent by FTEs in the Office of Economics and Analytics, the Office of General Counsel and the Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau that is directly in furtherance of the oversight and regulation of regulatory fee payors in certain industry segments such that it should be reallocated to a core bureau. See, e.g., FY 2023 Report and Order, 38 FCC Rcd at 8081-87, paras. 24-46. We therefore propose to reallocate 61 FTEs from the Office of Economics and Analytics, the Office of General Counsel, and the Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau as direct FTEs to core bureaus because the nature of their work has been determined to be primarily related to the oversight and regulation of fee payors. See FY 2023 Report and Order, 38 FCC Rcd at 8081-83, paras. 24-30 (discussion of these OEA FTEs). The proposals in this proceeding do not alter the functions of and delegation of authority to OEA. 47 CFR §§ 0.21 (OEA functions); 0.271 (OEA delegation); FY 2022 Report and Order, 37 FCC Rcd at 10849, 10856, paras. 6 and 20 (noting the FTE allocation of OGC); see also FY 2023 Report and Order, 38 FCC Rcd at 8083-84, paras. 31-34 (discussion of these OGC FTEs). Similarly, the proposals in this proceeding do not alter the functions of and delegation of authority to OGC. 47 CFR §§ 0.41 (OGC functions); 0.251 (OGC delegation); FY 2023 Report and Order, 38 FCC Rcd at 8084-87, paras. 35-46 (discussion of these PSHSB FTEs). Nor do the proposals in this proceeding alter the functions of and delegation of authority to PSHSB. 47 CFR §§ 0.191 (PSHSB functions); 0.392 (PSHSB delegation). Specifically, for FY 2026, we propose reallocating 31 FTEs from the Office of Economics and Analytics as direct to a core bureau for regulatory fee purposes as follows: three to the Space Bureau, one to the Office of International Affairs, eight to the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau, 17 to the Wireline Competition Bureau, and two to the Media Bureau. FY 2024 Second Report and Order, 39 FCC Rcd at 10152-53, para. 17 & n.72. Similarly, we propose reallocating three FTEs from the Office of General Counsel as direct FTEs to a core bureaus follows: one to the Wireline Competition Bureau, one to the Space Bureau, In FY 2024, there was no FTE time from OGC reallocated to the Space Bureau because the Commission found that such FTE time devoted to former International Bureau issues was focused on Office of International Affairs matters that are indirect, rather than issues pertaining to regulatory fee payors and, similar to this year and years past, the Commission does not reallocate as a direct FTE if the indirect FTE time at issue is less than a full FTE. Id. and one to the Media Bureau. Id. at 10152-53, para. 17. Likewise, we propose reallocating 27 FTEs in the Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau as direct to a core bureau as follows: 13 to the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau, eight to the Wireline Competition Bureau, and six to the Media Bureau. We note that the reallocations the Commission makes in its annual rulemaking are not cumulative but rather reflect changes in the underlying number of FTEs in the non-core bureaus and/or changes in the amount of work performed by the non-core bureaus for this fiscal year. We seek comment on these proposed reallocations. 22. Additionally, consistent with the Commission’s past practice, we propose reallocating two FTEs from the Media Bureau as indirect FTEs because the nature of their work is similar to work performed in the Enforcement Bureau, which we consider to be indirect. See, e.g., FY 2023 Report and Order, 38 FCC Rcd at 8096, para. 70. These reallocations result in an overall proposed increase of 59 FTEs being reallocated as direct FTEs to core bureaus. 23. Our proposals to reallocate FTEs for FY 2026 rely on staff’s validation of the data and the same analysis employed in the last three fiscal years evaluating whether measurable FTE time is primarily being spent on the regulation and oversight of regulatory fee payors such that it should be considered as direct to a core bureau. See, e.g., FY 2024 Second Report and Order, 39 FCC Rcd at 10151, para. 15. Specifically, where the amount of work under consideration equaled .5 FTE or less, we rounded down to the nearest whole FTE and only proposed our reallocations in one full FTE increments. Review of the Commission’s Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2024, MD Docket No. 24-86, Second Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 39 FCC Rcd 7173, 7188, para. 29 n.91 (2024) (FY 2024 NPRM). In analyzing the work of indirect FTEs in the non-core bureaus, we applied conservative estimates. Review of the Commission’s Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees, Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2023, MD Docket Nos. 22-301 and 23-159, Report and Order and Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 38 FCC Rcd 4580, 4591 n.58 (FY 2023 NPRM); FY 2024 Second Report and Order, 39 FCC Rcd at 10152-53, para. 17. The Commission previously concluded that less than a full-time FTE demonstrates that the work being done is appropriately considered to be indirect and should not be reassigned. FY 2023 NPRM, 38 FCC Rcd at 4591 n.58; FY 2024 Second Report and Order 39 FCC Rcd at 10152-53, para. 17. 24. As represented below, FTE time associated with the proposed reallocations would be added to the direct FTE totals of the relevant core bureau. In other words, these reallocations would increase the number of direct FTEs in a core bureau and reduce the total number of indirect FTEs within the Commission. Because our underlying methodology for calculating regulatory fees remains unchanged, we tentatively conclude that our regulatory fee calculation continues to be consistent with section 9 of the Communications Act, which requires us to base our methodology on the number of FTEs in calculating regulatory fees. 47 U.S.C. § 159(d) (“[T]he Commission shall by rule amend the schedule of regulatory fees established under this section if the Commission determines that the schedule requires amendment so that such fees reflect the full-time equivalent number of employees within the bureaus and offices of the Commission, adjusted to take into account factors that are reasonably related to the benefits provided to the payor of the fee by the Commission’s activities.”). We seek comment on this conclusion. 25. The table below shows the percentage of regulatory fees allocated to each core bureau based on the proposed reallocation of a total of 59 FTEs as direct to a core bureau. Our proposed reallocations result in an 18.58% increase in our overall direct FTE count for the fiscal year. These reallocations would be proportionally distributed within the core bureau. We seek comment on these reallocations for FY 2026 in Appendices A and B, which are based on our existing methodology and incorporate these proposals. CORE BUREAU DIRECT FTEs AND PERCENTAGES FOR FY 2025 AND FY 2026 WITH REALLOCATIONS OF INDIRECT FTEs Core Bureau/Office FY 2025 FTE Reallocations Total # of Direct FY 2025 FTEs With FTE Reallocations FY 2025 % After Reallocation Total # of Direct FY 2026 FTEs Without FTE Reallocations FY 2026 FTE Reallocations Total # of Direct FY 2026 FTEs With Proposed FTE Reallocations FY 2026 % After Proposed Reallocations Office of International Affairs (Submarine Cable and International Bearer Circuits) 0 8 1.80% 8 +1 from OEA +0 from OGC Total additional FTEs +1 9 2.40% Space Bureau (Space and Earth Stations) +1 from OEA +1 from OGC Total additional FTEs +2 51 11.50% 44 +3 from OEA +1 from OGC Total additional FTEs +4 48 12.80% Wireless Telecommunications Bureau  +8 from OEA +1 from OGC +14 from PSHSB Total additional FTEs +23 120 27.06% 81 +8 from OEA +0 from OGC +13 from PSHSB Total additional FTEs +21 102 27.20% Wireline Competition Bureau  +13 from OEA +1 from OGC +9 from PSHSB Total additional FTEs +23 132.5 29.88% 81.5 +17 from OEA +1 from OGC +8 from PSHSB Total additional FTEs +26 107.5 28.67% Media Bureau  +7 from OEA +1 from OGC +7 from PSHSB -2 from MB Reallocated as Indirect Total additional FTEs +13 134 29.76% 103 +2 from OEA +1 from OGC +6 from PSHSB -2 from MB Reallocated as Indirect Total additional FTEs +7 110 28.93% Total 61 445.50 100% 317.50 59 376.50 100% 26. As reflected in the table above, based on these proposed reallocations and after adjustments are made to the direct FTE counts to implement Commission precedent, See, e.g., supra note 14. we would have a total of 376.5 non-auctions direct FTEs for FY 2026. Accordingly, as shown in the table below, we would propose to collect approximately $9.988 million (2.40%) in fees from the Office of International Affairs regulatory fee payors; $53.267 million (12.80%) in fees from the Space Bureau regulatory fee payors; $113.192 million (27.20%) in fees from Wireless Telecommunications Bureau regulatory fee payors; $119.296 million (28.67%%) in fees from Wireline Competition Bureau regulatory fee payors; and $120.369 million (28.93%) in fees from Media Bureau regulatory fee payors. CORE BUREAU FTE PERCENTAGES AND AMOUNTS FOR FY 2025 AND FY 2026 WITH PROPOSED FTE REALLOCATION ADJUSTMENTS Core Bureau FY 2025 FTE% With FTE Reallocations FY 2025 Amount With FTE Reallocations (Millions) FY 2026 Proposed FTE % With Adjusted FTE Reallocations FY 2026 Proposed Amount With FTE Reallocations (Millions) FY 2025 Appropriation was $390.192 FY 2026 Appropriation is $416.112 Wireline Bureau 29.88% $116.580 28.67% $119.296 Media Bureau 29.76% $116.119 28.93% $120.369 Media Bureau; subcategory Broadcasters 13.14% $51.286 12.80% $53.243 Media Bureau; subcategory Cable 16.62% $64.833 16.13% $67.126 Wireless Bureau 27.06% $105.582 27.20% $113.192 Office of International Affairs 1.80% $7.039 2.40% $9.988 Space Bureau 11.50% $44.872 12.80% $53.267 27. Any proposals or comments requesting a change or modification to these proposed regulatory fees for FY 2026 should include a thorough analysis showing a sufficient basis for making the change and should provide alternative options for the Commission to meet its statutory obligation to collect the full amount of the appropriation by the end of the fiscal year. Commenters should also indicate how such proposed alternative options are fair, administrable, and sustainable. 28. While above we have proposed reallocating some FTEs from the Office of Economics and Analytics, the Office of General Counsel, and the Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau as direct to a core bureau, to date, our analysis of the work of FTEs in the Office of Engineering and Technology, Enforcement Bureau, and Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau has not justified similar reallocations. In prior orders, the Commission has continually reached this conclusion, and we are aware of nothing specific in FY 2026 that would support a different approach. For example, in previously examining the work of FTEs in the Office of Engineering and Technology, the Commission has repeatedly explained that the office provides engineering and technical expertise to the agency as a whole and supports each of the agency’s core bureaus. FY 2023 Report and Order, 38 FCC Rcd at 8092-93, paras. 58-60; see also FY 2025 Report and Order, 40 FCC Rcd at 7567-68, para. 25. Likewise, the Commission has long concluded that Enforcement Bureau oversight is focused on the integrity of Commission’s rules and ensuring the implementation of the Communications Act, which is FTE work that benefits the agency as a whole and directly benefits the American public, and not one particular group of regulatory fee payors. FY 2023 Report and Order, 38 FCC Rcd at 8093-96, paras. 61-69; see also FY 2025 Report and Order, 40 FCC Rcd at 7567-68, para. 25. Similarly, in prior evaluations of the work of FTEs in the Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau, the Commission has observed that the bureau is primarily devoted to developing and implementing consumer policies as required by the Communications Act, including disability rights, consumer education, processing informal complaints, outreach to state, local, and Tribal governments, and oversight more generally of the telecommunications industry (e.g., establishing and oversight of the Reassigned Numbers Database). FY 2023 Report and Order, 38 FCC Rcd at at 8096, para. 71; see also FY 2025 Report and Order, 40 FCC Rcd at 7567-68, para. 25. In sum, historically, the Commission has found it would not be equitable for any one regulatory fee group of payors to shoulder the FTE burden of such work. FY 2023 Report and Order, 38 FCC Rcd at 8092-99, paras. 57-76; see also FY 2025 Report and Order, 40 FCC Rcd at 7567-68, para. 25. 29. In the FY 2023 Report and Order, the Commission explained that, as part of its annual FTE analysis, it will continue to evaluate whether any FTEs should be reallocated for regulatory fee purposes when reviewing and validating the FTE data, but it noted that in doing so, it will exercise its discretion regarding where to focus its analytical efforts each year in order to best respond to changes in the Commission’s substantive work and organization, and changes in the telecommunications industry itself. FY 2023 Report and Order, 38 FCC Rcd at 8080, para. 19. The Commission therefore indicated that where its analysis merits inclusion of proposed reallocations, it will seek comment on any such potential reallocation of FTEs in an annual proceeding. Id. In other words, consistent with our existing methodology, we will reevaluate the nature of work performed within the non-core bureaus and offices if there is a reasoned basis to determine that measurable FTE work is being done within an organizational unit that should be reallocated to be direct to an identifiable category of fee payors. See, e.g., id. at 8081, para. 23; see also FY 2025 Report and Order, 40 FCC Rcd at 7566-67, paras. 22-23. 30. We invite commenters to offer any new or current reasons why the Commission should reexamine the nature of the work being performed by FTEs in its non-core bureaus and offices. For instance, have there been any significant developments in the communications industry, changes in law, and/or substantial shifts in Commission policy and workload over the past year that suggest that there would now be measurable FTE work being performed in the Office of Engineering and Technology, Enforcement Bureau, or Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau that directly benefits a specific category of fee payors? In particular, have there been changes in any industry segment or any increases in the specific work performed by staff of the Commission that necessitate a reevaluation of our general determination that the work being performed by FTEs within these organizational units remains indirect? Are there any significant rulemakings or adjudications involving the FTEs from the Office of Engineering and Technology, Enforcement Bureau, or Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau that might warrant further examination of whether there is measurable FTE work in these organizational units being devoted directly in furtherance of the oversight and regulation of specific fee payors? Have there been substantial changes such that the Commission’s previously articulated policy reasons for treating these FTEs as indirect no longer hold? How can we ensure that the nature of any such identified work would remain consistent throughout the fiscal year, and that any recategorization of FTE work from indirect to direct would adhere to our statutory requirements and be consistent with our goal of a regulatory fee system that is fair, administrable and sustainable? In the absence of changes in fact or law, we request that commenters refrain from filing comments advancing repetitious arguments advocating for new categories of fee payors that have previously been declined by the Commission. See, e.g., FY 2025 Report and Order, 40 FCC Rcd at 7575-84, paras. 44-68. B. Broadcast Television Stations 31. For FY 2026, we also propose to continue to assess fees for full-power broadcast television stations based on the population covered by a full-service broadcast television station’s contour as the Commission has since 2020. FY 2020 Report and Order, 36 FCC Rcd at 1738, para. 19. Previously, from approximately 1995 through 2018, regulatory fees for full-power television stations were based on the Nielsen Designated Market Area (DMA) groupings 1-10, 11-25, 26-50, 51-100, and remaining markets (DMAs 101-210). The population-based methodology conforms with the service authorized here—broadcasting television to the American people. We further propose to continue our use of 2020 U.S. Census data to assess fees for full-power broadcast television stations, as we traditionally have over the last few years. See id. at 1738-39, paras. 20-21 (adjusting the fees for Puerto Rico broadcasters). The population data for broadcasters’ service areas are determined using the TVStudy software and the Licensing and Management System (LMS) database, based on a station’s projected noise-limited service contour. 47 CFR § 73.622. TVStudy software is released by the Commission’s Office of Engineering and Technology. TVStudy uses 2020 U.S. Census data and interfaces with data contained in the LMS to perform coverage and interference analyses of full service digital and Class A television stations. See generally https://www.fcc.gov/oet/tvstudy#:~:text=Engineering%20%26%20Technology,-TVStudy%20FAQ&text=The%20FCC's%20Office%20of%20Engineering,and%20Class%20A%20television%20stations. However, consistent with the Commission’s prior decisions, we will continue to base assessments on limiting the population count of full-power television stations that rely on satellite television stations to reach terrain-limited areas in Puerto Rico. As previously implemented, the Commission based assessments on a full-power television station and its satellite facility on a maximum of 3.1 million population. Hence, the maximum fee amount that will be paid by a full-power TV station and its associated satellite facility together is 3.1 million times 0.006957 (the fee rate ) = $21,567. See FY 2020 Report and Order, 36 FCC Rcd at 1738-39, paras. 20-21; FY 2024 Second Report and Order, 39 FCC Rcd at 10155-56, para. 24. We seek comment on our mechanism for how we will calculate the regulatory fee based on the previously decided population-based methodology. In the FY 2018 Report and Order, the Commission adopted a new methodology for assessing regulatory fees for full-service broadcast stations. The Commission determined that it would fully transition to assessing regulatory fees for full-service television broadcast stations based on the population covered by the station’s contour by FY 2020 and, in the interim, for FY 2019, adopted a blended fee based partly on the historical DMA methodology and partly on the new population-based methodology. See Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2018, MD Docket No. 18-175, Report and Order and Order, 33 FCC Rcd 8497, 8501-02, para. 14 (2018) (FY 2018 Report and Order). We propose adopting a factor of $.006957 per population served for the FY 2026 full-power broadcast television station fee. The factor of $.006957 was derived by taking the revenue amount required from the full-power broadcast television station fee category and dividing it by the total population count of all “feeable” call signs. The population data for each licensee and the population-based fee (population multiplied by $.006957 for each full-power broadcast television station) For those VHF stations whose power had to be increased to obtain a clearer signal, the Commission will continue to use a population count based on that station’s lower VHF power level rather than at the increased power level. are listed in Appendix F. We seek comment on these proposed fees. C. CMRS and Mobile Services Assessments 32. Pursuant to statute, the Commission’s regulatory fee assessments are keyed to the FTE burden associated with the oversight and regulation of its regulatory fee payors. For each regulatory fee payor category, the Commission must have a mechanism to apportion the fee within a category. For some payors, the unit measure is per license; for other payors, it is per subscriber or it relates to population served. See paragraphs 41-50 infra describing the unit measure for each category and note 74 supra for full power broadcast television stations. Since FY 2004, the Commission has used a unit measure methodology of assessing regulatory fees for CMRS providers based on the count of “assigned numbers” For purposes of the NRUF filing requirement, “[a]ssigned numbers” are defined as “numbers working in the Public Switched Telephone Network under an agreement such as a contract or tariff at the request of specific end users or customers for their use, or numbers not yet working but having a customer service order pending [for five days or fewer].” 47 CFR § 52.15(f)(1)(iii). reported in providers’ biannual Numbering Resource Utilization Forecast (NRUF) filings, with such data serving as a proxy for a provider’s subscriber count. See Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2004, MD Docket No. 04-73, Report and Order, 19 FCC Rcd 11662, 11675, para. 47 (2004). The NRUF filings are FCC Form 502, which is collected by the North American Numbering Plan Administer (NANPA). See FCC, Forms, https://www.fcc.gov/licensing-databases/forms; NANPA, NRUF, Requirements to File, https://www.nanpa.com/nruf/requirements-file (last visited March 18, 2026). Providers need to file FCC Form 502 if they “are a carrier and have received numbers from the North American Numbering Plan Administrator (NANPA), a Pooling Administrator, or another telecommunications carrier. However, subscriber toll-free numbers are not subject to being reported. Filers include incumbent local exchange carriers (ILECs), competitive local exchange carriers (CLECs), 500 service providers, paging companies, wireless telephony carriers, shared tenant service providers, satellite service providers, and resellers of these services.” FCC, Common Carrier Filing Requirements—Information for Firms Providing Telecommunications Services, https://www.fcc.gov/reports-research/guides/common-carrier-filing-requirements-information-firms-providing-telecommunications-services (last visited Mar. 18, 2026) (discussing FCC Form 502). 33. Given the passage of time and new data collections adopted and implemented by the Commission that also provide the Commission with visibility into CMRS providers’ subscriber counts, we seek comment on whether using a different unit measure to apportion regulatory fees for CMRS providers would better reflect the FTE burden of oversight of such fee payors. Would another source of data result in a unit measure for CMRS providers that would better achieve our goal that all aspects of our regulatory fee methodology be fair, sustainable, and administrable? For instance, would using mobile subscription data that service providers are required to submit into the Broadband Data Collection (BDC) system Providers of mobile services, among others, must submit subscription data required under FCC Form 477 into the BDC system. See Establishing the Digital Opportunity Data Collection; Modernizing the FCC Form 477 Data Program, WC Docket Nos. 19-195 and 11-10, Order, 37 FCC Rcd 14957, para. 1 (2022) (explaining that the Commission “will continue to collect broadband and voice subscription data using the FCC Form 477, but filers will submit their data through the BDC system”). to determine CMRS unit counts for regulatory fee purposes be administratively easier for both the Commission and fee payors? Would using another source of data like the BDC lead to a more accurate outcome? Keeping in mind our statutory obligation to amend the fee schedule with factors that are reasonably related to the benefit of the payor of the fee 47 U.S.C. § 159(d). and our policy goal of ensuring that our regulatory fees are fair, administrable, and sustainable, what are the tradeoffs in using one data source over another? For the purposes of the Commission’s ability to determine most accurately a CMRS provider’s unit counts for the assessment of regulatory fees, are there discernable variances between the Commission’s data sources that make one fairer than another? We ask commenters to provide detailed comments regarding why one data source may provide a superior basis than the other for the purposes of assessing CMRS regulatory fees. 34. To the extent we adopt a change to the data used to assess regulatory fees for this category of fee payors, any such changes would not be implemented until FY 2027 to allow fee payors the opportunity to prepare for the change and also to comply with relevant congressional notification requirements. 47 U.S.C. § 159A(b)(1)-(2). D. Improving the Regulatory Fee Process 35. As part of the Commission’s statutory obligation to assess and collect regulatory fees each fiscal year in an amount equal to its annual S&E appropriation, 47 U.S.C. § 159(a), (b); supra note 2. the Commission strives to consider ways in which it can improve the regulatory fee process. As explained herein, our meticulous approach to making changes to our process and methodology ensures that our actions in assessing regulatory fees are fair, administrable, and sustainable. Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2020, Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2019, Report and Order and Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 35 FCC Rcd 4976, 4979-80, para. 8 (2020). For instance, the Commission added a new fee category to the regulatory fee schedule in 2020 when the Commission added non-U.S. licensed space stations with U.S. market access grants to the regulatory fee schedule. FY 2020 NPRM, 35 FCC Rcd at 4979-91, paras. 7-34. Prior to that, in 2017, the Commission added non-common carrier terrestrial IBCs to the regulatory fee schedule, in order to include both common carrier and non-common carrier terrestrial IBCs in the schedule. FY 2017 Report and Order, 32 FCC Rcd at 7071-72, paras. 34-35. In 2015, the Commission added a new fee category for DBS as a subcategory of the cable television and IPTV fee category, based on the oversight and regulation of this industry by Media Bureau FTEs. FY 2015 Report and Order, 30 FCC Rcd at 10276-77, paras. 19-20. Subsequently, the Commission placed all DBS, cable television, and IPTV providers in the same fee category at the same per subscriber regulatory fee. FY 2021 Report and Order, 36 FCC Rcd at 13004-05, para. 28. In 2014, the Commission adopted a new regulatory fee category for toll-free numbers because FTEs, primarily in the Wireline Competition Bureau, are devoted to toll-free number oversight and regulation. FY 2014 Report and Order, 29 FCC Rcd at 10778, paras. 26-27. In 2013, the Commission broadened the cable television category to include IPTV providers. FY 2013 Report and Order, 28 FCC Rcd at 12362-63, paras. 32-33. For FY 2026, we again invite comment “on ways to improve our regulatory fee process.” FY 2025 NPRM, 40 FCC Rcd at 4485, para. 41; see also, e.g., FY 2024 NPRM, 39 FCC Rcd at 7199, para. 53; FY 2023 NPRM, 38 FCC Rcd at 4619, para. 95; Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2021; Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for FY 2022, MD Docket Nos. 21-190 and 22-223, Report and Order and Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 37 FCC Rcd 7003, 7025, para. 53 (2022); FY 2021 Report and Order, 36 FCC Rcd at 13026, para. 73. Commenters should be mindful of the Commission’s prior conclusions with respect to past proposals and fully explain the legal bases for any proposals they make and how such proposals fit within the Commission’s statutory authority, precedent, and existing regulatory fee methodology. 36. Specifically, for the last several years, the Commission has rejected proposals for new fee categories offered by commenters because they have failed to satisfy the fair, administrable, and sustainable standard. See, e.g., FY 2025 Report and Order, 40 FCC Rcd at 7575-84, paras. 44-68. In implementing our section 9 authority, we consider the adoption of a new regulatory fee category or a change in an existing regulatory fee category only when we develop a sufficient basis for making the change, and we work to ensure that all changes serve the goal of ensuring that our assessment of regulatory fees is fair, administrable, and sustainable. See Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2013, MD Docket Nos. 12-201, 13-58, and 08-65, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 28 FCC Rcd 7790, 7798-7807, paras. 17-40 (2013); FY 2012 Regulatory Fee Reform NPRM, 27 FCC Rcd at 8464-65, paras. 14-16; see also supra note 41. After reviewing the FTE data for this fiscal year and the expected work of those FTEs, we tentatively conclude that there is no basis upon which to propose new fee categories. Commenters that disagree with this tentative conclusion should provide detailed evidence of materially changed circumstances, rather than reiterate arguments that the Commission has historically declined to adopt. IV. PROCEDURAL MATTERS 37. Included below are procedural items as well as our current payment and collection methods. We include these payments and collection procedures to remind regulatory fee payers and the public about these aspects of the annual regulatory fee collection process. 38. Credit Card Transaction Levels. In accordance with Treasury Financial Manual, Volume I, Part 5, Chapter 7000, Section 7065.20a—Credit Card Collections, the total daily credit card transactions processed from a single customer can be no more than $24,999.99 (hereinafter the “Maximum Daily Limit”) and the total monthly transactions processed from a single customer (based on a rolling 30-day period) can be no more than $100,000.00 (hereinafter the “Maximum Monthly Limit”). See Bureau of the Fiscal Service, Treasury Financial Manual, https://tfx.treasury.gov/tfm/volume1 (Treasury Financial Manual) (last visited Mar. 12, 2026). Customers who owe an amount on a bill, debt, or other obligation due to the federal government are prohibited from splitting the total amount due into multiple payments. Splitting an amount owed into several payment transactions violates the credit card network and Fiscal Service rules. An amount owed that exceeds the Maximum Daily Limit, $24,999.99, may not be split into two or more payment transactions in the same day by using one or multiple cards. Transactions greater than the Maximum Limits will be rejected. If a customer initiates multiple transactions on the same day with the same credit card, those transactions causing the total charge to exceed the Maximum Limits will also be rejected. This applies to single payments or bundled payments of more than one bill. Multiple transactions to a single agency in one day may be aggregated and treated as a single transaction subject to the $24,999.99 limit. Customers who wish to pay an amount greater than $24,999.99 should consider available electronic alternatives such as debit cards, Automated Clearing House (ACH) debits from a bank account, and wire transfers. Each of these payment options is available after filing regulatory fee information in the Commission’s Registration System (CORES). Further details will be provided regarding payment methods and procedures at the time of FY 2026 regulatory fee collection in Fact Sheets, https://www.fcc.gov/regfees. 39. Payment Methods. During the fee season for collecting regulatory fees, regulatees can pay their fees by credit card through Pay.gov, ACH, debit card, or by wire transfer. Additional payment instructions are posted on the Commission’s website at https://www.fcc.gov/licensing-databases/fees. The receiving bank for all wire payments is the U.S. Treasury, New York, NY (TREAS NYC). Any other form of payment (e.g., checks, cashier’s checks, or money orders) will be rejected. For payments by wire, an FCC Form 159-E should still be transmitted via fax so that the Commission can associate the wire payment with the correct regulatory fee information. The fax should be sent to the Commission at (202) 418-2843 at least one hour before initiating the wire transfer (but on the same business day) so as not to delay crediting their account. Regulatees should discuss arrangements (including bank closing schedules) with their bankers several days before they plan to make the wire transfer to allow sufficient time for the transfer to be initiated and completed before the deadline. Complete instructions for making wire payments are posted at https://www.fcc.gov/licensing-databases/fees/wire-transfer. 40. Standard Fee Calculations and Payment Dates. The Commission will accept fee payments made in advance of the window for the payment of regulatory fees. The responsibility for payment of fees by service category is as follows: 41. Media Services: Regulatory fees must be paid for initial construction permits that were granted on or before October 1, 2025 for AM/FM radio stations, full-power VHF/UHF broadcast television stations, and satellite television stations. Regulatory fees must be paid for all broadcast facility licenses granted on or before October 1, 2025. If a station had both an initial construction permit and a license granted on or before October 1, 2025, the station needs to pay only the regulatory fee for the broadcast facility license. 42. Wireline (Common Carrier) Services: Regulatory fees must be paid for authorizations that were granted on or before October 1, 2025. In instances where an authorization is transferred or assigned after October 1, 2025, responsibility for payment rests with the holder of the authorization as of the fee due date. Audio bridging service providers are included in this category. Audio bridging services are toll teleconferencing services. For Responsible Organizations (RespOrgs) that manage Toll Free Numbers (TFN), regulatory fees should be paid on all working, assigned, and reserved toll free numbers as well as toll free numbers in any other status as defined in section 52.103 of the Commission’s rules. 47 CFR § 52.103. The unit count should be based on toll free numbers managed by RespOrgs on or about December 31, 2025. 43. Wireless Services, Commercial Mobile Radio Service (CMRS) cellular, mobile, and messaging services (fees based on number of subscribers or telephone number count): Regulatory fees must be paid for authorizations that were granted on or before October 1, 2025. The number of subscribers, units, or telephone numbers on December 31, 2025 will be used as the basis from which to calculate the fee payment. In instances where a permit or license is transferred or assigned after October 1, 2025, responsibility for payment rests with the holder of the permit or license as of the fee due date. 44. Wireless Services, Multi-year fees: The first eight regulatory fee categories in our Schedule of Regulatory Fees (first seven in our Calculation of Fees Appendix) pay “small multi-year wireless regulatory fees.” These multiyear licenses are for PLMRS (exclusive), PLMRS (shared), Microwave, Marine (ship), Aviation (aircraft), Marine (coast), and Aviation (ground). Entities pay these regulatory fees in advance for the entire amount covered by the ten-year terms of their initial licenses and pay regulatory fees again only when the license is renewed, or a new license is obtained. We include these fee categories in our rulemaking to publicize our estimates of the number of “small multi-year wireless” licenses that will be renewed or newly obtained in FY 2026. 45. Multichannel Video Programming Distributor (MVPD) Services (cable television operators, Cable Television Relay Service (CARS) licensees, DBS, and IPTV): Regulatory fees must be paid for the number of basic cable television subscribers as of December 31, 2025. Cable television system operators should compute their number of basic subscribers as follows: Number of single family dwellings + number of individual households in multiple dwelling unit (apartments, condominiums, mobile home parks, etc.) paying at the basic subscriber rate + bulk rate customers + courtesy and free service. Note: Bulk-Rate Customers = Total annual bulk-rate charge divided by basic annual subscription rate for individual households. Operators may base their count on “a typical day in the last full week” of December 2025, rather than on a count as of December 31, 2025. Regulatory fees also must be paid for CARS licenses that were granted on or before October 1, 2025. In instances where a permit or license is transferred or assigned after October 1, 2025, responsibility for payment rests with the holder of the permit or license as of the fee due date. For providers of DBS service and IPTV-based MVPDs, regulatory fees should be paid based on a subscriber count on or about December 31, 2025. In instances where a permit or license is transferred or assigned after October 1, 2025, responsibility for payment rests with the holder of the permit or license as of the fee due date. 46. Space Services: Regulatory fees must be paid for earth stations that were licensed (or authorized) on or before October 1, 2025. Regulatory fees must also be paid for geostationary orbit space stations (GSO) and non-geostationary orbit satellite systems (NGSO), and the two NGSO subcategories “Small Constellations” and “Large Constellations,” that were authorized or granted U.S. market access on or before October 1, 2025. Licensees of small satellites and space stations principally used for Rendezvous and Proximity Operations (RPO) or On-Orbit Servicing (OOS), including Orbit Transfer Vehicles (OTV), that were authorized or granted U.S. market access on or before October 1, 2025 must also pay regulatory fees. In the Space Station Regulatory Fees Order, the Commission adopted a new methodology for assessing regulatory fees for small satellites and spacecraft licensed under sections 25.122 and 25.123 of the Commission’s rules and included space stations that are principally used for Rendezvous and Proximity Operations or On-Orbit Servicing, including Orbit Transfer Vehicles, in the existing fee category for small satellites on an interim basis. FY 2024 Space Station Regulatory Fees Order, 39 FCC Rcd at 7325-29, paras. 9-16. This rule was published in the Federal Register and became effective on September 13, 2024. See 89 FR 60572 (July 26, 2024). In instances where a permit or license is transferred or assigned after October 1, 2025, responsibility for payment rests with the holder of the authorization as of the fee due date. 47. International Services (Submarine Cable Systems, Terrestrial and Satellite Services): Regulatory fees for submarine cable systems are to be paid on a per cable landing license basis based on lit circuit capacity as of December 31, 2025. Regulatory fees for terrestrial and satellite IBCs are to be paid based on active (used or leased) international bearer circuits as of December 31, 2025, in any terrestrial or satellite transmission facility for the provision of service to an end user or resale carrier. When calculating the number of such active circuits, entities must include circuits used by themselves or their affiliates. For these purposes, “active circuits” include backup and redundant circuits as of December 31, 2025. Whether circuits are used specifically for voice or data is not relevant for purposes of determining that they are active circuits. We encourage terrestrial and satellite service providers to seek guidance from the Office of International Affairs Telecommunications and Analysis Division to verify their particular IBC reporting processes to ensure that their calculation methods comply with our rules. In instances where a permit or license is transferred or assigned after October 1, 2025, responsibility for payment rests with the holder of the permit or license as of the fee due date. 48. CMRS and Mobile Services Assessments: The Commission will compile data from the Numbering Resource Utilization Forecast (NRUF) report that is based on “assigned” telephone number (subscriber) counts that have been adjusted for porting to net Type 0 ports (“in” and “out”). See Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2005, Report and Order and Order on Reconsideration, 20 FCC Rcd 12259, 12264, paras. 38-44 (2005) (FY 2005 Report and Order). We have included non-geographic numbers in the calculation of the number of subscribers for each CMRS provider in Appendix A and the CMRS regulatory fee factor proposed in Appendix B. CMRS provider regulatory fees will be calculated and should be paid based on the inclusion of non-geographic numbers. CMRS providers can adjust the total number of subscribers, if needed. This information of telephone numbers (subscriber count) will be posted on CORES along with the carrier’s Operating Company Numbers (OCNs). 49. A carrier wishing to revise its telephone number (subscriber) count can do so by accessing CORES and following the prompts to revise their telephone number counts. Any revisions to the telephone number counts should be accompanied by an explanation. In the supporting documentation, the provider will need to state a reason for the change, such as a purchase or sale of a subsidiary, the date of the transaction, and any other pertinent information that will help to justify the change. The Commission will then review the revised count and supporting explanation, if any, and either approve or disapprove the submission in CORES. If the submission is disapproved, the Commission will contact the provider to afford the provider an opportunity to discuss its revised subscriber count and/or provide supporting documentation. If the Commission receives no response from the provider, or the Commission does not reverse its initial disapproval of the provider’s revised count submission, the fee payment must be based on the number of subscribers listed initially in CORES. Once the timeframe for revision has passed, the telephone number counts are final and are the basis upon which CMRS regulatory fees are to be paid. Providers can view their final telephone counts online in CORES. 50. Because some carriers do not file the NRUF report, they may not see their telephone number counts in CORES. In these instances, the carriers should compute their fee payment using the standard methodology that is currently in place for CMRS Wireless services (i.e., compute their telephone number counts as of December 31, 2025), and submit their fee payment accordingly. Whether a carrier reviews its telephone number counts in CORES or not, the Commission reserves the right to audit the number of telephone numbers for which regulatory fees are paid. If the Commission determines that a carrier paid CMRS or mobile services regulatory fees based on an incorrect number of telephone numbers, the Commission will bill the carrier for the difference between what was paid and what should have been paid. There would be a 25% penalty plus interest for an incorrect payment per 47 U.S.C. § 159A(c)(2). The penalty is automatic and immediate. Interest accrues according to 31 U.S.C. § 3717. The FCC’s implementing regulations are sections 1.1164(c) and 1.1940(b). 51. Providing Accountability Through Transparency Act. Consistent with the Providing Accountability Through Transparency Act, Public Law 118-9, a summary of this document will be available on https://www.fcc.gov/proposed-rulemakings. 52. Regulatory Flexibility Act. The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended (RFA), 5 U.S.C. §§ 601 et seq., as amended by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement and Fairness Act (SBREFA), Pub. L. No. 104-121, 110 Stat. 847 (1996). requires that an agency prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis for notice-and-comment rulemaking proceedings, unless the agency certifies that “the rule will not, if promulgated, have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.” 5 U.S.C. § 605(b). Accordingly, the Commission has prepared an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) concerning potential rule and policy changes contained in this NPRM. The IRFA is set forth in Appendix H. The Commission invites the general public, in particular small businesses, to comment on the IRFA. Comments must be filed by the deadlines for comments on the NPRM indicated on the first page of this document and must have a separate and distinct heading designating them as responses to the IRFA. 53. Paperwork Reduction Act. This document does not contain any proposed new or substantively modified information collections subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), Public Law 104-13.  In addition, therefore, it does not contain any new or modified information collection burden for small business concerns with fewer than 25 employees, pursuant to the Small Business Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public Law 107-198, see 44 U.S.C. § 3506(c)(4). 54. Comment Filing Procedures.  Pursuant to sections 1.415 and 1.419 of the Commission’s rules, 47 CFR §§ 1.415, 1.419, interested parties may file comments and reply comments on or before the dates indicated on the first page of this document. Comments may be filed using the Commission’s Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS). · Electronic Filers: Comments may be filed electronically using the Internet by accessing the ECFS: https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/. · Paper Filers: Parties who choose to file by paper must file an original and one copy of each filing. · Filings can be sent by hand or messenger delivery, by commercial courier, or by the U.S. Postal Service. All filings must be addressed to the Secretary, Federal Communications Commission. · Hand-delivered or messenger-delivered paper filings for the Commission’s Secretary are accepted between 8:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. by the FCC’s mailing contractor at 9050 Junction Drive, Annapolis Junction, MD 20701. All hand deliveries must be held together with rubber bands or fasteners. Any envelopes and boxes must be disposed of before entering the building. · Commercial courier deliveries (any deliveries not by the U.S. Postal Service) must be sent to 9050 Junction Drive, Annapolis Junction, MD 20701. · Filings sent by U.S. Postal Service First-Class Mail, Priority Mail, and Priority Mail Express must be sent to 45 L Street NE, Washington, DC 20554. 55. Materials in Accessible Formats.  To request materials in accessible formats for people with disabilities (Braille, large print, electronic files, audio format), send an e-mail to fcc504@fcc.gov or call the Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau at 202-418-0530 (voice). 56. Availability of Documents. Comments, reply comments, and ex parte submissions will be available via ECFS. Documents will be available electronically in ASCII, Microsoft Word, and/or Adobe Acrobat. These documents are available for public inspection during regular business hours in the FCC Reference Center, Federal Communications Commission, 45 L Street NE, Washington, D.C. 20554. 57. Ex Parte Information. The proceeding initiated by this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, in which we seek comment on proposals as described above, See supra para. 1. shall be treated as a “permit-but-disclose” proceeding in accordance with the Commission’s ex parte rules. 47 CFR §§ 1.1200 et seq. Persons making ex parte presentations must file a copy of any written presentation or a memorandum summarizing any oral presentation within two business days after the presentation (unless a different deadline applicable to the Sunshine period applies). Persons making oral ex parte presentations are reminded that memoranda summarizing the presentation must (1) list all persons attending or otherwise participating in the meeting at which the ex parte presentation was made, and (2) summarize all data presented and arguments made during the presentation. If the presentation consisted in whole or in part of the presentation of data or arguments already reflected in the presenter’s written comments, memoranda, or other filings in the proceeding, the presenter may provide citations to such data or arguments in his or her prior comments, memoranda, or other filings (specifying the relevant page and/or paragraph numbers where such data or arguments can be found) in lieu of summarizing them in the memorandum. Documents shown or given to Commission staff during ex parte meetings are deemed to be written ex parte presentations and must be filed consistent with section 1.1206(b) of the Commission’s rules. In proceedings governed by section 1.49(f) of the Commission’s rules or for which the Commission has made available a method of electronic filing, written ex parte presentations and memoranda summarizing oral ex parte presentations, and all attachments thereto, must be filed through the electronic comment filing system available for that proceeding, and must be filed in their native format (e.g., .doc, .xml, .ppt, searchable .pdf). Participants in this proceeding should familiarize themselves with the Commission’s ex parte rules. V. ORDERING CLAUSES 58. Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED that, pursuant to sections 47 U.S.C. §§ 4(i), 4(j), 9, 9A, and 303(r) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. §§ 154(i), 154(j), 159, 159A, and 303(r), this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking IS HEREBY ADOPTED. Pursuant to Executive Order 14215, 90 Fed. Reg. 10447 (Feb. 20, 2025), this regulatory action has been determined to be not significant under Executive Order 12866, 58 Fed. Reg. 68708 (Dec. 28, 1993). 59. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Commission’s Office of the Secretary SHALL SEND a copy of this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, including the Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief Counsel for the Small Business Administration (SBA) Office of Advocacy. FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION Marlene H. Dortch Secretary 2 APPENDIX A Calculation of FY 2026 Revenue Requirements and Pro-Rata Fees Regulatory fees for the first seven categories, identified with an *, are collected by the Commission in advance to cover the term of the license and are submitted at the time the application is filed. Fee Category FY 2026 Payment Units Yrs FY 2025 Revenue Estimate ($) FY 2026 Revenue Require-ment ($) Computed FY 2026 Regulatory Fee ($) Rounded FY 2026 Regulatory Fee ($) Expected FY 2026 Revenue ($) *PLMRS (Exclusive Use) 1,400 10 320,000 350,000 25 25 350,000 *PLMRS (Shared use) 23,000 10 2,600,000 2,300,000 10 10 2,300,000 *Microwave 11,000 10 2,600,000 2,750,000 25 25 2,750,000 *Marine (Ship) 7,400 10 1,080,000 1,110,000 15 15 1,110,000 *Aviation (Aircraft) 6,000 10 590,000 600,000 10 10 600,000 *Marine (Coast) 330 10 144,000 132,000 40 40 132,000 *Aviation (Ground) 400 10 76,000 80,000 20 20 80,000 AM Class A1 60 1 266,220 276,453 4,608 4,610 276,600 AM Class B1 1,300 1 3,316,680 3,442,929 2,648 2,650 3,445,000 AM Class C1 730 1 1,184,400 1,230,215 1,685 1,685 1,230,050 AM Class D1 1,200 1 3,921,960 4,074,734 3,396 3,395 4,074,000 FM Classes A, B1 & C31 2,700 1 8,273,900 8,589,319 3,181 3,180 8,586,000 FM Classes B, C, C0, C1 & C21 3,000 1 10,128,640 10,520,418 3,507 3,505 10,515,000 AM Construction Permits2 1 1 570 600 600 600 600 FM Construction Permits2 4 1 15,000 4,200 1,050 1,050 4,200 Digital Television5 (including Satellite TV) 3.498 billion population 1 23,412,392 24,335,017 0.006957 0.006957 24,335,586 Digital TV Construction Permits2 1 1 41,600 5,300 5,300 5,300 5,300 LPTV/Class A/Translators FM Trans/Boosters 6,000 1 1,512,500 1,576,407 263 265 1,590,000 CARS Stations 97 1 194,500 201,460 2,077 2,075 201,275 Cable TV Systems, including IPTV & DBS 41,800,000 1 64,680,000 66,924,877 1.6011 1.60 66,880,000 Interstate Telecommunication Service Providers $20,600,000,000 1 112,750,000 115,332,870 0.005599 0.00560 115,360,000 Toll Free Numbers 40,000,000 1 3,900,000 3,962,890 0.0991 0.10 4,000,000 CMRS Mobile Services (Cellular/Public Mobile) 623,000,000 1 98,352,000 104,536,811 0.1678 0.17 105,910,000 CMRS Messaging Services 580,000 1 44,800 46,400 0.08 0.08 46,400 BRS/3 1,220 1 919,600 990,660 812 810 988,200 LMDS 365 1 281,200 296,386 812 810 295,650 Per Gbps circuit Int’l Bearer Circuits Terrestrial (Common & Non-Common) & Satellite (Common & Non-Common) 36,000 1 364,000 499,378 13.87 14 504,000 Submarine Cable Providers (See chart at bottom of Appendix B)4 79 1 6,686,863 9,488,174 120,103 120,105 9,488,295 Earth Stations 3,250 1 8,240,000 9,785,138 3,011 3,010 9,782,500 Space Stations (Geostationary) 146 1 21,977,450 26,090,149 178,700 178,700 26,090,200 Space Stations (Non-Geostationary, Small Constellation) 25 1 8,628,2202 10,233,005 409,320 409,320 10,233,000 Space Stations (Non-Geostationary, Large Constellation) 3 1 5,752,1703 6,822,003 2,274,001 2,274,000 6,822,000 Space Stations (Non-Geostationary, Small Satellite) 23 1 271,260 336,650 14,637 14,635 336,605 ****** Total Estimated Revenue to be Collected 391,734,169 416,924,441 418,322,461 ****** Total Revenue Requirement 390,192,000 416,112,000 416,112,000 Difference 1,542,258 812,440 2,210,461 Notes on Appendix A 1 The fee amounts listed in the column entitled “Rounded FY 2026 Reg. Fee” are the result of dividing the revenue requirement by the payment units of each radio class category. The actual FY 2026 regulatory fees for AM/FM radio station are listed on a grid located at the end of Appendix B. 2 The AM and FM Construction Permit revenues and the full-power (VHF/UHF) Construction Permit revenues were adjusted, respectively, to set the regulatory fee to an amount no higher than the lowest licensed fee for that class of service based on the threshold 10,001-25,000, the traditional basis for identifying the lowest licensed fee. Reductions in the full-power (VHF/UHF) Construction Permit revenues, and in the AM and FM Construction Permit revenues, were offset by increases in the revenue totals for full-power television stations by market size, and in the AM and FM radio stations by class size and population served, respectively. 3 The MDS/MMDS category was renamed Broadband Radio Service (BRS). See Amendment of Parts 1, 21, 73, 74 and 101 of the Commission’s Rules to Facilitate the Provision of Fixed and Mobile Broadband Access, Educational and Other Advanced Services in the 2150-2162 and 2500-2690 MHz Bands, Report & Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 19 FCC Rcd 14165, 14169, para. 6 (2004). 4 The chart at the end of Appendix B lists the submarine cable bearer circuit regulatory fees (common and non-common carrier basis) that resulted from the adoption of the Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2008, Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 24 FCC Rcd 6388 (2008) and Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2008, Second Report and Order, 24 FCC Rcd 4208 (2009). The Submarine Cable fee in Appendix A is a weighted average of the various fee payers in the chart at the end of Appendix B. 5 The actual full-power television regulatory fees to be paid by call sign are identified in Appendix F. APPENDIX B FY 2026 Schedule of Regulatory Fees Regulatory fees for the first eight categories listed, identified with an *, are collected by the Commission in advance to cover the term of the license and are submitted at the time the application is filed. Fee Category Annual Regulatory Fee ($) *PLMRS (per license) (Exclusive Use) (47 CFR part 90) 25 *Microwave (per license) (47 CFR part 101) 25 *Marine (Ship) (per station) (47 CFR part 80) 15 *Marine (Coast) (per license) (47 CFR part 80) 40 *Rural Radio (47 CFR part 22) (previously listed under the Land Mobile category) 10 *PLMRS (Shared Use) (per license) (47 CFR part 90) 10 *Aviation (Aircraft) (per station) (47 CFR part 87) 10 *Aviation (Ground) (per license) (47 CFR part 87) 20 CMRS Mobile/Cellular Services (per unit) (47 CFR parts 20, 22, 24, 27, 80 and 90) (Includes Non-Geographic telephone numbers) 0.17 CMRS Messaging Services (per unit) (47 CFR parts 20, 22, 24 and 90) 0.08 Broadband Radio Service (formerly MMDS/ MDS) (per license) (47 CFR part 27) 810 Local Multipoint Distribution Service (per call sign) (47 CFR, part 101) 810 AM Radio Construction Permits 600 FM Radio Construction Permits 1,050 AM and FM Broadcast Radio Station Fees See Table Below Digital TV (47 CFR part 73) VHF and UHF Commercial Fee Factor 0.006957 See Appendix F for fee amounts due, also available at https://www.fcc.gov/licensing-databases/fees/regulatory-fees Digital TV Construction Permits 5,300 Low Power TV, Class A TV, TV/FM Translators & FM Boosters (47 CFR part 74) 265 CARS (47 CFR part 78) 2,075 Cable Television Systems (per subscriber) (47 CFR part 76), Including IPTV and Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS) 1.60 Interstate Telecommunication Service Providers (per revenue dollar) 0.00560 Toll Free (per toll free subscriber) (47 CFR section 52.101 (f) of the rules) 0.10 Earth Stations: Transmit/Receive & Transmit only (per authorization or registration) 3,010 Space Stations (per authorized station in geostationary orbit) (47 CFR part 25) 178,700 Space Stations (per authorized system in non-geostationary orbit) (47 CFR part 25) – Small Constellation (fewer than 1000 authorized space stations) 409,320 Space Stations (per authorized system in non-geostationary orbit) (47 CFR part 25) – Large Constellation (1000 or more authorized space stations) 2,274,000 Space Stations (per license/call sign in non-geostationary orbit) (47 CFR part 25) (Small Satellite) 14,635 International Bearer Circuits - Terrestrial/Satellites (per Gbps circuit) 14 Submarine Cable Landing Licenses Fee (per cable system) See Table Below FY 2026 Radio Station Regulatory Fees Population Served AM Class A AM Class B AM Class C AM Class D FM Classes A, B1 & C3 FM Classes B, C, C0, C1 & C2 <=10,000 $575 $415 $360 $395 $630 $720 10,001 - 25,000 $960 $690 $600 $660 $1,050 $1,200 25,001 – 75,000 $1,440 $1,035 $900 $990 $1,575 $1,800 75,001 – 150,000 $2,160 $1,555 $1,350 $1,485 $2,365 $2,700 150,001 – 500,000 $3,245 $2,330 $2,030 $2,230 $3,550 $4,055 500,001 – 1,200,000 $4,860 $3,490 $3,035 $3,340 $5,315 $6,070 1,200,001 – 3,000,000 $7,295 $5,245 $4,560 $5,015 $7,980 $9,120 3,000,001 – 6,000,000 $10,935 $7,860 $6,835 $7,515 $11,960 $13,670 >6,000,000 $16,405 $11,790 $10,255 $11,280 $17,945 $20,510 FY 2026 International Bearer Circuits - Submarine Cable Systems Submarine Cable Systems (capacity as of December 31, 2025) Fee Ratio FY 2026 Regulatory Fees Less than 50 Gbps 0.0625 Units $7,505 50 Gbps or greater, but less than 250 Gbps 0.125 Units $15,015 250 Gbps or greater, but less than 1,500 Gbps 0.25 Units $30,025 1,500 Gbps or greater, but less than 3,500 Gbps 0.5 Units $60,050 3,500 Gbps or greater, but less than 6,500 Gbps 1.0 Unit $120,105 6,500 Gbps or greater 2.0 Units $240,205 APPENDIX C Sources of Payment Unit Estimates for FY 2026 In order to calculate individual service fees for FY 2026, we adjusted FY 2025 payment units for each service to more accurately reflect expected FY 2026 payment liabilities. We obtained our updated estimates through a variety of means and sources. For example, we used Commission licensee databases, actual prior year payment records, and industry and trade association projections, where available. The databases we consulted include our Universal Licensing System (ULS), International Communications Filing System (ICFS), Licensing and Management System (LMS), and Cable Operations and Licensing System (COALS), as well as reports generated within the Commission such as the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau’s Numbering Resource Utilization Forecast. Regulatory fee payment units are not all the same for all fee categories. For most fee categories, the term “units” reflects licenses or permits that have been issued, but for other fee categories, the term “units” reflects quantities such as subscribers, population counts, circuit counts, telephone numbers, and revenues. As more current data are received after the NPRM is released, the Commission sometimes adjusts the NPRM fee rates to reflect the new information in the Report and Order. This is intended to make sure that the fee rates in the Report and Order reflect more recent and accurate information. We realize that by adjusting the unit counts as more accurate information is received may adjust the fee rates for certain regulatory fee categories. Certain entities that collect the fees from customers in advance in order to pay the Commission, such as Cable and DBS companies, ITSP providers, Cell Phone and Toll-Free providers, may need to adjust their billings to customers as the Commission adjusts its fee rates. As a result, the Commission understands that these adjustments are necessary so that these regulatees can recover their fee obligations from their customers. We sought verification for these estimates from multiple sources and, in all cases, we compared FY 2026 estimates with actual FY 2025 payment units to ensure that our revised estimates were reasonable. Where appropriate, we adjusted and/or rounded our final estimates to take into consideration the fact that certain variables that impact on the number of payment units cannot yet be estimated with sufficient accuracy. These include an unknown number of waivers and/or exemptions that may occur in FY 2026 and the fact that, in many services, the number of actual licensees or station operators fluctuates over time due to economic, technical, or other reasons. When we note, for example, that our estimated FY 2026 payment units are based on FY 2025 actual payment units, it does not necessarily mean that our FY 2026 projection is exactly the same number as in FY 2025. We have either rounded the FY 2026 number or adjusted it slightly to account for these variables. Fee Category Sources of Payment Unit Estimates Land Mobile (All), Microwave, Marine (Ship & Coast), Aviation (Aircraft & Ground), Domestic Public Fixed Based on Wireless Telecommunications Bureau (WTB) information as well as prior year payment information. Estimates have been adjusted to take into consideration the licensing of portions of these services. CMRS Cellular/Mobile Services Based on WTB projection reports, and FY 2025 payment data. CMRS Messaging Services Based on WTB reports, and FY 2025 payment data. AM/FM Radio Stations Based on downloaded LMS data, adjusted for exemptions, and actual FY 2025 payment units. Digital TV Stations (Combined VHF/UHF units) Based on LMS data, fee rate adjusted for exemptions, and population figures are calculated based on individual station parameters. AM/FM/TV Construction Permits Based on LMS data, adjusted for exemptions, and actual FY 2025 payment units. LPTV, Translators and Boosters, Class A Television Based on LMS data, adjusted for exemptions, and actual FY 2025 payment units. BRS (formerly MDS/MMDS) LMDS Based on WTB reports and actual FY 2025 payment units. Based on WTB reports and actual FY 2025 payment units. Cable Television Relay Service (CARS) Stations Based on cable trend data, data from the Media Bureau’s COALS database, and actual FY 2025 payment units. Cable Television System Subscribers, Including IPTV Subscribers Based on publicly available data sources for estimated subscriber counts, trend information from past payment data, and actual FY 2025 payment units. Interstate Telecommunication Service Providers Based on FCC Form 499-A worksheets due in April 2026, and any data assistance provided by the Wireline Competition Bureau. Earth Stations Based on Space Bureau licensing data and actual FY 2025 payment units. Space Stations (GSOs & NGSOs) Based on Space Bureau data reports and actual FY 2025 payment units. International Bearer Circuits Based on assistance provided by the Office of International Affairs, any data submissions by licensees, adjusted as necessary, and actual FY 2025 payment units. Submarine Cable Licenses Based on Office of International Affairs license information, and actual FY 2025 payment units. APPENDIX D Factors, Measurements, and Calculations that Determine Station Signal Contours and Associated Population Coverages AM Stations For stations with nondirectional daytime antennas, the theoretical radiation was used at all azimuths. For stations with directional daytime antennas, specific information on each day tower, including field ratio, phase, spacing, and orientation was retrieved, as well as the theoretical pattern root-mean-square of the radiation in all directions in the horizontal plane (RMS) figure (milliVolt per meter (mV/m) @ 1 km) for the antenna system. The standard, or augmented standard if pertinent, horizontal plane radiation pattern was calculated using techniques and methods specified in sections 73.150 and 73.152 of the Commission’s rules. Radiation values were calculated for each of 360 radials around the transmitter site. Next, estimated soil conductivity data was retrieved from a database representing the information in FCC Figure R3. Using the calculated horizontal radiation values, and the retrieved soil conductivity data, the distance to the principal community (5 mV/m) contour was predicted for each of the 360 radials. The resulting distance to principal community contours were used to form a geographical polygon. Population counting was accomplished by determining which 2020 block centroids were contained in the polygon. (A block centroid is the center point of a small area containing population as computed by the U.S. Census Bureau.) The sum of the population figures for all enclosed blocks represents the total population for the predicted principal community coverage area. FM Stations The greater of the horizontal or vertical effective radiated power (ERP) (kW) and respective height above average terrain (HAAT) (m) combination was used. Where the antenna height above mean sea level (HAMSL) was available, it was used in lieu of the average HAAT figure to calculate specific HAAT figures for each of 360 radials under study. Any available directional pattern information was applied as well, to produce a radial-specific ERP figure. The HAAT and ERP figures were used in conjunction with the Field Strength (50-50) propagation curves specified in 47 CFR § 73.313 of the Commission’s rules to predict the distance to the principal community (70 dBu (decibel above 1 microVolt per meter) or 3.17 mV/m) contour for each of the 360 radials. The resulting distance to principal community contours were used to form a geographical polygon. Population counting was accomplished by determining which 2020 block centroids were contained in the polygon. The sum of the population figures for all enclosed blocks represents the total population for the predicted principal community coverage area. 2 APPENDIX E Space Station Satellite Charts For FY 2026 Regulatory Fees Space Stations (Geostationary Orbit): U.S.-Licensed Space Stations LICENSEE CALL SIGN SATELLITE NAME TYPE 1. Astranis Projects USA LLC S3092 ARCTURUS GSO 2. DIRECTV Enterprises, LLC S2632 DIRECTV D8 GSO 3. DIRECTV Enterprises, LLC S2640 DIRECTV D11 GSO 4. DIRECTV Enterprises, LLC S2641 DIRECTV D10 GSO 5. DIRECTV Enterprises, LLC S2669 DIRECTV D9S GSO 6. DIRECTV Enterprises, LLC S2673 DIRECTV D5 GSO 7. DIRECTV Enterprises, LLC S2797 DIRECTV D12 GSO 8. DIRECTV Enterprises, LLC S2869 DIRECTV D14 GSO 9. DIRECTV Enterprises, LLC S2930 DIRECTV D15 GSO 10. DIRECTV Enterprises, LLC S3039 DIRECTV D16 GSO 11. DISH Operating L.L.C. S2694 ECHOSTAR 10 GSO 12. DISH Operating L.L.C. S2738 ECHOSTAR 11 GSO 13. DISH Operating L.L.C. S2790 ECHOSTAR 14 GSO 14. DISH Operating L.L.C. S2931 ECHOSTAR 18 GSO 15. EchoStar Satellite Operating Corporation S2811 ECHOSTAR 15 GSO 16. EchoStar Satellite Operating Corporation S2844 ECHOSTAR 16 GSO 17. EchoStar Satellite Services L.L.C. S2179 ECHOSTAR 9 GSO 18. EchoStar BSS Corp S3093 ECHOSTAR 23 GSO 19. ES 172 LLC S2610 EUTELSAT 174A GSO 20. ES 172 LLC S3021 EUTELSAT 172B GSO 21. Horizon-3 Satellite LLC S2947 HORIZONS-3e GSO 22. Hughes Network Systems, LLC S2753 ECHOSTAR XVII GSO 23. Hughes Network Systems, LLC S2834 ECHOSTAR 19 GSO 24. Hughes Network Systems, LLC S3017 ECHOSTAR 24 (JUPITER 3) GSO 25. Intelsat License LLC/Viasat, Inc. S2160 GALAXY 28 GSO 26. Intelsat License LLC S2237 INTELSAT 11 GSO 27. Intelsat License LLC S2381 GALAXY 3C GSO 28. Intelsat License LLC S2382 INTELSAT 10 GSO 29. Intelsat License LLC S2386 GALAXY 13 / Horizons 1 GSO 30. Intelsat License LLC S2405 INTELSAT 901 GSO 31. Intelsat License LLC S2406 INTELSAT 902 GSO 32. Intelsat License LLC S2408 INTELSAT 904 GSO 33. Intelsat License LLC S2409 INTELSAT 905 GSO 34. Intelsat License LLC S2410 INTELSAT 906 GSO 35. Intelsat License LLC S2414 INTELSAT 10-02 GSO 36. Intelsat License LLC S2423 HORIZONS 2 GSO 37. Intelsat License LLC S2647 GALAXY 19 GSO 38. Intelsat License LLC S2687 GALAXY 16 GSO 39. Intelsat License LLC S2715 GALAXY 17 GSO 40. Intelsat License LLC S2733 GALAXY 18 GSO 41. Intelsat License LLC S2750 INTELSAT 16 GSO 42. Intelsat License LLC S2751 INTELSAT 28 GSO 43. Intelsat License LLC S2785 INTELSAT 14 GSO 44. Intelsat License LLC S2804 INTELSAT 25 GSO 45. Intelsat License LLC S2817 INTELSAT 18 GSO 46. Intelsat License LLC S2831 INTELSAT 23 GSO 47. Intelsat License LLC S2846 INTELSAT 22 GSO 48. Intelsat License LLC S2847 INTELSAT 20 GSO 49. Intelsat License LLC S2850 INTELSAT 19 GSO 50. Intelsat License LLC S2863 INTELSAT 21 GSO 51. Intelsat License LLC S2789 INTELSAT 15 GSO 52. Intelsat License LLC S2814 INTELSAT 17 GSO 53. Intelsat License LLC S2887 INTELSAT 30 GSO 54. Intelsat License LLC S2915 INTELSAT 34 GSO 55. Intelsat License LLC S2924 INTELSAT 31 GSO 56. Intelsat License LLC S2948 INTELSAT 36 GSO 57. Intelsat License LLC S2959 INTELSAT 35e GSO 58. Intelsat License LLC S2972 INTELSAT 37e GSO 59. Intelsat License LLC S3015 GALAXY 33 GSO 60. Intelsat License LLC S3016 GALAXY 30 GSO 61. Intelsat License LLC S3023 INTELSAT 39 GSO 62. Intelsat License LLC S3058 HISPASAT 143W-1 GSO 63. Intelsat License LLC S3066 INTELSAT 40e GSO 64. Intelsat License LLC S3076 GALAXY 31 GSO 65. Intelsat License LLC S3078 GALAXY 32 GSO 66. Intelsat License LLC S3083 GALAXY 34 GSO 67. Intelsat License LLC S3143 GALAXY 35 GSO 68. Intelsat License LLC S3148 GALAXY 36 GSO 69. Intelsat License LLC S3164 GALAXY 37 GSO 70. Ligado Networks Subsidiary, LLC S2358 SKYTERRA-1 GSO 71. Novavision Group, Inc. S2861 DIRECTV KU-79W GSO 72. Open Plaza Corp./DIRECTV Latin America, LLC S2922 SKY-B1 GSO 73. Satellite CD Radio LLC S2812 FM-6 GSO 74. SES Americom, Inc. S2162 AMC-3 GSO 75. SES Americom, Inc. S2180 AMC-15 GSO 76. SES Americom, Inc. S2347 AMC-6 GSO 77. SES Americom, Inc. S2415 NSS-10 GSO 78. SES Americom, Inc. S2826 SES-2 GSO 79. SES Americom, Inc. S2807 SES-1 GSO 80. SES Americom, Inc. S2892 SES-3 GSO 81. SES Americom, Inc. S3097 SES-19 GSO 82. SES Americom, Inc. S3138 SES-22 GSO 83. SES Americom, Inc. S3096 SES-18 GSO 84. SES Americom, Inc. S3098 SES-20 GSO 85. SES Americom, Inc. S3099 SES-21 GSO 86. Silkwave Africa, LLC S3074 AsiaStar GSO 87. Sirius XM Radio Inc. S2710 FM-5 GSO 88. Sirius XM Radio Inc. S3033 SXM-7 GSO 89. Sirius XM Radio Inc. S3034 SXM-8 GSO 90. Sirius XM Radio Inc. S3166 SXM-9 GSO 91. Sirius XM Radio Inc. S3167 SXM-10 GSO 92. Skynet Satellite Corp. S2933 TELSTAR 12V GSO 93. Skynet Satellite Corporation S2357 TELSTAR 11N GSO 94. Telesat Canada S2433 ANIK F4 (AMC-11) GSO 95. Viasat, Inc. S2747 VIASAT-1 GSO 96. Viasat, Inc. S2917 VIASAT-3 GSO 97. Viasat, Inc. S3050 VIASAT-89US GSO 98. XM Radio LLC S2786 XM-5 GSO Space Stations (Geostationary Orbit): Non-U.S.-Licensed Space Stations – Market Access Through Petition for Declaratory Ruling GRANTEE CALL SIGN SATELLITE NAME TYPE 99. Avanti Hylas 2 Ltd. S3130 HYLAS-4 GSO 100. DBSD Services Ltd S2651 DBSD G1 GSO 101. Embratel TVSAT Telecomunicacoes S.A. S3142 Star One D2 GSO 102. Embratel TVSAT Telecomunicacoes S.A S3192 Star One C4 GSO 103. Empresa Argentina de Soluciones Satelitales S.A. S2956 ARSAT-2 GSO 104. Embratel Tvsat Telecommunicacoes S.A. S2678 STAR ONE C2 GSO 105. Embratel Tvsat Telecommunicacoes S.A. S2845 STAR ONE C3 GSO 106. Eutelsat do Brasil Ltda. S3226 EUTELSAT 65 West A GSO 107. Eutelsat S.A. S3055 EUTELSAT 139 WEST A GSO 108. Eutelsat S. A. S3056 EUTELSAT 8 WEST B GSO 109. Gamma Acquisition L.L.C. S2633 TerreStar 1 GSO 110. Hispamar Satélites, S.A. S2886 AMAZONAS-3 GSO 111. Hispamar Satélites, S.A. S3086 AMAZONAS NEXUS GSO 112. Hispasat, S.A. S2969 HISPASAT 30W-6 GSO 113. Horizons-4 Satellite LLC S3180 Horizon-4 GSO 114. Inmarsat PLC S2932 Inmarsat-4 F3 GSO 115. Inmarsat PLC S2949 Inmarsat-3 F5 GSO 116. Inmarsat PLC S3205 Inmarsat 4-F2 GSO 117. New Skies Satellites B.V. S2756 NSS-9 GSO 118. New Skies Satellites B.V. S2828 SES-4 GSO 119. New Skies Satellites B.V. S2870 SES-6 GSO 120. New Skies Satellites B.V. S2950 SES-10 GSO 121. Satelites Mexicanos, S.A. de C.V. S2873 EUTELSAT 117 WEST A GSO 122. Satelites Mexicanos, S.A. de C.V. S2926 EUTELSAT 117 WEST B GSO 123. Satelites Mexicanos, S.A. de C.V. S2938 EUTELSAT 115 WEST B GSO 124. SES Satellites (Gibraltar) Ltd. S2676 AMC 21 GSO 125. SES Satellites (Gibraltar) Ltd. S2951 SES-15 GSO 126. SES Americom, Inc. S2964 SES-11 GSO 127. SES Americom, Inc. S3037 NSS-11 GSO 128. SES DTH do Brasil Ltda S2974 SES-14 GSO 129. SES-17 S.a.r.l. S3043 SES-17 GSO 130. Spacing Guild UK Limited S3150 NuView Bravo GSO 131. Spacing Guild UK Limited S3151 NuView Alpha GSO 132. Telesat Brasil Capacidade de Satelites Ltda S2821 ESTRELA DO SUL 2 GSO 133. Telesat Canada S2674 ANIK F1R GSO 134. Telesat Canada S2703 ANIK F3 GSO 135. Telesat Canada S2472 ANIK F2 GSO 136. Telesat International Ltd. S2955 TELSTAR 19 VANTAGE GSO 137. Viasat, Inc. S2902 VIASAT-2 GSO Space Stations (Geostationary Orbit): Non-U.S.-Licensed Space Stations – Market Access Through Earth Station Licenses ITU or Operator Name (if available) CALL SIGN COMMON NAME TYPE 138. AUSSAT B 152E M221170 OPTUS D2 GSO 139. Ciel Satellite Group E050029 Ciel-2 GSO 140. Ciel Satellite Group E140100 Ciel-6i GSO 141. QuetzSat, S.de R.L. de C.V. E090020 Quetzsat-1 GSO 142. Eutelsat 65 West A E160081 Eutelsat 65 West A GSO 143. INMARSAT 5F2 E120072 INMARSAT 5F2 GSO 144. INMARSAT 5F3 E150028 INMARSAT 5F3 GSO 145. SES Americom, Inc. E960207 JCSAT-3A GSO 146. JCSAT-2B M174163 JCSAT-2B GSO 147. NIMIQ 5 E080107 NIMIQ 5 GSO 148. WILDBLUE-1 E040213 WILDBLUE-1 GSO 149. Intelsat License LLC E120106 GSO 150. Hawaii Pacific Teleport, L.P. E010016 Telstar 18 Vantage GSO 151. APT Satellite Holdings M161190 APSTAR 6C GSO 152. APT Satellite Holdings M246190 APSTAR 6D GSO Space Stations (per license/call sign in non-geostationary orbit) (Small Satellite) LICENSEE/GRANTEE CALL SIGN SATELLITE NAME TYPE 1. Aethero Space Inc. S3189 Deimos Small Satellite 2. Capella Space Corp. S3162 Acadia-1&2 Small Satellite 3. ICEYE US, Inc. S3082 ICEYE Small Satellite 4. ICEYE US, Inc. S3165 ICEYE Second Tranche Small Satellite 5. ICEYE US, Inc. S3224 ICEYE Third Tranche Small Satellite 6. Impulse Space S3194 Impulse-2 Small Satellite 7. Impulse Space S3228 Impulse-3 Small Satellite 8. Loft Orbital Solutions Inc. S3072 YAM-3 Small Satellite 9. Loft Orbital Solutions Inc. S3147 YAM-5 Small Satellite 10. Loft Orbital Solutions, Inc. S3170 YAM-6 Small Satellite 11. Loft Orbital Solutions, Inc. S3184 YAM-7 Small Satellite 12. Loft Orbital Solutions, Inc. S3199 YAM-8 Small Satellite 13. Loft Orbital Solutions, Inc. S3227 YAM-9 Small Satellite 14. Lynk Global, Inc. S3087 Lynk Towers Small Satellite 15. Space Logistics, LLC S2990 Mission Extension Vehicle-1 RPO/OOS 16. Space Logistics, LLC S3059 Mission Extension Vehicle-2 RPO/OOS 17. Space Sciences & Engineering LLC S3153 GNOMES-4 Small Satellite 18. Space Sciences & Engineering LLC S3185 GNOMES-5 Small Satellite 19. Turion Space Corp. S3146 DROID.001 Small Satellite 20. Turion Space Corp. S3198 DROID .002 Small Satellite 21. Umbra Lab Inc. S3095 Umbra SAR Small Satellite 22. Umbra Lab Inc. S3168 Umbra Block Two SAR Constellation Small Satellite 23. Umbra Lab Inc. S3186 Umbra Block 2.1 SAR Constellation Small Satellite 24. Xona Space Systems, Inc. S3215 IOV Small Satellite 25. XPLORE, Inc. S3193 XCUBE-1 Small Satellite Space Stations (Non-Geostationary Orbit) – Small Constellations LICENSEE/GRANTEE CALL SIGN SATELLITE/ SYSTEM NAME AUTHORIZED STATIONS 1. Albedo Space Inc. S3208 Clarity-1 1 2. AST & Science, LLC S3065 Bluebird Block 1 5 3. BlackSky Global, LLC S3032 Global 16 4. Capella Space Corp. S3178 Acadia-3, Acadia-4, Acadia-5, Acadia-6 4 5. Globalstar License LLC S2115 GLOBALSTAR 96 6. Hawkeye 360 S3042 HE360 174 7. Iridium Constellation LLC S2110 IRIDIUM 99 8. Kepler Communications, Inc. S2981 KEPLER 140 9. Kineis S3054 KINEIS 25 10. Loft Orbital Solutions, Inc. S3181 YAC-1 10 11. Maxar License, Inc. DG Consents Sub, Inc. S2129 / S2348 WorldView 1,2 & 3, GeoEye-1 Worldview Legion 15 12. Muon Space, Inc. S3173 MuSat-2, MuSat-3 2 13. Myriota Pty. Ltd. S3047 MYRIOTA 26 14. O3b Limited S2935 O3b 42 15. ORBCOMM License Corp S2103 ORBCOMM 72 16. Orbital Sidekick, Inc. S3139 GHOSt 6 17. Planet Labs PBC S2912 Flock/Skysats 576 18. Planet Labs PBC S3152 Tanager 2 19. Pixxel Space Technologies, Inc. S3200 FLYY 3 20. Sidus Space, Inc. S3175 LizzieSat-2, LizzieSat-3, LizzieSat-4, LizzieSat-5 4 21. Sierra Nevada Company, LLC S3214 Vindler Constellation 3 22. Space Norway AS S2978 ARCTIC SATELLITE BROADBAND MISSION 2 23. Spire Global, Inc. S2946 / S3045 / S3182 LEMUR & MINAS & HUBBLE 636 24. Spire Global, Inc. S3213 LEMUR-4 175 25. Telesat LEO Inc. S2976 TELESAT Ku/Ka-Band 117 26. The Tomorrow Companies, Inc. S3156 Tomorrow.io Weather Constellation 4 27. Viasat, Inc. S2985 ViaSat – NGSO 20 Space Stations (Non-Geostationary) – Large Constellations LICENSEE/GRANTEE CALL SIGN SATELLITE/ SYSTEM NAME AUTHORIZED STATIONS 1. Kuiper Systems LLC S3051 KUIPER 3,232 2. Space Exploration Holdings, LLC S2983 / S3018 / S2992 / S3069 SPACEX/Ku-/Ka-/V-band/Gen 2 11,908 3. WorldVu Satellites Ltd. S2963 / S2994 ONEWEB Ku-/Ka-/V-BAND 2,000 APPENDIX F FY 2026 Full-Service Broadcast Television Stations by Call Sign Facility Id Call Sign Service Area Population Terrain-Limited Population Terrain-Limited Fee Amount 3246 KAAH-TV 1,018,897 939,246 $ 6,534 18285 KAAL 605,222 580,564 $ 4,039 11912 KAAS-TV 243,984 243,947 $ 1,697 56528 KABB 3,017,860 3,000,477 $ 20,874 282 KABC-TV 18,303,336 17,670,502 $ 122,934 1236 KACV-TV 383,228 383,071 $ 2,665 33261 KADN-TV 889,583 889,583 $ 6,189 8263 KAEF-TV 139,510 124,133 $ 864 2728 KAET 4,867,739 4,836,434 $ 33,647 2767 KAFT 1,294,492 1,218,670 $ 8,478 62442 KAID 864,547 857,276 $ 5,964 4145 KAII-TV 203,698 179,435 $ 1,248 67494 KAIL 2,091,288 2,061,175 $ 14,340 13988 KAIT 594,090 583,749 $ 4,061 40517 KAJB 393,654 393,355 $ 2,737 65522 KAKE 821,488 816,811 $ 5,683 804 KAKM 397,237 395,241 $ 2,750 148 KAKW-DT 3,350,876 3,242,159 $ 22,556 51598 KALB-TV 933,915 932,500 $ 6,487 51241 KALO 1,018,088 971,631 $ 6,760 40820 KAMC 411,973 411,949 $ 2,866 8523 KAMR-TV 377,485 377,410 $ 2,626 65301 KAMU-TV 395,784 392,044 $ 2,727 2506 KAPP 337,194 298,159 $ 2,074 3658 KARD 680,743 678,724 $ 4,722 23079 KARE 4,243,145 4,234,439 $ 29,459 33440 KARK-TV 1,243,813 1,230,366 $ 8,560 37005 KARZ-TV 1,153,588 1,134,221 $ 7,891 32311 KASA-TV 1,198,361 1,159,350 $ 8,066 41212 KASN 1,200,705 1,185,725 $ 8,249 7143 KASW 4,828,272 4,813,078 $ 33,485 55049 KASY-TV 1,182,887 1,143,258 $ 7,954 33471 KATC 1,376,057 1,376,057 $ 9,573 13813 KATN 95,520 95,197 $ 662 21649 KATU 3,400,708 3,238,560 $ 22,531 33543 KATV 1,285,451 1,265,986 $ 8,807 50182 KAUT-TV 1,826,857 1,825,132 $ 12,697 21488 KAUU 398,876 396,486 $ 2,758 6864 KAUZ-TV 366,943 365,162 $ 2,540 73101 KAVU-TV 323,202 322,961 $ 2,247 49579 KAWB 193,767 193,705 $ 1,348 49578 KAWE 139,854 137,788 $ 959 58684 KAYU-TV 925,282 861,276 $ 5,992 29234 KAZA-TV 15,481,136 14,233,993 $ 99,026 17433 KAZD 8,087,952 8,085,339 $ 56,250 776273 KAZF 253,785 188,057 $ 1,308 1151 KAZQ 1,137,703 1,126,947 $ 7,840 776268 KAZS 396,796 390,474 $ 2,717 35811 KAZT-TV 495,353 409,112 $ 2,846 4148 KBAK-TV 1,626,532 1,363,867 $ 9,488 16940 KBCA 465,218 465,157 $ 3,236 53586 KBCB 1,510,168 1,478,647 $ 10,287 22685 KBDI-TV 4,731,715 4,335,180 $ 30,160 65395 KBFD-DT 1,016,508 887,671 $ 6,176 169030 KBGS-TV 176,271 173,911 $ 1,210 61068 KBHE-TV 153,390 144,914 $ 1,008 48556 KBIM-TV 226,233 226,194 $ 1,574 29108 KBIN-TV 1,014,918 1,013,041 $ 7,048 33658 KBJR-TV 278,564 274,572 $ 1,910 83306 KBLN-TV 322,286 145,745 $ 1,014 63768 KBLR 2,280,730 2,220,879 $ 15,451 53324 KBME-TV 146,149 146,082 $ 1,016 10150 KBMT 799,217 798,262 $ 5,554 22121 KBMY 142,682 142,622 $ 992 49760 KBOI-TV 872,030 863,497 $ 6,007 55370 KBRR 154,408 154,405 $ 1,074 66414 KBSD-DT 151,986 151,901 $ 1,057 66415 KBSH-DT 97,884 95,916 $ 667 19593 KBSI 730,259 728,325 $ 5,067 66416 KBSL-DT 47,462 46,328 $ 322 4939 KBSV 1,535,281 1,424,913 $ 9,913 62469 KBTC-TV 4,319,699 4,228,861 $ 29,420 61214 KBTV-TV 771,692 771,692 $ 5,369 6669 KBTX-TV 5,354,551 5,351,089 $ 37,228 35909 KBVO 1,911,833 1,684,206 $ 11,717 58618 KBVU 136,908 121,846 $ 848 776229 KBWT 2,672 2,667 $ 19 6823 KBYU-TV 2,838,181 2,620,447 $ 18,230 33756 KBZK 153,764 141,054 $ 981 21422 KCAL-TV 18,258,912 17,586,821 $ 122,352 11265 KCAU-TV 769,096 754,352 $ 5,248 14867 KCBA 3,334,176 2,557,080 $ 17,790 27507 KCBD 426,315 426,302 $ 2,966 9628 KCBS-TV 18,628,137 17,359,665 $ 120,771 776213 KCBU 28,971 23,368 $ 163 49750 KCBY-TV 92,825 77,624 $ 540 33710 KCCI 1,216,146 1,209,219 $ 8,413 9640 KCCW-TV 294,831 287,246 $ 1,998 63158 KCDO-TV 3,305,368 3,160,730 $ 21,989 62424 KCDT 807,726 762,258 $ 5,303 83913 KCEB 446,377 445,850 $ 3,102 57219 KCEC 4,497,531 4,237,580 $ 29,481 10245 KCEN-TV 2,224,490 2,174,193 $ 15,126 13058 KCET 17,868,933 16,310,676 $ 113,473 18079 KCFW-TV 196,292 157,001 $ 1,092 132606 KCGE 129,876 129,876 $ 904 60793 KCHF 1,175,596 1,148,137 $ 7,988 33722 KCIT 392,243 391,646 $ 2,725 62468 KCKA 1,082,723 906,771 $ 6,308 41969 KCLO-TV 150,949 145,392 $ 1,011 47903 KCNC-TV 4,460,509 4,175,114 $ 29,046 71586 KCNS 9,007,762 8,012,556 $ 55,743 33742 KCOP-TV 18,134,022 17,318,605 $ 120,486 19117 KCOS 1,092,982 1,092,792 $ 7,603 63165 KCOY-TV 700,154 478,768 $ 3,331 33894 KCPQ 5,131,164 4,985,829 $ 34,686 53843 KCPT 2,690,171 2,688,808 $ 18,706 33875 KCRA-TV 11,608,107 7,153,845 $ 49,769 9719 KCRG-TV 1,143,055 1,130,704 $ 7,866 60728 KCSD-TV 323,237 323,093 $ 2,248 59494 KCSG 229,899 220,818 $ 1,536 33749 KCTS-TV 4,848,434 4,778,758 $ 33,246 41230 KCTV 2,732,197 2,730,443 $ 18,996 58605 KCVU 700,745 689,702 $ 4,798 10036 KCWC-DT 42,872 38,501 $ 268 64444 KCWE 2,642,880 2,641,432 $ 18,376 51502 KCWI-TV 1,152,163 1,151,070 $ 8,008 42008 KCWO-TV 55,411 55,383 $ 385 166511 KCWV 210,633 210,626 $ 1,465 24316 KCWX 4,897,780 4,890,042 $ 34,020 68713 KCWY-DT 85,085 84,715 $ 589 22201 KDAF 7,951,276 7,949,040 $ 55,301 33764 KDBC-TV 1,101,513 1,097,028 $ 7,632 79258 KDCK 43,010 42,993 $ 299 166332 KDCU-DT 773,823 773,808 $ 5,383 38375 KDEN-TV 3,973,266 3,942,210 $ 27,426 17037 KDFI 7,990,955 7,989,287 $ 55,581 33770 KDFW 7,962,141 7,959,855 $ 55,377 29102 KDIN-TV 1,193,740 1,189,191 $ 8,273 25454 KDKA-TV 3,569,162 3,428,192 $ 23,850 60740 KDKF 73,619 66,137 $ 460 4691 KDLH 267,326 264,686 $ 1,841 41975 KDLO-TV 214,001 213,796 $ 1,487 55379 KDLT-TV 700,230 689,305 $ 4,795 55375 KDLV-TV 98,101 97,673 $ 680 25221 KDMD 394,250 391,278 $ 2,722 78915 KDMI 1,248,443 1,247,337 $ 8,678 56524 KDNL-TV 3,013,924 3,009,244 $ 20,935 24518 KDOC-TV 18,264,021 17,379,123 $ 120,907 1005 KDOR-TV 1,180,603 1,177,894 $ 8,195 60736 KDRV 551,809 469,537 $ 3,267 61064 KDSD-TV 65,355 60,171 $ 419 53329 KDSE 52,777 51,188 $ 356 56527 KDSM-TV 1,202,702 1,201,866 $ 8,361 49326 KDTN 7,901,133 7,898,922 $ 54,953 83491 KDTP 25,965 23,729 $ 165 33778 KDTV-DT 8,697,794 7,750,134 $ 53,918 67910 KDTX-TV 7,985,188 7,983,676 $ 55,542 126 KDVR 4,301,541 4,144,268 $ 28,832 18084 KECI-TV 228,161 210,560 $ 1,465 51208 KECY-TV 407,175 403,848 $ 2,810 791767 KEDB 105,050 97,963 $ 682 791702 KEDS 2,594,159 2,593,835 $ 18,045 58408 KEDT 527,343 527,343 $ 3,669 55435 KEET 181,333 161,389 $ 1,123 41983 KELO-TV 767,130 715,437 $ 4,977 34440 KEMO-TV 9,007,762 8,012,556 $ 55,743 776162 KEMS 55,920 54,847 $ 382 2777 KEMV 634,060 576,758 $ 4,013 26304 KENS 3,091,086 3,077,749 $ 21,412 63845 KENV-DT 52,294 45,932 $ 320 18338 KENW 85,762 85,762 $ 597 50591 KEPB-TV 680,317 618,277 $ 4,301 56029 KEPR-TV 529,602 519,486 $ 3,614 49324 KERA-TV 7,984,381 7,981,440 $ 55,527 40878 KERO-TV 1,387,245 1,257,683 $ 8,750 61067 KESD-TV 172,302 165,214 $ 1,149 25577 KESQ-TV 1,487,393 615,803 $ 4,284 50205 KETA-TV 1,874,445 1,860,161 $ 12,941 62182 KETC 2,945,200 2,942,622 $ 20,472 37101 KETD 3,918,776 3,879,692 $ 26,991 2768 KETG 421,357 403,179 $ 2,805 12895 KETH-TV 7,293,196 7,293,115 $ 50,738 55643 KETK-TV 1,072,485 1,071,097 $ 7,452 2770 KETS 1,209,518 1,191,713 $ 8,291 53903 KETV 1,491,674 1,486,408 $ 10,341 92872 KETZ 505,102 502,310 $ 3,495 68853 KEYC-TV 553,554 539,853 $ 3,756 33691 KEYE-TV 3,533,479 3,444,549 $ 23,964 60637 KEYT-TV 1,466,777 1,275,243 $ 8,872 83715 KEYU 366,142 366,071 $ 2,547 34406 KEZI 1,221,893 1,166,907 $ 8,118 73701 KFAA-TV 7,987,157 7,983,918 $ 55,544 34412 KFBB-TV 96,782 95,488 $ 664 125 KFCT 967,548 960,099 $ 6,679 51466 KFDA-TV 394,744 393,695 $ 2,739 22589 KFDM 770,621 770,609 $ 5,361 48521 KFDR 672,350 657,307 $ 4,573 65370 KFDX-TV 367,320 366,583 $ 2,550 49264 KFFV 4,674,758 4,634,964 $ 32,245 12729 KFFX-TV 467,787 463,006 $ 3,221 83992 KFJX 709,125 679,797 $ 4,729 42122 KFMB-TV 4,239,135 3,914,207 $ 27,231 53321 KFME 442,176 441,664 $ 3,073 74256 KFNB 84,543 83,990 $ 584 21613 KFNE 53,059 52,392 $ 364 21612 KFNR 9,724 9,457 $ 66 66222 KFOR-TV 1,813,323 1,811,723 $ 12,604 33716 KFOX-TV 1,107,424 1,097,251 $ 7,634 41517 KFPH-DT 385,474 313,720 $ 2,183 81509 KFPX-TV 1,072,290 1,072,222 $ 7,459 31597 KFQX 197,918 173,495 $ 1,207 59013 KFRE-TV 1,850,426 1,835,478 $ 12,769 51429 KFSF-DT 7,986,866 7,039,241 $ 48,972 66469 KFSM-TV 1,005,574 981,351 $ 6,827 8620 KFSN-TV 1,973,837 1,957,017 $ 13,615 29560 KFTA-TV 907,937 894,593 $ 6,224 83714 KFTC 64,284 64,250 $ 447 60537 KFTH-DT 7,287,908 7,287,530 $ 50,699 60549 KFTR-DT 18,326,526 16,971,273 $ 118,069 61335 KFTS 77,847 66,866 $ 465 81441 KFTU-DT 109,271 105,476 $ 734 34439 KFTV-DT 1,930,415 1,914,464 $ 13,319 664 KFVE 91,164 81,417 $ 566 592 KFVS-TV 867,085 843,470 $ 5,868 29015 KFWD 7,970,373 7,964,229 $ 55,407 35336 KFXA 914,357 912,893 $ 6,351 17625 KFXB-TV 377,548 370,365 $ 2,577 70917 KFXK-TV 969,012 966,868 $ 6,727 84453 KFXL-TV 977,327 976,428 $ 6,793 56079 KFXV 1,335,643 1,335,643 $ 9,292 41427 KFYR-TV 153,218 150,858 $ 1,050 25685 KGAN 1,122,060 1,109,804 $ 7,721 34457 KGBT-TV 1,350,104 1,350,004 $ 9,392 7841 KGCW 938,174 935,835 $ 6,511 24485 KGEB 1,257,918 1,224,797 $ 8,521 34459 KGET-TV 982,744 940,071 $ 6,540 53320 KGFE 120,164 120,164 $ 836 7894 KGIN 235,875 233,749 $ 1,626 83945 KGLA-DT 1,754,806 1,754,806 $ 12,208 34445 KGMB 1,017,227 907,842 $ 6,316 58608 KGMC 2,076,523 2,052,808 $ 14,281 36914 KGMD-TV 101,247 100,762 $ 701 36920 KGMV 209,577 175,904 $ 1,224 10061 KGNS-TV 283,777 274,877 $ 1,912 34470 KGO-TV 9,406,080 8,630,291 $ 60,041 56034 KGPE 1,829,902 1,812,936 $ 12,613 81694 KGPX-TV 792,059 724,592 $ 5,041 25511 KGTF 155,729 154,491 $ 1,075 40876 KGTV 4,257,568 3,912,037 $ 27,216 36918 KGUN-TV 1,479,221 1,292,183 $ 8,990 34874 KGW 3,397,112 3,239,730 $ 22,539 63177 KGWC-TV 84,597 84,117 $ 585 63162 KGWL-TV 37,314 37,199 $ 259 63166 KGWN-TV 558,685 528,237 $ 3,675 63170 KGWR-TV 49,435 49,242 $ 343 4146 KHAW-TV 102,381 101,946 $ 709 60353 KHBS 610,455 588,263 $ 4,093 27300 KHCE-TV 2,848,289 2,842,696 $ 19,777 26431 KHET 1,022,459 1,009,772 $ 7,025 21160 KHGI-TV 245,331 244,515 $ 1,701 36917 KHII-TV 1,017,217 907,842 $ 6,316 29085 KHIN 1,137,059 1,135,866 $ 7,902 17688 KHME 196,002 194,233 $ 1,351 47670 KHMT 193,159 188,714 $ 1,313 47987 KHNE-TV 205,833 204,923 $ 1,426 34867 KHNL 1,017,191 907,816 $ 6,316 60354 KHOG-TV 862,177 797,810 $ 5,550 4144 KHON-TV 1,016,508 944,271 $ 6,569 34529 KHOU 7,289,635 7,287,991 $ 50,703 4690 KHQA-TV 308,541 308,333 $ 2,145 34537 KHQ-TV 938,773 887,184 $ 6,172 30601 KHRR 1,298,625 1,241,818 $ 8,639 34348 KHSD-TV 203,077 199,032 $ 1,385 24508 KHSL-TV 634,956 615,388 $ 4,281 69677 KHSV 2,384,812 2,343,597 $ 16,304 64544 KHVO 101,138 99,980 $ 696 23394 KIAH 7,307,171 7,306,816 $ 50,834 34564 KICU-TV 8,992,796 7,837,235 $ 54,524 56028 KIDK 351,335 348,794 $ 2,427 58560 KIDY 126,096 126,079 $ 877 53382 KIEM-TV 177,885 166,501 $ 1,158 66258 KIFI-TV 360,684 357,711 $ 2,489 16950 KIFR 2,356,175 2,330,021 $ 16,210 10188 KIII 580,363 577,602 $ 4,018 29095 KIIN 1,405,103 1,375,871 $ 9,572 34527 KIKU 1,017,227 920,837 $ 6,406 63865 KILM 18,009,859 16,478,550 $ 114,641 56033 KIMA-TV 325,241 275,599 $ 1,917 66402 KIMT 671,281 662,859 $ 4,612 67089 KINC 2,320,873 2,230,933 $ 15,521 34847 KING-TV 4,735,386 4,686,752 $ 32,606 51708 KINT-TV 1,093,579 1,093,227 $ 7,606 26249 KION-TV 2,814,543 1,002,679 $ 6,976 62427 KIPT 190,856 189,839 $ 1,321 66781 KIRO-TV 4,715,994 4,685,383 $ 32,596 62430 KISU-TV 358,145 353,319 $ 2,458 12896 KITU-TV 749,934 749,934 $ 5,217 64548 KITV 1,016,508 890,101 $ 6,192 59255 KIVI-TV 864,257 856,996 $ 5,962 47285 KIXE-TV 484,629 444,405 $ 3,092 13792 KJJC-TV 85,813 84,995 $ 591 14000 KJLA 18,944,109 17,650,447 $ 122,794 20015 KJNP-TV 96,266 96,001 $ 668 53315 KJRE 15,414 15,394 $ 107 59439 KJRH-TV 1,475,194 1,458,401 $ 10,146 55364 KJRR 45,707 44,148 $ 307 7675 KJTL 365,659 365,242 $ 2,541 55031 KJTV-TV 433,372 432,694 $ 3,010 13814 KJUD 32,087 31,083 $ 216 36607 KJZZ-TV 2,837,622 2,620,561 $ 18,231 776244 KKAB 935,198 933,568 $ 6,495 776230 KKAC 128,739 128,719 $ 895 776239 KKAD 55,004 54,083 $ 376 83180 KKAI 1,016,756 995,859 $ 6,928 58267 KKAP 1,002,980 967,770 $ 6,733 24766 KKCO 252,558 223,619 $ 1,556 776228 KKEL 8,625 8,430 $ 59 35097 KKJB 780,452 775,264 $ 5,394 22644 KKPX-TV 8,265,775 7,324,470 $ 50,956 35037 KKTV 3,340,505 2,899,502 $ 20,172 35042 KLAS-TV 2,421,827 2,256,225 $ 15,697 52907 KLAX-TV 350,490 350,144 $ 2,436 3660 KLBK-TV 409,551 409,512 $ 2,849 65523 KLBY 29,875 29,852 $ 208 38430 KLCS 17,868,933 16,310,676 $ 113,473 77719 KLCW-TV 404,384 404,369 $ 2,813 51479 KLDO-TV 267,717 267,717 $ 1,863 37105 KLEI 149,648 122,977 $ 856 56032 KLEW-TV 173,816 158,086 $ 1,100 35059 KLFY-TV 1,380,417 1,379,775 $ 9,599 54011 KLJB 1,003,676 992,763 $ 6,907 11264 KLKN 1,295,353 1,249,913 $ 8,696 52593 KLML 285,490 232,725 $ 1,619 47975 KLNE-TV 124,206 124,134 $ 864 38590 KLPA-TV 395,240 395,079 $ 2,749 38588 KLPB-TV 789,881 789,881 $ 5,495 749 KLRN 2,865,059 2,843,302 $ 19,781 11951 KLRT-TV 1,206,848 1,187,015 $ 8,258 8564 KLRU 3,404,331 3,364,831 $ 23,409 8322 KLSR-TV 617,791 555,511 $ 3,865 31114 KLST 205,611 176,862 $ 1,230 24436 KLTJ 7,239,268 7,239,082 $ 50,362 38587 KLTL-TV 438,847 438,847 $ 3,053 38589 KLTM-TV 670,083 665,283 $ 4,628 38591 KLTS-TV 930,704 927,650 $ 6,454 68540 KLTV 1,125,646 1,108,403 $ 7,711 12913 KLUJ-TV 1,304,523 1,304,523 $ 9,076 57220 KLUZ-TV 1,122,002 1,061,683 $ 7,386 11683 KLVX 2,368,176 2,246,657 $ 15,630 82476 KLWB 1,066,369 1,066,248 $ 7,418 40250 KLWY 652,057 648,301 $ 4,510 64551 KMAU 230,508 205,410 $ 1,429 51499 KMAX-TV 11,771,919 7,828,092 $ 54,460 65686 KMBC-TV 2,690,459 2,688,812 $ 18,706 35183 KMCB 77,018 70,797 $ 493 41237 KMCC 2,384,330 2,325,062 $ 16,175 42636 KMCI-TV 2,611,447 2,610,077 $ 18,158 38584 KMCT-TV 270,862 270,855 $ 1,884 22127 KMCY 80,761 80,722 $ 562 162016 KMDE 34,041 34,035 $ 237 26428 KMEB 239,702 216,916 $ 1,509 24753 KMEE-TV 217,161 202,513 $ 1,409 39665 KMEG 763,806 758,839 $ 5,279 35123 KMEX-DT 18,389,371 16,955,856 $ 117,962 40875 KMGH-TV 4,484,612 4,211,082 $ 29,296 35131 KMID 453,896 453,890 $ 3,158 16749 KMIR-TV 3,014,399 805,795 $ 5,606 63164 KMIZ 573,185 571,442 $ 3,976 53541 KMLM-DT 358,819 358,819 $ 2,496 52046 KMLU 685,717 681,660 $ 4,742 47981 KMNE-TV 44,963 41,160 $ 286 4326 KMOS-TV 823,502 819,698 $ 5,703 41425 KMOT 90,764 88,505 $ 616 70034 KMOV 3,058,356 3,053,447 $ 21,243 51488 KMPH-TV 1,871,826 1,831,011 $ 12,738 44052 KMSB 1,390,772 1,081,454 $ 7,524 68883 KMSP-TV 4,232,627 4,200,278 $ 29,221 12525 KMSS-TV 1,047,384 1,044,317 $ 7,265 43095 KMTP-TV 9,007,762 8,012,556 $ 55,743 35189 KMTR 858,621 737,863 $ 5,133 35190 KMTV-TV 1,482,627 1,481,213 $ 10,305 77063 KMTW 782,241 782,233 $ 5,442 35200 KMVT 203,865 194,642 $ 1,354 32958 KMVU-DT 333,344 255,430 $ 1,777 86534 KMYA-DT 181,750 181,710 $ 1,264 51518 KMYS 2,695,906 2,689,444 $ 18,710 54420 KMYT-TV 1,378,264 1,366,926 $ 9,510 35822 KMYU 174,066 170,667 $ 1,187 993 KNAT-TV 1,194,249 1,164,035 $ 8,098 24749 KNAZ-TV 370,644 251,297 $ 1,748 47906 KNBC 18,007,954 16,466,286 $ 114,556 81464 KNBN 158,327 149,470 $ 1,040 9754 KNCT 2,162,813 2,134,345 $ 14,849 82611 KNDB 140,901 140,846 $ 980 82615 KNDM 81,669 81,636 $ 568 12395 KNDO 326,624 291,816 $ 2,030 12427 KNDU 531,985 514,613 $ 3,580 17683 KNEP 96,311 91,722 $ 638 776145 KNGF 418,755 418,649 $ 2,913 48003 KNHL 282,894 282,649 $ 1,966 125710 KNIC-DT 2,916,877 2,900,176 $ 20,177 59363 KNIN-TV 861,563 857,065 $ 5,963 48525 KNLC 3,009,669 3,007,124 $ 20,921 84215 KNMD-TV 1,175,472 1,147,431 $ 7,983 55528 KNME-TV 1,185,928 1,145,659 $ 7,970 47707 KNMT 3,242,939 3,141,420 $ 21,855 48975 KNOE-TV 744,581 736,357 $ 5,123 49273 KNOP-TV 84,998 83,626 $ 582 10228 KNPB 687,138 528,128 $ 3,674 55362 KNRR 24,339 24,315 $ 169 35277 KNSD 4,176,531 3,908,916 $ 27,194 19191 KNSN-TV 703,800 557,463 $ 3,878 23302 KNSO 1,962,568 1,942,998 $ 13,517 35280 KNTV 9,285,323 8,743,038 $ 60,825 144 KNVA 3,326,171 3,285,676 $ 22,858 33745 KNVN 497,887 470,307 $ 3,272 69692 KNVO 1,359,785 1,359,785 $ 9,460 29557 KNWA-TV 935,156 915,507 $ 6,369 59440 KNXV-TV 4,839,106 4,825,470 $ 33,571 59014 KOAA-TV 1,865,217 1,422,070 $ 9,893 50588 KOAB-TV 254,424 250,749 $ 1,744 50590 KOAC-TV 2,168,640 1,718,555 $ 11,956 58552 KOAM-TV 822,738 789,385 $ 5,492 53928 KOAT-TV 1,171,605 1,145,416 $ 7,969 35313 KOB 1,189,849 1,152,270 $ 8,016 35321 KOBF 198,225 163,241 $ 1,136 8260 KOBI 595,619 551,251 $ 3,835 62272 KOBR 227,347 226,868 $ 1,578 50170 KOCB 1,803,171 1,802,139 $ 12,537 4328 KOCE-TV 18,212,242 17,141,918 $ 119,256 84225 KOCM 1,615,493 1,614,922 $ 11,235 12508 KOCO-TV 1,890,246 1,881,152 $ 13,087 83181 KOCW 80,292 80,262 $ 558 18283 KODE-TV 789,082 781,251 $ 5,435 66195 KOED-TV 1,555,369 1,523,164 $ 10,597 50198 KOET 657,252 637,057 $ 4,432 51189 KOFY-TV 5,746,338 4,850,897 $ 33,748 34859 KOGG 206,000 173,034 $ 1,204 166534 KOHD 248,737 244,163 $ 1,699 35380 KOIN 3,398,786 3,237,691 $ 22,525 35388 KOKH-TV 1,800,124 1,797,602 $ 12,506 11910 KOKI-TV 1,428,477 1,415,308 $ 9,846 48663 KOLD-TV 1,278,430 932,536 $ 6,488 7890 KOLN 1,565,175 1,465,478 $ 10,195 63331 KOLO-TV 1,045,027 912,343 $ 6,347 28496 KOLR 1,111,540 1,075,340 $ 7,481 21656 KOMO-TV 4,798,742 4,748,599 $ 33,036 65583 KOMU-TV 560,878 559,926 $ 3,895 776087 KONC 1,752,026 1,713,180 $ 11,919 35396 KONG 4,651,055 4,627,490 $ 32,193 60675 KOOD 107,949 107,840 $ 750 50589 KOPB-TV 3,433,002 3,231,453 $ 22,481 2566 KOPX-TV 1,674,969 1,674,820 $ 11,652 64877 KORO 572,684 572,684 $ 3,984 6865 KOSA-TV 412,004 408,993 $ 2,845 34347 KOTA-TV 189,181 166,163 $ 1,156 8284 KOTI 318,713 97,757 $ 680 35434 KOTV-DT 1,476,322 1,464,332 $ 10,187 56550 KOVR 11,787,731 7,857,430 $ 54,664 51101 KOZJ 431,452 429,469 $ 2,988 51102 KOZK 876,101 867,569 $ 6,036 3659 KOZL-TV 1,026,947 999,396 $ 6,953 35455 KPAX-TV 224,598 210,969 $ 1,468 67868 KPAZ-TV 4,842,326 4,829,190 $ 33,597 6124 KPBS 3,878,727 3,740,193 $ 26,021 50044 KPBT-TV 405,749 405,749 $ 2,823 77452 KPCB-DT 30,087 30,010 $ 209 35460 KPDX 3,335,153 3,195,785 $ 22,233 12524 KPEJ-TV 439,758 439,752 $ 3,059 41223 KPHO-TV 4,847,036 4,823,456 $ 33,557 61551 KPIC 162,187 108,923 $ 758 86205 KPIF 294,133 287,132 $ 1,998 25452 KPIX-TV 8,939,616 8,011,243 $ 55,734 58912 KPJK 8,580,033 7,562,337 $ 52,611 166510 KPJR-TV 3,994,308 3,966,833 $ 27,597 13994 KPLC 1,433,578 1,431,830 $ 9,961 41964 KPLO-TV 55,567 52,690 $ 367 35417 KPLR-TV 3,020,349 3,017,559 $ 20,993 12144 KPMR 1,305,956 1,148,984 $ 7,993 47973 KPNE-TV 89,112 84,360 $ 587 35486 KPNX 4,833,873 4,829,331 $ 33,598 77512 KPNZ 2,843,405 2,620,343 $ 18,230 73998 KPOB-TV 131,017 130,539 $ 908 26655 KPPX-TV 4,839,734 4,825,175 $ 33,569 53117 KPRC-TV 7,306,242 7,305,940 $ 50,827 48660 KPRY-TV 42,882 42,790 $ 298 61071 KPSD-TV 19,034 17,986 $ 125 53544 KPTB-DT 351,156 349,137 $ 2,429 81445 KPTF-DT 83,380 83,378 $ 580 77451 KPTH 709,738 706,066 $ 4,912 51491 KPTM 1,544,022 1,542,684 $ 10,732 33345 KPTS 849,715 845,613 $ 5,883 50633 KPTV 3,367,478 3,193,457 $ 22,217 82575 KPTW 93,904 86,230 $ 600 1270 KPVI-DT 301,761 295,401 $ 2,055 58835 KPXB-TV 7,268,859 7,268,534 $ 50,567 68695 KPXC-TV 3,953,241 3,922,814 $ 27,291 68834 KPXD-TV 7,851,329 7,849,492 $ 54,609 33337 KPXE-TV 2,621,434 2,620,523 $ 18,231 5801 KPXG-TV 3,396,167 3,240,309 $ 22,543 81507 KPXJ 1,114,713 1,111,470 $ 7,732 61173 KPXL-TV 2,675,400 2,663,341 $ 18,529 35907 KPXM-TV 3,872,706 3,871,246 $ 26,932 58978 KPXN-TV 18,009,859 16,478,550 $ 114,641 77483 KPXO-TV 1,016,659 977,430 $ 6,800 21156 KPXR-TV 870,810 864,123 $ 6,012 69619 KPYX 8,951,798 8,033,747 $ 55,891 10242 KQCA 11,066,274 6,905,589 $ 48,042 41430 KQCD-TV 46,118 43,974 $ 306 18287 KQCK 3,914,615 3,869,797 $ 26,922 78322 KQCW-DT 1,198,492 1,192,260 $ 8,295 35525 KQDS-TV 309,526 305,800 $ 2,127 35500 KQED 8,924,403 7,934,659 $ 55,201 35663 KQEH 8,924,403 7,934,659 $ 55,201 8214 KQET 3,221,916 2,234,120 $ 15,543 5471 KQIN 585,179 585,151 $ 4,071 17686 KQME 203,177 198,383 $ 1,380 61063 KQSD-TV 32,060 31,225 $ 217 8378 KQSL 209,114 145,828 $ 1,015 20427 KQTV 1,587,910 1,493,576 $ 10,391 78921 KQUP 801,534 624,922 $ 4,348 306 KRBC-TV 237,068 236,992 $ 1,649 166319 KRBK 1,018,307 1,001,775 $ 6,969 22161 KRCA 18,303,336 17,670,502 $ 122,934 57945 KRCB 9,553,735 9,246,484 $ 64,328 41110 KRCG 758,918 744,644 $ 5,180 8291 KRCR-TV 523,130 470,701 $ 3,275 10192 KRCW-TV 3,330,638 3,194,693 $ 22,225 49134 KRDK-TV 396,418 396,379 $ 2,758 52579 KRDO-TV 3,041,472 2,649,733 $ 18,434 70578 KREG-TV 159,270 97,419 $ 678 34868 KREM 935,162 865,664 $ 6,022 51493 KREN-TV 890,359 755,865 $ 5,259 70596 KREX-TV 154,968 154,745 $ 1,077 70579 KREY-TV 77,765 69,062 $ 480 48589 KREZ-TV 148,142 101,846 $ 709 43328 KRGV-TV 1,364,680 1,364,370 $ 9,492 82698 KRII 130,753 129,582 $ 902 29114 KRIN 989,720 976,875 $ 6,796 25559 KRIS-TV 576,145 576,104 $ 4,008 22204 KRIV 7,295,333 7,294,571 $ 50,748 14040 KRMA-TV 4,385,284 4,186,932 $ 29,128 14042 KRMJ 184,799 169,573 $ 1,180 20476 KRMT 3,457,214 3,353,993 $ 23,334 84224 KRMU 86,743 70,549 $ 491 20373 KRMZ 37,319 34,727 $ 242 47971 KRNE-TV 45,930 38,258 $ 266 60307 KRNV-DT 1,043,407 879,554 $ 6,119 65526 KRON-TV 9,335,037 8,729,878 $ 60,734 53539 KRPV-DT 65,504 65,504 $ 456 48575 KRQE 1,174,664 1,143,133 $ 7,953 57431 KRSU-TV 1,078,345 1,076,370 $ 7,488 82613 KRTN-TV 86,907 67,161 $ 467 35567 KRTV 95,862 94,385 $ 657 84157 KRWB-TV 118,050 117,368 $ 817 35585 KRWF 82,308 82,308 $ 573 55516 KRWG-TV 929,122 719,343 $ 5,004 48360 KRXI-TV 802,294 612,918 $ 4,264 307 KSAN-TV 142,667 142,664 $ 993 11911 KSAS-TV 773,161 773,144 $ 5,379 53118 KSAT-TV 3,075,254 3,027,321 $ 21,061 35584 KSAX 380,811 380,811 $ 2,649 35587 KSAZ-TV 4,854,767 4,831,287 $ 33,611 38214 KSBI 1,751,439 1,749,811 $ 12,173 19653 KSBW 5,564,606 4,838,506 $ 33,661 19654 KSBY 564,561 526,110 $ 3,660 82910 KSCC 534,707 534,707 $ 3,720 10202 KSCE 1,093,223 1,089,485 $ 7,580 35608 KSCI 18,212,242 17,141,918 $ 119,256 26231 KSCN-TV 18,512,098 18,476,669 $ 128,542 72348 KSCW-DT 927,681 922,979 $ 6,421 46981 KSDK 3,013,779 3,007,368 $ 20,922 35594 KSEE 1,888,344 1,874,494 $ 13,041 29121 KSFL-TV 328,842 328,837 $ 2,288 48658 KSFY-TV 731,978 677,603 $ 4,714 17680 KSGW-TV 63,725 62,410 $ 434 59444 KSHB-TV 2,616,078 2,614,543 $ 18,189 73706 KSHV-TV 927,614 927,074 $ 6,450 29096 KSIN-TV 349,020 347,636 $ 2,419 34846 KSIX-TV 79,019 79,019 $ 550 35606 KSKN 841,494 741,761 $ 5,160 70482 KSLA 998,682 998,217 $ 6,945 6359 KSL-TV 2,839,353 2,616,980 $ 18,206 71558 KSMN 357,081 357,075 $ 2,484 33336 KSMO-TV 2,585,699 2,584,094 $ 17,978 28510 KSMQ-TV 540,217 524,751 $ 3,651 35611 KSMS-TV 1,684,095 922,727 $ 6,419 21161 KSNB-TV 748,097 747,971 $ 5,204 72359 KSNC 166,315 165,997 $ 1,155 67766 KSNF 640,722 637,167 $ 4,433 72361 KSNG 143,267 143,050 $ 995 72362 KSNK 46,872 43,725 $ 304 67335 KSNT 657,321 629,824 $ 4,382 10179 KSNV 2,283,885 2,225,135 $ 15,480 72358 KSNW 810,301 809,927 $ 5,635 61956 KSPS-TV 935,711 883,159 $ 6,144 52953 KSPX-TV 7,814,495 5,846,886 $ 40,677 166546 KSQA 391,323 383,112 $ 2,665 53313 KSRE 83,984 83,984 $ 584 35843 KSTC-TV 4,228,163 4,218,565 $ 29,349 63182 KSTF 49,439 49,305 $ 343 28010 KSTP-TV 4,230,921 4,222,032 $ 29,373 60534 KSTR-DT 7,934,842 7,931,770 $ 55,181 64987 KSTS 9,125,502 7,902,723 $ 54,979 22215 KSTU 2,834,133 2,604,938 $ 18,123 23428 KSTW 4,945,092 4,849,973 $ 33,741 5243 KSVI 192,678 191,712 $ 1,334 58827 KSWB-TV 3,976,536 3,773,857 $ 26,255 60683 KSWK 78,448 78,334 $ 545 35645 KSWO-TV 461,432 437,725 $ 3,045 776219 KSWY 40,578 36,197 $ 252 61350 KSYS 551,328 475,899 $ 3,311 59988 KTAB-TV 281,813 281,579 $ 1,959 999 KTAJ-TV 2,529,426 2,528,757 $ 17,593 35648 KTAL-TV 1,072,280 1,070,439 $ 7,447 12930 KTAS 501,069 491,644 $ 3,420 81458 KTAZ 4,835,851 4,811,877 $ 33,476 35649 KTBC 4,138,493 3,857,454 $ 26,836 67884 KTBN-TV 18,729,484 17,423,297 $ 121,214 67999 KTBO-TV 1,758,274 1,756,813 $ 12,222 35652 KTBS-TV 1,138,628 1,135,638 $ 7,901 28324 KTBU 7,233,338 7,232,807 $ 50,319 67950 KTBW-TV 4,873,117 4,763,879 $ 33,142 35655 KTBY 360,565 358,722 $ 2,496 68594 KTCA-TV 4,022,616 4,008,908 $ 27,890 68597 KTCI-TV 3,912,137 3,908,528 $ 27,192 35187 KTCW 106,581 93,009 $ 647 36916 KTDO 1,093,374 1,089,602 $ 7,580 2769 KTEJ 417,496 415,013 $ 2,887 83707 KTEL-TV 61,338 61,328 $ 427 35666 KTEN 629,981 627,687 $ 4,367 24514 KTFD-TV 3,767,471 3,727,523 $ 25,932 35512 KTFF-DT 2,403,821 2,383,063 $ 16,579 20871 KTFK-DT 7,705,367 5,721,312 $ 39,803 68753 KTFN 1,095,022 1,091,962 $ 7,597 35084 KTFQ-TV 1,188,205 1,154,792 $ 8,034 29232 KTGM 153,836 153,653 $ 1,069 2787 KTHV 1,302,388 1,276,430 $ 8,880 29100 KTIN 275,295 273,715 $ 1,904 66170 KTIV 806,217 800,304 $ 5,568 49397 KTKA-TV 805,221 786,518 $ 5,472 35670 KTLA 18,962,616 17,555,224 $ 122,132 62354 KTLM 1,148,738 1,148,738 $ 7,992 49153 KTLN-TV 5,867,943 5,221,797 $ 36,328 64984 KTMD 7,304,022 7,303,795 $ 50,813 14675 KTMF 203,121 182,458 $ 1,269 10177 KTMW 2,690,440 2,543,730 $ 17,697 21533 KTNC-TV 9,007,762 8,012,556 $ 55,743 47996 KTNE-TV 95,310 90,746 $ 631 60519 KTNL-TV 8,275 8,274 $ 58 74100 KTNV-TV 2,422,112 2,249,532 $ 15,650 71023 KTNW 512,412 493,366 $ 3,432 8651 KTOO-TV 32,198 32,017 $ 223 7078 KTPX-TV 1,138,473 1,136,085 $ 7,904 68541 KTRE 438,137 420,563 $ 2,926 35675 KTRK-TV 7,318,272 7,316,846 $ 50,903 28230 KTRV-TV 869,223 861,267 $ 5,992 69170 KTSC 3,598,645 3,397,164 $ 23,634 61066 KTSD-TV 84,807 83,980 $ 584 37511 KTSF 8,697,794 7,750,134 $ 53,918 67760 KTSM-TV 1,093,389 1,090,716 $ 7,588 35678 KTTC 836,828 748,435 $ 5,207 28501 KTTM 77,930 75,368 $ 524 11908 KTTU-TV 1,393,795 1,109,962 $ 7,722 22208 KTTV 18,130,338 17,373,502 $ 120,867 28521 KTTW 381,013 377,833 $ 2,629 65355 KTTZ-TV 402,714 402,692 $ 2,802 35685 KTUL 1,573,310 1,543,051 $ 10,735 10173 KTUU-TV 397,237 395,237 $ 2,750 77480 KTUZ-TV 1,841,616 1,840,457 $ 12,804 49632 KTVA 354,313 354,089 $ 2,463 34858 KTVB 869,177 862,056 $ 5,997 31437 KTVC 140,329 104,355 $ 726 68581 KTVD 4,468,718 4,179,057 $ 29,074 35692 KTVE 607,145 606,961 $ 4,223 49621 KTVF 96,106 95,973 $ 668 5290 KTVH-DT 241,887 181,640 $ 1,264 35693 KTVI 3,025,572 3,022,219 $ 21,026 40993 KTVK 4,837,443 4,825,882 $ 33,574 22570 KTVL 476,591 388,139 $ 2,700 18066 KTVM-TV 294,105 208,697 $ 1,452 59139 KTVN 1,043,407 885,756 $ 6,162 21251 KTVO 220,732 220,235 $ 1,532 35694 KTVQ 193,122 188,064 $ 1,308 50592 KTVR 153,040 56,934 $ 396 23422 KTVT 8,233,312 8,230,812 $ 57,262 35703 KTVU 9,036,813 8,056,602 $ 56,050 35705 KTVW-DT 4,827,096 4,809,796 $ 33,462 68889 KTVX 2,838,210 2,602,217 $ 18,104 55907 KTVZ 249,013 246,030 $ 1,712 18286 KTWO-TV 84,574 84,044 $ 585 70938 KTWU 1,834,018 1,697,183 $ 11,807 51517 KTXA 8,210,642 8,208,172 $ 57,104 42359 KTXD-TV 8,012,541 8,010,333 $ 55,728 51569 KTXH 7,302,378 7,301,602 $ 50,797 10205 KTXL 9,145,873 6,451,158 $ 44,881 308 KTXS-TV 269,545 267,328 $ 1,860 69315 KUAC-TV 96,544 96,043 $ 668 51233 KUAM-TV 153,836 153,836 $ 1,070 2722 KUAS-TV 1,060,599 1,041,636 $ 7,247 2731 KUAT-TV 1,596,429 1,361,399 $ 9,471 60520 KUBD 15,387 13,666 $ 95 70492 KUBE-TV 7,297,882 7,297,596 $ 50,769 1136 KUCW 2,837,693 2,601,359 $ 18,098 69396 KUED 2,837,687 2,603,895 $ 18,115 69582 KUEN 2,806,982 2,580,258 $ 17,951 82576 KUES 32,094 26,754 $ 186 82585 KUEW 174,491 162,588 $ 1,131 66611 KUFM-TV 203,395 180,333 $ 1,255 169028 KUGF-TV 89,762 89,455 $ 622 68717 KUHM-TV 166,592 156,454 $ 1,088 69269 KUHT 7,288,782 7,288,082 $ 50,703 62382 KUID-TV 482,761 308,950 $ 2,149 169027 KUKL-TV 140,626 131,415 $ 914 35724 KULR-TV 194,552 186,663 $ 1,299 41429 KUMV-TV 70,878 70,314 $ 489 81447 KUNP 133,781 45,006 $ 313 4624 KUNS-TV 4,682,176 4,668,774 $ 32,481 86532 KUOK 28,807 28,738 $ 200 66589 KUON-TV 1,516,440 1,502,853 $ 10,455 86263 KUPB 386,448 386,448 $ 2,689 65535 KUPK 147,290 146,174 $ 1,017 27431 KUPT 101,334 101,329 $ 705 89714 KUPU 1,019,651 1,010,979 $ 7,033 57884 KUPX-TV 2,824,302 2,598,543 $ 18,078 23074 KUSA 4,470,580 4,195,376 $ 29,187 61072 KUSD-TV 519,419 519,181 $ 3,612 10238 KUSI-TV 3,853,072 3,707,454 $ 25,793 43567 KUSM-TV 155,558 140,071 $ 974 69694 KUTF 1,357,824 1,164,486 $ 8,101 81451 KUTH-DT 2,636,456 2,416,549 $ 16,812 68886 KUTP 4,842,720 4,823,413 $ 33,556 35823 KUTV 2,837,398 2,601,168 $ 18,096 63927 KUVE-DT 1,370,137 1,024,072 $ 7,124 7700 KUVI-DT 1,287,700 1,076,164 $ 7,487 35841 KUVN-DT 7,987,884 7,986,084 $ 55,559 58609 KUVS-DT 4,496,875 4,458,448 $ 31,017 49766 KVAL-TV 1,113,777 992,676 $ 6,906 32621 KVAW 58,052 58,052 $ 404 58795 KVCR-DT 19,073,599 18,308,953 $ 127,375 35846 KVCT 291,432 290,038 $ 2,018 10195 KVCW 2,283,670 2,224,688 $ 15,477 64969 KVDA 3,114,838 3,092,933 $ 21,518 19783 KVEA 18,300,497 17,059,098 $ 118,680 12523 KVEO-TV 1,357,022 1,356,984 $ 9,441 2495 KVEW 537,519 524,246 $ 3,647 35852 KVHP 773,592 773,545 $ 5,382 49832 KVIA-TV 1,093,416 1,090,743 $ 7,588 35855 KVIE 11,759,390 8,232,137 $ 57,271 40450 KVIH-TV 139,435 119,247 $ 830 40446 KVII-TV 392,629 391,979 $ 2,727 61961 KVLY-TV 409,018 408,931 $ 2,845 16729 KVMD 15,940,782 15,143,297 $ 105,352 83825 KVME-TV 26,212 22,277 $ 155 25735 KVOA 1,386,793 1,069,725 $ 7,442 35862 KVOS-TV 2,566,816 2,493,670 $ 17,348 69733 KVPT 1,854,771 1,828,301 $ 12,719 55372 KVRR 403,075 403,075 $ 2,804 166331 KVSN-DT 3,136,196 2,698,298 $ 18,772 608 KVTH-DT 319,985 318,374 $ 2,215 2784 KVTJ-DT 1,459,963 1,459,552 $ 10,154 607 KVTN-DT 970,045 963,130 $ 6,700 35867 KVUE 3,458,312 3,395,187 $ 23,620 78910 KVUI 286,007 279,513 $ 1,945 35870 KVVU-TV 2,369,125 2,246,682 $ 15,630 36170 KVYE 404,453 401,890 $ 2,796 776246 KWAL 202,934 167,016 $ 1,162 35095 KWBA-TV 1,194,062 1,136,172 $ 7,904 78314 KWBM 694,164 676,716 $ 4,708 27425 KWBN 1,016,508 893,029 $ 6,213 76268 KWBQ 1,186,772 1,147,638 $ 7,984 66413 KWCH-DT 897,522 896,232 $ 6,235 71549 KWCM-TV 253,609 245,441 $ 1,708 35419 KWDK 4,867,196 4,778,196 $ 33,242 42007 KWES-TV 506,963 506,675 $ 3,525 50194 KWET 125,090 109,790 $ 764 35881 KWEX-DT 2,871,330 2,864,298 $ 19,927 35883 KWGN-TV 4,368,605 4,155,087 $ 28,907 37099 KWHB 1,056,520 1,056,118 $ 7,347 36846 KWHE 1,015,533 885,013 $ 6,157 56384 KWHY 18,512,098 18,476,669 $ 128,542 35096 KWKB 1,167,302 1,156,465 $ 8,046 162115 KWKS 38,196 37,876 $ 264 12522 KWKT-TV 1,631,788 1,626,721 $ 11,317 21162 KWNB-TV 87,130 85,538 $ 595 776269 KWNV 18,419 17,701 $ 123 67347 KWOG 634,387 615,024 $ 4,279 56852 KWPX-TV 4,985,717 4,873,427 $ 33,904 6885 KWQC-TV 1,082,087 1,072,789 $ 7,463 53318 KWSE 85,141 83,532 $ 581 71024 KWSU-TV 824,342 528,984 $ 3,680 25382 KWTV-DT 1,801,405 1,800,115 $ 12,523 35903 KWTX-TV 2,532,542 2,418,595 $ 16,826 593 KWWL 1,127,596 1,116,266 $ 7,766 84410 KWWT 358,813 358,813 $ 2,496 14674 KWYB 91,657 72,951 $ 508 10032 KWYP-DT 163,309 143,265 $ 997 35920 KXAN-TV 3,476,567 3,408,238 $ 23,711 49330 KXAS-TV 8,080,362 8,077,819 $ 56,197 24287 KXGN-TV 14,265 13,906 $ 97 37103 KXHI 105,022 101,614 $ 707 35954 KXII 2,904,223 2,845,456 $ 19,796 55083 KXLA 18,944,109 17,650,447 $ 122,794 35959 KXLF-TV 301,370 256,892 $ 1,787 53847 KXLN-DT 7,293,696 7,293,476 $ 50,741 35906 KXLT-TV 369,632 369,086 $ 2,568 61978 KXLY-TV 884,722 852,475 $ 5,931 55684 KXMA-TV 42,033 41,964 $ 292 55686 KXMB-TV 164,736 160,794 $ 1,119 55685 KXMC-TV 108,096 100,774 $ 701 55683 KXMD-TV 66,215 66,107 $ 460 47995 KXNE-TV 314,798 313,705 $ 2,182 81593 KXNW 707,066 702,866 $ 4,890 35991 KXRM-TV 2,129,262 1,769,815 $ 12,313 1255 KXTF 157,622 157,168 $ 1,093 25048 KXTV 11,761,085 8,212,854 $ 57,137 35994 KXTX-TV 8,029,815 8,026,902 $ 55,843 62293 KXVA 195,284 195,242 $ 1,358 23277 KXVO 1,535,792 1,534,836 $ 10,678 9781 KXXV 2,192,443 2,159,450 $ 15,023 31870 KYAZ 7,295,634 7,295,425 $ 50,754 29086 KYIN 596,722 594,616 $ 4,137 60384 KYLE-TV 367,648 367,562 $ 2,557 33639 KYMA-DT 403,372 400,541 $ 2,787 47974 KYNE-TV 1,089,692 1,089,546 $ 7,580 53820 KYOU-TV 679,167 668,722 $ 4,652 36003 KYTV 1,129,940 1,117,420 $ 7,774 55644 KYTX 956,234 955,262 $ 6,646 13815 KYUR 397,084 395,055 $ 2,748 5237 KYUS-TV 12,525 12,495 $ 87 33752 KYVE 317,640 273,973 $ 1,906 55762 KYVV-TV 51,859 51,856 $ 361 25453 KYW-TV 11,769,848 11,559,783 $ 80,421 69531 KZJL 7,255,731 7,255,494 $ 50,476 69571 KZJO 4,814,396 4,758,120 $ 33,102 61062 KZSD-TV 40,148 34,607 $ 241 33079 KZTV 578,385 575,560 $ 4,004 57292 WAAY-TV 1,644,869 1,570,146 $ 10,924 1328 WABC-TV 22,259,872 21,880,695 $ 152,224 4190 WABE-TV 6,138,218 6,116,631 $ 42,553 43203 WABG-TV 352,521 352,047 $ 2,449 17005 WABI-TV 532,053 512,796 $ 3,568 16820 WABM 1,857,082 1,825,082 $ 12,697 23917 WABW-TV 1,106,011 1,104,788 $ 7,686 19199 WACH 1,448,991 1,442,358 $ 10,034 189358 WACP 9,884,531 9,777,819 $ 68,024 23930 WACS-TV 785,954 782,957 $ 5,447 60018 WACX 5,173,569 5,164,028 $ 35,926 361 WACY-TV 992,148 991,650 $ 6,899 455 WADL 4,727,529 4,719,528 $ 32,834 589 WAFB 1,928,550 1,927,924 $ 13,413 591 WAFF 1,642,889 1,574,162 $ 10,951 70689 WAGA-TV 6,879,310 6,793,067 $ 47,259 48305 WAGM-TV 60,320 59,087 $ 411 37809 WAGV 1,267,813 1,122,725 $ 7,811 706 WAIQ 624,285 622,198 $ 4,329 701 WAKA 796,039 790,015 $ 5,496 4143 WALA-TV 1,431,666 1,428,457 $ 9,938 70713 WALB 794,686 793,085 $ 5,517 60536 WAMI-DT 6,013,991 6,013,991 $ 41,839 70852 WAND 1,345,860 1,344,596 $ 9,354 39270 WANE-TV 1,182,627 1,182,599 $ 8,227 72120 WANF 6,907,445 6,833,668 $ 47,542 64546 WAOW 642,013 633,108 $ 4,405 52073 WAPA-TV 3,310,492 2,963,089 $ 20,614 49712 WAPT 784,962 783,938 $ 5,454 67792 WAQP 2,125,841 2,121,638 $ 14,760 13206 WATC-DT 6,582,231 6,553,248 $ 45,591 71082 WATE-TV 1,971,491 1,724,804 $ 11,999 22819 WATL 6,759,193 6,686,998 $ 46,521 20287 WATM-TV 868,640 735,080 $ 5,114 11907 WATN-TV 1,792,866 1,789,289 $ 12,448 13989 WAVE 1,998,359 1,989,161 $ 13,839 71127 WAVY-TV 2,171,033 2,171,033 $ 15,104 54938 WAWD 661,368 661,287 $ 4,601 65247 WAWV-TV 684,558 679,421 $ 4,727 12793 WAXN-TV 3,101,362 3,092,322 $ 21,513 65696 WBAL-TV 10,637,240 10,226,692 $ 71,147 74417 WBAY-TV 1,275,960 1,275,160 $ 8,871 71085 WBBH-TV 2,368,347 2,368,347 $ 16,477 65204 WBBJ-TV 654,842 651,262 $ 4,531 9617 WBBM-TV 10,069,057 10,062,626 $ 70,006 9088 WBBZ-TV 1,293,109 1,281,368 $ 8,914 70138 WBDT 3,996,184 3,976,552 $ 27,665 51349 WBEC-TV 5,979,674 5,979,674 $ 41,601 10758 WBFF 9,293,641 9,148,848 $ 63,649 12497 WBFS-TV 5,895,133 5,895,133 $ 41,012 6568 WBGU-TV 1,325,871 1,325,871 $ 9,224 81594 WBIF 315,981 315,981 $ 2,198 84802 WBIH 734,949 717,111 $ 4,989 717 WBIQ 1,649,738 1,621,834 $ 11,283 46984 WBIR-TV 2,083,590 1,795,576 $ 12,492 67048 WBKB-TV 131,202 123,916 $ 862 34167 WBKI 2,220,753 2,204,001 $ 15,333 4692 WBKO 1,079,438 953,403 $ 6,633 76001 WBKP 54,703 54,532 $ 379 68427 WBMM 595,569 595,314 $ 4,142 73692 WBNA 1,955,499 1,904,525 $ 13,250 23337 WBNG-TV 1,400,072 1,023,266 $ 7,119 71217 WBNS-TV 3,083,491 3,021,775 $ 21,022 72958 WBNX-TV 3,642,087 3,632,499 $ 25,271 71218 WBOC-TV 880,031 880,031 $ 6,122 71220 WBOY-TV 689,705 605,977 $ 4,216 60850 WBPH-TV 11,348,739 10,115,153 $ 70,371 7692 WBPX-TV 7,354,860 7,283,151 $ 50,669 5981 WBRA-TV 1,705,750 1,657,188 $ 11,529 71221 WBRC 1,976,420 1,942,307 $ 13,513 71225 WBRE-TV 2,912,468 2,263,626 $ 15,748 38616 WBRZ-TV 2,815,186 2,813,190 $ 19,571 82627 WBSF 1,816,355 1,811,602 $ 12,603 30826 WBTV 4,973,067 4,828,412 $ 33,591 66407 WBTW 2,060,897 2,044,444 $ 14,223 16363 WBUI 964,071 964,061 $ 6,707 59281 WBUP 124,208 111,143 $ 773 60830 WBUY-TV 1,568,306 1,566,684 $ 10,899 72971 WBXX-TV 2,270,940 2,098,066 $ 14,596 25456 WBZ-TV 8,524,410 8,283,402 $ 57,628 63153 WCAU 11,821,594 11,646,436 $ 81,024 363 WCAV 1,122,505 960,525 $ 6,682 46728 WCAX-TV 793,321 675,201 $ 4,697 39659 WCBB 985,125 952,373 $ 6,626 10587 WCBD-TV 1,336,923 1,336,923 $ 9,301 12477 WCBI-TV 675,135 673,011 $ 4,682 9610 WCBS-TV 23,434,126 22,837,346 $ 158,879 49157 WCCB 4,088,954 4,017,224 $ 27,948 9629 WCCO-TV 4,237,121 4,228,346 $ 29,417 14050 WCCT-TV 5,898,482 5,384,454 $ 37,460 69544 WCCU 673,293 673,293 $ 4,684 3001 WCCV-TV 3,000,204 2,188,016 $ 15,222 23937 WCES-TV 1,138,637 1,137,146 $ 7,911 65666 WCET 3,245,827 3,234,134 $ 22,500 46755 WCFE-TV 468,278 427,164 $ 2,972 71280 WCHS-TV 1,276,867 1,199,053 $ 8,342 42124 WCIA 809,784 809,348 $ 5,631 711 WCIQ 3,433,774 3,244,161 $ 22,570 71428 WCIU-TV 10,205,649 10,199,522 $ 70,958 9015 WCIV 1,341,404 1,341,404 $ 9,332 42116 WCIX 568,778 555,600 $ 3,865 16993 WCJB-TV 1,080,055 1,080,055 $ 7,514 11125 WCLF 5,072,243 5,072,204 $ 35,287 68007 WCLJ-TV 2,538,971 2,537,989 $ 17,657 3255 WCLO-TV 3,274,828 3,009,859 $ 20,940 50781 WCMH-TV 2,988,929 2,947,009 $ 20,502 9917 WCML 229,956 221,000 $ 1,537 9908 WCMU-TV 717,859 708,880 $ 4,932 9922 WCMV 435,637 421,372 $ 2,931 9913 WCMW 107,851 105,871 $ 737 32326 WCNC-TV 4,347,601 4,262,460 $ 29,654 53734 WCNY-TV 1,328,626 1,263,336 $ 8,789 73642 WCOV-TV 916,080 911,398 $ 6,341 40618 WCPB 612,947 612,947 $ 4,264 59438 WCPO-TV 3,461,834 3,448,166 $ 23,989 10981 WCPX-TV 9,906,756 9,905,251 $ 68,911 71297 WCSC-TV 1,188,482 1,188,482 $ 8,268 39664 WCSH 1,844,256 1,625,773 $ 11,311 69479 WCTE 645,441 572,887 $ 3,986 18334 WCTI-TV 1,741,252 1,734,851 $ 12,069 31590 WCTV 1,083,799 1,083,709 $ 7,539 33081 WCTX 7,999,974 7,453,383 $ 51,853 65684 WCVB-TV 8,334,723 8,171,970 $ 56,852 9987 WCVE-TV 1,894,231 1,892,374 $ 13,165 83304 WCVI-TV 41,004 40,978 $ 285 34204 WCVN-TV 2,242,264 2,237,912 $ 15,569 9989 WCVW 1,662,141 1,660,801 $ 11,554 73042 WCWF 1,175,186 1,174,365 $ 8,170 35385 WCWG 3,895,811 3,546,156 $ 24,671 29712 WCWJ 1,938,352 1,938,263 $ 13,484 73264 WCWN 1,917,787 1,630,664 $ 11,345 2455 WCYB-TV 2,296,374 1,447,129 $ 10,068 11291 WDAF-TV 2,724,533 2,722,049 $ 18,937 21250 WDAM-TV 507,937 495,331 $ 3,446 22129 WDAY-TV 389,109 389,023 $ 2,706 22124 WDAZ-TV 155,202 154,877 $ 1,077 71325 WDBB 1,874,003 1,841,150 $ 12,809 71326 WDBD 924,445 923,304 $ 6,423 71329 WDBJ 1,603,364 1,421,509 $ 9,889 51567 WDCA 8,945,253 8,890,093 $ 61,848 16530 WDCQ-TV 1,226,421 1,226,397 $ 8,532 30576 WDCW 9,008,590 8,971,597 $ 62,415 54385 WDEF-TV 1,887,280 1,668,579 $ 11,608 32851 WDFX-TV 343,408 343,096 $ 2,387 43846 WDHN 454,174 453,945 $ 3,158 71338 WDIO-DT 345,803 332,242 $ 2,311 714 WDIQ 674,543 625,633 $ 4,353 53114 WDIV-TV 5,555,564 5,555,436 $ 38,649 71427 WDJT-TV 3,315,464 3,306,632 $ 23,004 39561 WDKA 640,692 640,230 $ 4,454 64017 WDKY-TV 1,280,920 1,245,717 $ 8,666 67893 WDLI-TV 4,131,639 4,098,980 $ 28,517 72335 WDPB 652,694 652,694 $ 4,541 83740 WDPM-DT 1,493,282 1,491,552 $ 10,377 1283 WDPN-TV 12,164,952 12,033,746 $ 83,719 6476 WDPX-TV 7,354,860 7,283,151 $ 50,669 28476 WDRB 2,166,593 2,149,625 $ 14,955 12171 WDSC-TV 4,131,441 4,131,441 $ 28,742 17726 WDSE 335,589 320,243 $ 2,228 71353 WDSI-TV 1,155,212 1,094,624 $ 7,615 71357 WDSU 1,746,300 1,746,300 $ 12,149 7908 WDTI 2,314,404 2,313,996 $ 16,098 65690 WDTN 3,998,815 3,979,357 $ 27,684 70592 WDTV 554,217 513,260 $ 3,571 25045 WDVM-TV 7,516,686 5,790,489 $ 40,284 4110 WDWL 2,449,731 2,192,227 $ 15,251 49421 WEAO 3,954,789 3,936,003 $ 27,383 71363 WEAR-TV 1,662,799 1,662,271 $ 11,564 7893 WEAU 1,031,280 993,529 $ 6,912 61003 WEBA-TV 652,051 645,245 $ 4,489 19561 WECN 2,551,597 2,296,482 $ 15,977 48666 WECT 1,284,078 1,284,078 $ 8,933 13602 WEDH 5,419,331 4,792,684 $ 33,343 13607 WEDN 3,520,804 2,654,657 $ 18,468 69338 WEDQ 6,372,341 6,354,538 $ 44,209 21808 WEDU 6,372,341 6,354,538 $ 44,209 13594 WEDW 21,942,405 21,529,106 $ 149,778 13595 WEDY 5,419,331 4,792,684 $ 33,343 24801 WEEK-TV 730,054 729,949 $ 5,078 6744 WEFS 4,115,849 4,115,849 $ 28,634 24215 WEHT 854,000 838,936 $ 5,836 721 WEIQ 1,138,095 1,137,690 $ 7,915 18301 WEIU-TV 442,120 442,040 $ 3,075 69271 WEKW-TV 1,306,163 800,635 $ 5,570 60825 WELF-TV 1,547,836 1,455,263 $ 10,124 26602 WELU 2,052,918 1,847,568 $ 12,854 40761 WEMT 1,708,704 1,169,182 $ 8,134 69237 WENH-TV 4,865,355 4,679,954 $ 32,558 71508 WENY-TV 636,768 501,692 $ 3,490 83946 WEPH 604,510 602,977 $ 4,195 81508 WEPX-TV 945,425 945,425 $ 6,577 25738 WESH 4,917,201 4,906,261 $ 34,133 65670 WETA-TV 9,177,186 9,112,861 $ 63,398 69944 WETK 681,830 571,729 $ 3,978 60653 WETM-TV 844,248 745,266 $ 5,185 18252 WETP-TV 2,251,212 1,940,383 $ 13,499 2709 WEUX 396,788 387,527 $ 2,696 72041 WEVV-TV 751,428 750,047 $ 5,218 59441 WEWS-TV 4,098,329 4,061,663 $ 28,257 72052 WEYI-TV 3,802,069 3,734,694 $ 25,982 72054 WFAA 8,238,058 8,226,984 $ 57,235 81669 WFBD 919,012 918,335 $ 6,389 69532 WFDC-DT 9,008,590 8,971,597 $ 62,415 10132 WFFF-TV 644,230 566,681 $ 3,942 25040 WFFT-TV 1,133,445 1,133,031 $ 7,882 11123 WFGC 6,357,641 6,357,641 $ 44,230 6554 WFGX 1,631,714 1,631,224 $ 11,348 13991 WFIE 742,941 741,771 $ 5,161 715 WFIQ 550,070 548,067 $ 3,813 64592 WFLA-TV 6,656,303 6,639,930 $ 46,194 22211 WFLD 10,111,733 10,105,397 $ 70,303 72060 WFLI-TV 1,357,801 1,252,063 $ 8,711 39736 WFLX 6,299,680 6,299,680 $ 43,827 72062 WFMJ-TV 4,291,547 3,802,286 $ 26,453 72064 WFMY-TV 5,399,787 5,364,129 $ 37,318 39884 WFMZ-TV 11,348,739 10,115,153 $ 70,371 83943 WFNA 1,511,431 1,509,839 $ 10,504 47902 WFOR-TV 5,952,062 5,952,062 $ 41,408 11909 WFOX-TV 1,881,740 1,881,740 $ 13,091 40626 WFPT 6,479,421 6,072,020 $ 42,243 21245 WFPX-TV 2,980,937 2,976,800 $ 20,710 25396 WFQX-TV 537,914 533,910 $ 3,714 9635 WFRV-TV 1,313,825 1,300,885 $ 9,050 53115 WFSB 4,799,110 4,417,573 $ 30,733 6093 WFSG 403,233 403,173 $ 2,805 21801 WFSU-TV 592,693 592,676 $ 4,123 11913 WFTC 4,159,690 4,144,073 $ 28,830 64588 WFTS-TV 6,213,173 6,213,039 $ 43,224 16788 WFTT-TV 5,291,296 5,291,296 $ 36,812 72076 WFTV 4,707,940 4,707,940 $ 32,753 70649 WFTX-TV 2,076,721 2,076,721 $ 14,448 60553 WFTY-DT 5,838,625 5,724,691 $ 39,827 25395 WFUP 235,473 234,457 $ 1,631 60555 WFUT-DT 21,842,105 21,428,169 $ 149,076 22108 WFWA 1,071,881 1,071,733 $ 7,456 9054 WFXB 1,448,018 1,447,713 $ 10,072 3228 WFXG 1,126,109 1,115,208 $ 7,759 70815 WFXL 748,116 748,087 $ 5,204 19707 WFXP 556,627 543,130 $ 3,779 24813 WFXR 1,418,873 1,283,217 $ 8,927 6463 WFXT 8,044,623 7,951,492 $ 55,319 22245 WFXU 225,675 225,675 $ 1,570 43424 WFXV 682,282 587,673 $ 4,088 25236 WFXW 217,631 217,631 $ 1,514 41397 WFYI 2,614,535 2,613,865 $ 18,185 53930 WGAL 6,592,850 5,851,154 $ 40,706 2708 WGBA-TV 1,219,315 1,218,972 $ 8,480 24314 WGBC 233,035 232,798 $ 1,620 72099 WGBH-TV 8,264,395 8,151,180 $ 56,708 12498 WGBO-DT 9,984,682 9,984,501 $ 69,462 72098 WGBX-TV 8,354,289 8,184,570 $ 56,940 72096 WGBY-TV 4,556,980 3,838,887 $ 26,707 62388 WGCU 1,789,951 1,789,951 $ 12,453 54275 WGEM-TV 325,716 325,430 $ 2,264 27387 WGEN-TV 47,451 47,451 $ 330 7727 WGFL 958,665 958,665 $ 6,669 25682 WGGB-TV 3,501,457 3,092,700 $ 21,516 11027 WGGN-TV 4,010,515 3,987,566 $ 27,741 9064 WGGS-TV 2,096,590 1,891,182 $ 13,157 72106 WGHP 4,716,324 4,663,025 $ 32,441 710 WGIQ 367,358 367,140 $ 2,554 12520 WGMB-TV 1,815,089 1,814,919 $ 12,626 25683 WGME-TV 1,562,382 1,391,898 $ 9,683 24618 WGNM 765,295 764,308 $ 5,317 72119 WGNO 1,737,340 1,737,340 $ 12,087 9762 WGNT 2,218,861 2,218,861 $ 15,437 72115 WGN-TV 10,139,791 10,133,994 $ 70,502 40619 WGPT 570,828 347,754 $ 2,419 65074 WGPX-TV 3,063,562 3,053,879 $ 21,246 64547 WGRZ 2,042,983 1,973,423 $ 13,729 63329 WGTA 1,174,842 1,134,460 $ 7,892 66285 WGTE-TV 2,250,689 2,250,689 $ 15,658 59279 WGTQ 114,517 109,995 $ 765 59280 WGTU 395,169 388,357 $ 2,702 23948 WGTV 6,872,895 6,793,292 $ 47,261 7623 WGTW-TV 830,912 830,818 $ 5,780 24783 WGVK 2,565,756 2,563,031 $ 17,831 24784 WGVU-TV 1,943,807 1,894,218 $ 13,178 21536 WGWG 1,146,502 1,146,502 $ 7,976 56642 WGWW 1,742,591 1,714,951 $ 11,931 58262 WGXA 799,532 798,664 $ 5,556 73371 WHAM-TV 1,381,792 1,333,395 $ 9,276 32327 WHAS-TV 2,065,124 2,034,746 $ 14,156 6096 WHA-TV 1,715,866 1,709,075 $ 11,890 13950 WHBF-TV 1,726,081 1,717,606 $ 11,949 12521 WHBQ-TV 1,735,050 1,714,081 $ 11,925 10894 WHBR 1,425,293 1,424,691 $ 9,912 65128 WHDF 1,720,614 1,666,798 $ 11,596 72145 WHDH 7,993,816 7,899,325 $ 54,956 83929 WHDT 6,334,757 6,334,757 $ 44,071 70041 WHEC-TV 1,322,761 1,278,323 $ 8,893 67971 WHFT-TV 5,976,793 5,976,793 $ 41,581 41458 WHIO-TV 4,041,602 4,033,560 $ 28,061 713 WHIQ 1,383,801 1,329,761 $ 9,251 61216 WHIZ-TV 962,141 885,771 $ 6,162 18780 WHLA-TV 569,415 530,529 $ 3,691 48668 WHLT 481,036 479,959 $ 3,339 24582 WHLV-TV 4,739,820 4,739,820 $ 32,975 37102 WHMB-TV 3,187,327 3,126,458 $ 21,751 61004 WHMC 838,228 838,228 $ 5,832 36117 WHME-TV 1,490,612 1,490,518 $ 10,370 37106 WHNO 1,561,961 1,561,961 $ 10,867 72300 WHNS 2,753,561 2,462,848 $ 17,134 48693 WHNT-TV 1,687,347 1,607,863 $ 11,186 66221 WHO-DT 1,226,093 1,209,327 $ 8,413 6866 WHOI 716,035 715,956 $ 4,981 11113 WHOT-TV 1,964,065 1,956,753 $ 13,613 72313 WHP-TV 4,219,869 3,695,568 $ 25,710 51980 WHPX-TV 5,666,126 5,176,293 $ 36,011 73036 WHRM-TV 537,971 535,112 $ 3,723 25932 WHRO-TV 2,261,464 2,261,381 $ 15,732 68058 WHSG-TV 6,744,093 6,678,392 $ 46,462 4688 WHSV-TV 894,602 760,620 $ 5,292 9990 WHTJ 867,445 743,025 $ 5,169 72326 WHTM-TV 3,349,178 2,923,354 $ 20,338 11117 WHTN 2,282,597 2,269,471 $ 15,789 27772 WHUT-TV 8,785,956 8,745,663 $ 60,844 18793 WHWC-TV 1,205,932 1,152,576 $ 8,018 72338 WHYY-TV 10,984,166 10,590,279 $ 73,677 5360 WIAT 1,959,076 1,921,566 $ 13,368 63160 WIBW-TV 1,312,372 1,263,123 $ 8,788 25684 WICD 1,220,886 1,219,775 $ 8,486 25686 WICS 1,060,412 1,058,572 $ 7,364 24970 WICU-TV 704,263 654,470 $ 4,553 62210 WICZ-TV 1,208,124 932,840 $ 6,490 18410 WIDP 2,258,204 2,022,801 $ 14,073 26025 WIFS 1,664,757 1,659,814 $ 11,547 720 WIIQ 325,293 321,753 $ 2,238 68939 WILL-TV 1,148,587 1,125,681 $ 7,831 6863 WILX-TV 3,505,808 3,321,258 $ 23,106 22093 WINK-TV 2,135,187 2,135,187 $ 14,854 67787 WINM 1,035,236 1,004,998 $ 6,992 41314 WINP-TV 2,918,791 2,870,939 $ 19,973 3646 WIPB 2,098,072 2,097,589 $ 14,593 48408 WIPL 902,112 849,374 $ 5,909 53863 WIPM-TV 2,018,636 1,743,992 $ 779 53859 WIPR-TV 3,164,369 2,988,035 $ 20,788 10253 WIPX-TV 2,538,971 2,537,989 $ 17,657 39887 WIRS 962,531 803,553 $ 3,105 71336 WIRT-DT 125,282 123,221 $ 857 13990 WIS 2,873,204 2,819,721 $ 19,617 65143 WISC-TV 1,816,917 1,779,975 $ 12,383 13960 WISE-TV 1,105,600 1,105,444 $ 7,691 39269 WISH-TV 3,141,430 3,093,806 $ 21,524 65680 WISN-TV 3,041,677 3,036,957 $ 21,128 73083 WITF-TV 2,757,178 2,500,545 $ 17,396 73107 WITI 3,149,773 3,140,719 $ 21,850 594 WITN-TV 1,942,458 1,927,751 $ 13,411 61005 WITV 1,002,380 1,002,380 $ 6,974 7780 WIVB-TV 1,911,934 1,834,562 $ 12,763 11260 WIVT 831,941 612,317 $ 4,260 60571 WIWN 3,387,206 3,370,697 $ 23,450 62207 WIYC 673,128 670,480 $ 4,665 73120 WJAC-TV 2,152,162 1,855,359 $ 12,908 10259 WJAL 9,654,785 9,309,845 $ 64,769 50780 WJAR 7,602,846 7,447,435 $ 51,812 35576 WJAX-TV 1,909,321 1,909,321 $ 13,283 27140 WJBF 1,669,785 1,652,861 $ 11,499 73123 WJBK 5,840,177 5,804,131 $ 40,379 37174 WJCL 1,031,857 1,031,857 $ 7,179 73130 WJCT 1,893,148 1,892,490 $ 13,166 29719 WJEB-TV 1,880,192 1,880,192 $ 13,080 65749 WJET-TV 711,412 685,375 $ 4,768 7651 WJFB 2,745,573 2,734,787 $ 19,026 49699 WJFW-TV 281,148 271,274 $ 1,887 73136 WJHG-TV 912,881 905,531 $ 6,300 57826 WJHL-TV 2,035,505 1,463,539 $ 10,182 68519 WJKT 645,594 645,161 $ 4,488 1051 WJLA-TV 9,654,785 9,314,754 $ 64,803 86537 WJLP 22,694,994 22,426,423 $ 156,021 9630 WJMN-TV 158,494 151,938 $ 1,057 61008 WJPM-TV 587,058 586,836 $ 4,083 58340 WJPX 2,861,004 2,653,740 $ 18,462 21735 WJRT-TV 2,831,612 2,583,368 $ 17,972 23918 WJSP-TV 4,678,958 4,643,904 $ 32,308 41210 WJTC 1,517,180 1,516,056 $ 10,547 48667 WJTV 966,513 958,676 $ 6,670 73150 WJW 3,969,148 3,895,876 $ 27,104 61007 WJWJ-TV 1,180,652 1,180,652 $ 8,214 58342 WJWN-TV 1,830,695 1,568,858 $ 3,105 53116 WJXT 1,899,110 1,899,110 $ 13,212 11893 WJXX 1,888,910 1,888,113 $ 13,136 32334 WJYS 9,820,848 9,820,831 $ 68,324 25455 WJZ-TV 10,637,240 10,228,751 $ 71,161 73152 WJZY 4,965,077 4,831,865 $ 33,615 64983 WKAQ-TV 3,259,225 2,914,322 $ 1,159 6104 WKAR-TV 1,713,640 1,709,038 $ 11,890 34171 WKAS 522,877 496,277 $ 3,453 51570 WKBD-TV 5,180,191 5,179,980 $ 36,037 73153 WKBN-TV 4,870,043 4,522,748 $ 31,465 13929 WKBS-TV 1,054,914 914,205 $ 6,360 74424 WKBT-DT 973,803 920,961 $ 6,407 54176 WKBW-TV 2,261,221 2,175,654 $ 15,136 53465 WKCF 5,109,221 5,107,692 $ 35,534 73155 WKEF 3,860,944 3,850,405 $ 26,787 34177 WKGB-TV 444,266 442,639 $ 3,079 34196 WKHA 475,212 372,027 $ 2,588 34207 WKLE 918,947 911,337 $ 6,340 34212 WKMA-TV 558,464 558,150 $ 3,883 71293 WKMG-TV 4,643,692 4,643,692 $ 32,306 34195 WKMJ-TV 1,572,974 1,565,579 $ 10,892 34202 WKMR 457,241 422,772 $ 2,941 34174 WKMU 339,477 339,064 $ 2,359 42061 WKNO 1,649,295 1,647,327 $ 11,460 83931 WKNX-TV 1,778,483 1,548,751 $ 10,775 776176 WKOF 1,636,277 1,519,722 $ 10,573 34205 WKOH 591,189 584,484 $ 4,066 67869 WKOI-TV 3,996,184 3,976,552 $ 27,665 34211 WKON 1,170,361 1,163,470 $ 8,094 18267 WKOP-TV 1,641,367 1,465,642 $ 10,196 64545 WKOW 1,999,166 1,978,160 $ 13,762 21432 WKPC-TV 1,620,977 1,613,304 $ 11,224 65758 WKPD 277,245 276,367 $ 1,923 34200 WKPI-TV 552,999 432,287 $ 3,007 27504 WKPT-TV 1,107,992 876,999 $ 6,101 58341 WKPV 981,832 762,182 $ 3,105 11289 WKRC-TV 3,412,677 3,359,970 $ 23,375 73187 WKRG-TV 1,661,088 1,660,222 $ 11,550 73188 WKRN-TV 2,843,550 2,823,383 $ 19,642 34222 WKSO-TV 675,800 663,810 $ 4,618 40902 WKTC 1,422,142 1,421,788 $ 9,891 60654 WKTV 1,566,267 1,340,030 $ 9,323 73195 WKYC 4,162,460 4,109,739 $ 28,591 24914 WKYT-TV 1,263,314 1,247,201 $ 8,677 71861 WKYU-TV 447,402 444,471 $ 3,092 34181 WKZT-TV 1,092,295 1,075,603 $ 7,483 18819 WLAE-TV 1,489,518 1,489,518 $ 10,363 36533 WLAJ 4,230,811 4,195,529 $ 29,188 2710 WLAX 480,917 455,361 $ 3,168 68542 WLBT 930,984 929,897 $ 6,469 39644 WLBZ 374,046 364,463 $ 2,536 69328 WLED-TV 333,929 175,095 $ 1,218 63046 WLEF-TV 201,828 200,259 $ 1,393 73203 WLEX-TV 1,083,858 1,075,334 $ 7,481 37806 WLFB 756,510 656,110 $ 4,565 37808 WLFG 1,555,609 1,240,816 $ 8,632 73204 WLFI-TV 2,422,930 2,397,991 $ 16,683 73205 WLFL 4,154,373 4,151,842 $ 28,884 19777 WLII-DT 2,661,917 2,391,018 $ 16,634 37503 WLIO 1,076,204 1,052,712 $ 7,324 38336 WLIW 21,331,793 21,007,396 $ 146,148 27696 WLJC-TV 1,433,034 1,317,702 $ 9,167 71645 WLJT 382,232 381,417 $ 2,654 53939 WLKY 2,035,700 2,028,397 $ 14,112 11033 WLLA 2,204,047 2,203,715 $ 15,331 1222 WLMA 1,681,703 1,678,515 $ 11,677 17076 WLMB 1,598,305 1,597,151 $ 11,111 68518 WLMT 1,764,760 1,762,079 $ 12,259 22591 WLNE-TV 6,880,185 6,815,475 $ 47,415 74420 WLNS-TV 4,230,811 4,195,529 $ 29,188 73206 WLNY-TV 7,829,527 7,738,668 $ 53,838 84253 WLOO 897,764 896,755 $ 6,239 56537 WLOS 3,337,211 2,748,224 $ 19,119 37732 WLOV-TV 608,778 606,994 $ 4,223 13995 WLOX 1,236,798 1,224,809 $ 8,521 38586 WLPB-TV 1,409,300 1,409,216 $ 9,804 73189 WLPX-TV 1,012,910 963,892 $ 6,706 66358 WLRN-TV 6,010,422 6,010,422 $ 41,815 73226 WLS-TV 10,428,632 10,421,900 $ 72,505 73230 WLTV-DT 5,988,029 5,988,029 $ 41,659 37176 WLTX 1,614,789 1,611,719 $ 11,213 37179 WLTZ 738,023 734,057 $ 5,107 21259 WLUC-TV 103,185 95,367 $ 663 4150 WLUK-TV 1,237,211 1,236,394 $ 8,602 73238 WLVI 7,993,816 7,899,325 $ 54,956 36989 WLVT-TV 11,348,739 10,115,153 $ 70,371 3978 WLWC 3,398,164 3,257,998 $ 22,666 46979 WLWT 3,499,610 3,489,652 $ 24,278 54452 WLXI 3,243,843 3,015,382 $ 20,978 55350 WLYH 3,349,178 2,923,354 $ 20,338 43192 WMAB-TV 389,089 384,767 $ 2,677 43170 WMAE-TV 692,999 663,737 $ 4,618 43197 WMAH-TV 1,302,245 1,301,790 $ 9,057 43176 WMAO-TV 333,490 333,321 $ 2,319 47905 WMAQ-TV 10,069,653 10,068,069 $ 70,044 59442 WMAR-TV 10,025,750 9,879,744 $ 68,733 43184 WMAU-TV 637,434 631,358 $ 4,392 43193 WMAV-TV 1,018,601 1,018,556 $ 7,086 43169 WMAW-TV 731,384 716,614 $ 4,985 46991 WMAZ-TV 1,238,176 1,180,117 $ 8,210 66398 WMBB 990,632 964,744 $ 6,712 43952 WMBC-TV 22,446,503 21,778,765 $ 151,515 42121 WMBD-TV 720,722 720,669 $ 5,014 83969 WMBF-TV 526,232 526,232 $ 3,661 60829 WMCF-TV 644,916 641,833 $ 4,465 9739 WMCN-TV 10,984,166 10,590,279 $ 73,677 19184 WMC-TV 1,559,675 1,557,573 $ 10,836 189357 WMDE 6,933,795 6,802,466 $ 47,325 73255 WMDN 259,822 259,616 $ 1,806 16455 WMDT 790,315 790,315 $ 5,498 39656 WMEA-TV 965,365 911,355 $ 6,340 39648 WMEB-TV 411,335 396,677 $ 2,760 70537 WMEC 199,187 198,698 $ 1,382 39649 WMED-TV 28,850 27,884 $ 194 776266 WMEI 910,872 910,788 $ 6,336 39662 WMEM-TV 61,231 60,308 $ 420 41893 WMFD-TV 2,011,673 1,686,812 $ 11,735 41436 WMFP 6,230,964 5,959,061 $ 41,457 61111 WMGM-TV 830,912 830,818 $ 5,780 43847 WMGT-TV 614,625 614,040 $ 4,272 73263 WMHT 1,729,302 1,559,066 $ 10,846 68545 WMLW-TV 1,863,951 1,863,679 $ 12,966 53819 WMOR-TV 6,400,456 6,400,333 $ 44,527 81503 WMOW 122,110 106,904 $ 744 65944 WMPB 8,059,368 7,940,127 $ 55,239 43168 WMPN-TV 843,756 841,772 $ 5,856 65942 WMPT 9,500,117 9,442,413 $ 65,691 60827 WMPV-TV 1,565,537 1,564,599 $ 10,885 10221 WMSN-TV 2,030,916 2,010,636 $ 13,988 2174 WMTJ 2,764,573 2,492,464 $ 17,340 6870 WMTV 1,628,641 1,625,206 $ 11,307 73288 WMTW 2,041,342 1,737,673 $ 12,089 23935 WMUM-TV 926,604 921,419 $ 6,410 73292 WMUR-TV 5,652,739 5,453,759 $ 37,942 42663 WMVS 3,216,887 3,155,770 $ 21,955 42665 WMVT 3,216,887 3,155,770 $ 21,955 81946 WMWC-TV 935,338 912,437 $ 6,348 56548 WMYA-TV 1,808,659 1,723,755 $ 11,992 74211 WMYD 5,840,155 5,839,880 $ 40,628 20624 WMYT-TV 4,965,077 4,831,865 $ 33,615 25544 WMYV 4,406,813 4,379,408 $ 30,468 73310 WNAB 2,600,886 2,591,235 $ 18,027 73311 WNAC-TV 7,817,084 7,459,610 $ 51,897 47535 WNBC 23,283,577 22,722,761 $ 158,082 83965 WNBW-DT 1,557,530 1,550,637 $ 10,788 72307 WNCF 665,079 658,994 $ 4,585 50782 WNCN 4,201,973 4,186,944 $ 29,129 57838 WNCT-TV 2,034,787 1,975,930 $ 13,747 41674 WNDU-TV 1,901,588 1,870,311 $ 13,012 28462 WNDY-TV 3,141,430 3,093,806 $ 21,524 71928 WNED-TV 1,408,141 1,390,745 $ 9,675 60931 WNEH 1,389,794 1,383,193 $ 9,623 41221 WNEM-TV 1,437,726 1,434,104 $ 9,977 49439 WNEO 3,343,598 3,265,373 $ 22,717 73318 WNEP-TV 3,472,501 2,879,994 $ 20,036 18795 WNET 22,428,695 21,915,470 $ 152,466 51864 WNEU 7,676,529 7,606,661 $ 52,920 23942 WNGH-TV 6,461,522 6,281,764 $ 43,702 67802 WNIN 907,713 891,200 $ 6,200 41671 WNIT 1,335,767 1,335,767 $ 9,293 48457 WNJB 22,145,547 21,374,668 $ 148,704 48477 WNJN 22,145,547 21,374,668 $ 148,704 48481 WNJS 7,729,626 7,710,589 $ 53,643 48465 WNJT 7,729,626 7,710,589 $ 53,643 73333 WNJU 23,283,577 22,722,761 $ 158,082 73336 WNJX-TV 1,446,990 1,265,826 $ 953 61217 WNKY 414,184 412,652 $ 2,871 71905 WNLO 1,911,934 1,834,562 $ 12,763 4318 WNMU 178,504 177,692 $ 1,236 73344 WNNE 801,186 684,501 $ 4,762 54280 WNOL-TV 1,730,074 1,730,074 $ 12,036 71676 WNPB-TV 2,094,971 1,923,306 $ 13,380 62137 WNPI-DT 159,208 154,143 $ 1,072 41398 WNPT 2,692,492 2,657,273 $ 18,487 28468 WNPX-TV 2,494,581 2,470,662 $ 17,188 61009 WNSC-TV 2,860,897 2,853,300 $ 19,850 61010 WNTV 2,775,252 2,572,161 $ 17,895 16539 WNTZ-TV 328,336 327,661 $ 2,280 7933 WNUV 9,944,268 9,731,571 $ 67,703 9999 WNVC 867,445 743,025 $ 5,169 10019 WNVT 1,894,231 1,892,374 $ 13,165 776263 WNWE 16,156 16,156 $ 112 73354 WNWO-TV 2,915,507 2,915,507 $ 20,283 136751 WNYA 1,932,105 1,656,014 $ 11,521 30303 WNYB 1,784,805 1,758,025 $ 12,231 6048 WNYE-TV 20,693,079 20,445,674 $ 142,241 34329 WNYI 1,609,642 1,329,569 $ 9,250 67784 WNYO-TV 1,449,480 1,428,169 $ 9,936 73363 WNYT 1,975,605 1,653,904 $ 11,506 22206 WNYW 21,377,740 21,043,915 $ 146,403 69618 WOAI-TV 3,063,753 3,050,610 $ 21,223 66804 WOAY-TV 536,548 414,046 $ 2,881 41225 WOFL 4,897,034 4,891,577 $ 34,031 70651 WOGX 1,262,333 1,262,333 $ 8,782 8661 WOI-DT 1,278,698 1,277,340 $ 8,886 39746 WOIO 4,198,546 4,095,152 $ 28,490 71725 WOLE-DT 1,581,955 1,411,809 $ 4,933 73375 WOLF-TV 3,025,477 2,531,097 $ 17,609 60963 WOLO-TV 2,854,959 2,814,886 $ 19,583 36838 WOOD-TV 2,637,147 2,631,110 $ 18,305 67602 WOPX-TV 4,677,102 4,676,992 $ 32,538 64865 WORA-TV 3,172,055 2,933,387 $ 20,408 73901 WORO-DT 2,847,102 2,661,536 $ 18,516 60357 WOST 1,055,465 918,659 $ 6,391 66185 WOSU-TV 3,073,523 3,013,857 $ 20,967 131 WOTF-TV 4,204,625 4,204,625 $ 29,252 10212 WOTV 2,493,328 2,492,908 $ 17,343 50147 WOUB-TV 739,667 721,384 $ 5,019 50141 WOUC-TV 1,680,457 1,618,502 $ 11,260 23342 WOWK-TV 1,098,995 1,028,502 $ 7,155 65528 WOWT 1,516,978 1,514,052 $ 10,533 31570 WPAN 1,392,393 1,392,261 $ 9,686 51988 WPBF 3,601,603 3,601,603 $ 25,056 21253 WPBN-TV 452,157 440,310 $ 3,063 62136 WPBS-TV 332,147 296,972 $ 2,066 13456 WPBT 5,976,331 5,976,331 $ 41,577 13924 WPCB-TV 2,920,794 2,802,648 $ 19,498 64033 WPCH-TV 6,826,973 6,747,200 $ 46,940 4354 WPCT 207,688 207,286 $ 1,442 17012 WPDE-TV 1,845,347 1,838,747 $ 12,792 52527 WPEC 6,332,850 6,332,850 $ 44,058 84088 WPFO 1,390,230 1,272,952 $ 8,856 54728 WPGA-TV 575,813 575,578 $ 4,004 60820 WPGD-TV 2,787,190 2,772,517 $ 19,288 73875 WPGH-TV 3,209,933 3,099,658 $ 21,564 2942 WPGX 448,453 445,686 $ 3,101 73879 WPHL-TV 10,944,731 10,756,717 $ 74,834 73881 WPIX 22,259,872 21,818,842 $ 151,794 69880 WPKD-TV 3,366,547 3,181,216 $ 22,132 53113 WPLG 6,165,413 6,165,413 $ 42,893 11906 WPMI-TV 1,609,741 1,609,491 $ 11,197 10213 WPMT 2,757,178 2,500,545 $ 17,396 18798 WPNE-TV 1,210,150 1,209,366 $ 8,414 73907 WPNT 3,148,917 3,050,465 $ 21,222 28480 WPPT 11,348,739 10,115,153 $ 70,371 51984 WPPX-TV 8,429,105 8,212,096 $ 57,132 47404 WPRI-TV 7,754,340 7,480,561 $ 52,042 51991 WPSD-TV 852,232 848,332 $ 5,902 12499 WPSG 11,342,493 11,068,585 $ 77,004 66219 WPSU-TV 1,016,983 842,529 $ 5,861 73905 WPTA 1,136,029 1,135,873 $ 7,902 25067 WPTD 3,535,155 3,522,151 $ 24,504 25065 WPTO 3,080,289 3,066,947 $ 21,337 59443 WPTV-TV 6,414,108 6,414,108 $ 44,623 57476 WPTZ 801,186 684,501 $ 4,762 8616 WPVI-TV 11,997,071 11,834,791 $ 82,335 48772 WPWR-TV 10,111,733 10,105,397 $ 70,303 51969 WPXA-TV 7,486,662 7,341,812 $ 51,077 71236 WPXC-TV 1,812,411 1,812,329 $ 12,608 5800 WPXD-TV 5,357,614 5,357,504 $ 37,272 37104 WPXE-TV 3,105,562 3,094,581 $ 21,529 48406 WPXG-TV 2,760,323 2,697,351 $ 18,765 73312 WPXH-TV 1,558,487 1,543,110 $ 10,735 73910 WPXI 3,270,399 3,179,997 $ 22,123 2325 WPXJ-TV 2,383,753 2,319,308 $ 16,135 52628 WPXK-TV 1,897,932 1,672,850 $ 11,638 21729 WPXL-TV 1,738,354 1,738,354 $ 12,094 48608 WPXM-TV 5,673,283 5,673,283 $ 39,469 73356 WPXN-TV 22,193,311 21,756,322 $ 151,359 27290 WPXP-TV 6,117,297 6,117,297 $ 42,558 50063 WPXQ-TV 3,398,164 3,257,998 $ 22,666 70251 WPXR-TV 1,361,522 1,199,794 $ 8,347 40861 WPXS 2,313,093 2,228,599 $ 15,504 53065 WPXT 1,058,317 1,005,248 $ 6,994 37971 WPXU-TV 764,835 764,835 $ 5,321 67077 WPXV-TV 1,997,620 1,997,620 $ 13,897 74091 WPXW-TV 8,918,745 8,866,240 $ 61,682 21726 WPXX-TV 1,563,942 1,560,675 $ 10,858 73319 WQAD-TV 1,077,293 1,065,179 $ 7,410 65130 WQCW 1,234,953 1,165,995 $ 8,112 71561 WQEC 177,193 175,191 $ 1,219 41315 WQED 3,491,971 3,385,114 $ 23,550 60556 WQHS-DT 3,982,203 3,936,334 $ 27,385 53716 WQLN 573,688 553,172 $ 3,848 52075 WQMY 403,099 246,363 $ 1,714 64550 WQOW 383,460 372,929 $ 2,594 5468 WQPT-TV 928,221 922,909 $ 6,421 64690 WQPX-TV 1,624,976 1,207,503 $ 8,401 52408 WQRF-TV 1,384,090 1,360,850 $ 9,467 2175 WQTO 2,533,848 1,714,503 $ 4,227 8688 WRAL-TV 4,258,430 4,255,027 $ 29,602 10133 WRAY-TV 4,701,102 4,682,210 $ 32,574 64611 WRAZ 4,206,845 4,204,439 $ 29,250 136749 WRBJ-TV 1,029,422 1,026,759 $ 7,143 3359 WRBL 1,573,722 1,534,121 $ 10,673 57221 WRBU 2,964,043 2,960,986 $ 20,600 54940 WRBW 4,929,252 4,926,807 $ 34,276 59137 WRCB 1,674,932 1,436,942 $ 9,997 47904 WRC-TV 9,040,003 8,996,367 $ 62,588 54963 WRDC 4,380,924 4,374,069 $ 30,430 55454 WRDQ 4,765,929 4,765,929 $ 33,157 73937 WRDW-TV 1,630,465 1,580,144 $ 10,993 66174 WREG-TV 1,645,112 1,638,826 $ 11,401 61011 WRET-TV 2,775,252 2,572,161 $ 17,895 73940 WREX 2,777,313 2,554,899 $ 17,774 54443 WRFB 2,361,435 2,105,790 $ 1,159 73942 WRGB 1,773,206 1,559,637 $ 10,850 411 WRGT-TV 3,563,572 3,528,799 $ 24,550 74416 WRIC-TV 2,264,724 2,197,233 $ 15,286 61012 WRJA-TV 1,227,284 1,220,205 $ 8,489 412 WRLH-TV 2,215,949 2,152,568 $ 14,975 61013 WRLK-TV 1,268,677 1,267,713 $ 8,819 43870 WRLM 3,954,789 3,936,003 $ 27,383 74156 WRNN-TV 21,146,732 20,904,564 $ 145,433 73964 WROC-TV 1,210,157 1,192,546 $ 8,297 159007 WRPT 108,521 108,009 $ 751 20590 WRPX-TV 2,980,937 2,976,800 $ 20,710 62009 WRSP-TV 1,062,091 1,060,251 $ 7,376 40877 WRTV 3,148,448 3,125,475 $ 21,744 15320 WRUA 2,624,204 2,339,222 $ 16,274 71580 WRXY-TV 2,114,529 2,114,529 $ 14,711 48662 WSAV-TV 1,094,897 1,094,884 $ 7,617 6867 WSAW-TV 657,843 651,328 $ 4,531 36912 WSAZ-TV 1,173,019 1,103,266 $ 7,675 56092 WSBE-TV 8,044,866 7,776,757 $ 54,103 73982 WSBK-TV 7,834,658 7,766,985 $ 54,035 72053 WSBS-TV 47,386 47,386 $ 330 73983 WSBT-TV 1,790,673 1,780,628 $ 12,388 23960 WSB-TV 6,772,503 6,695,450 $ 46,580 69446 WSCG 961,649 961,649 $ 6,690 64971 WSCV 6,029,382 6,029,382 $ 41,946 70536 WSEC 517,830 517,364 $ 3,599 49711 WSEE-TV 585,062 562,271 $ 3,912 21258 WSES 1,905,067 1,866,312 $ 12,984 73988 WSET-TV 1,587,650 1,345,990 $ 9,364 13993 WSFA 1,206,335 1,168,069 $ 8,126 11118 WSFJ-TV 1,911,871 1,902,328 $ 13,234 10203 WSFL-TV 5,890,244 5,890,244 $ 40,978 72871 WSFX-TV 1,088,964 1,088,964 $ 7,576 73999 WSIL-TV 650,734 647,093 $ 4,502 4297 WSIU-TV 994,418 936,746 $ 6,517 74007 WSJV 1,686,953 1,680,493 $ 11,691 78908 WSKA 530,610 416,302 $ 2,896 74034 WSKG-TV 866,172 616,130 $ 4,286 76324 WSKY-TV 2,003,325 2,002,894 $ 13,934 776220 WSLN 3,269,796 3,020,118 $ 21,011 57840 WSLS-TV 1,436,974 1,276,869 $ 8,883 21737 WSMH 2,350,370 2,335,477 $ 16,248 41232 WSMV-TV 2,883,773 2,837,323 $ 19,739 70119 WSNS-TV 10,069,653 10,068,069 $ 70,044 74070 WSOC-TV 4,156,321 4,085,565 $ 28,423 66391 WSPA-TV 3,717,232 3,549,667 $ 24,695 64352 WSPX-TV 1,285,581 1,167,040 $ 8,119 17611 WSRE 1,490,766 1,489,946 $ 10,366 63867 WSST-TV 312,974 312,260 $ 2,172 60341 WSTE-DT 3,284,058 3,220,155 $ 22,403 21252 WSTM-TV 1,437,543 1,367,590 $ 9,514 11204 WSTR-TV 3,424,743 3,411,973 $ 23,737 19776 WSUR-DT 3,276,102 3,182,722 $ 4,933 2370 WSVI 41,004 41,004 $ 285 63840 WSVN 6,165,386 6,165,386 $ 42,893 73374 WSWB 1,516,774 1,088,360 $ 7,572 28155 WSWG 389,103 389,030 $ 2,706 71680 WSWP-TV 849,038 633,378 $ 4,406 74094 WSYM-TV 1,695,809 1,694,640 $ 11,790 73113 WSYR-TV 1,314,500 1,226,575 $ 8,533 40758 WSYT 1,962,530 1,731,744 $ 12,048 56549 WSYX 2,871,413 2,825,664 $ 19,658 65681 WTAE-TV 2,985,875 2,865,692 $ 19,937 23341 WTAJ-TV 1,158,024 925,907 $ 6,442 4685 WTAP-TV 489,083 469,004 $ 3,263 416 WTAT-TV 1,284,148 1,284,148 $ 8,934 67993 WTBY-TV 16,997,114 16,897,718 $ 117,557 29715 WTCE-TV 2,964,583 2,964,583 $ 20,625 65667 WTCI 1,276,295 1,159,269 $ 8,065 67786 WTCT 590,643 586,819 $ 4,082 28954 WTCV 2,861,004 2,653,740 $ 18,462 74422 WTEN 1,913,356 1,621,808 $ 11,283 9881 WTGL 4,516,827 4,516,827 $ 31,424 27245 WTGS 1,064,292 1,064,066 $ 7,403 70655 WTHI-TV 966,268 914,388 $ 6,361 70162 WTHR 3,175,603 3,122,761 $ 21,725 147 WTIC-TV 5,397,501 4,767,795 $ 33,170 26681 WTIN-TV 3,277,279 3,162,469 $ 953 66536 WTIU 1,690,704 1,689,678 $ 11,755 1002 WTJP-TV 2,037,103 2,002,301 $ 13,930 4593 WTJR 316,974 316,852 $ 2,204 70287 WTJX-TV 112,125 104,561 $ 727 47401 WTKR 2,242,929 2,242,846 $ 15,603 82735 WTLF 883,350 883,326 $ 6,145 23486 WTLH 1,082,589 1,082,542 $ 7,531 67781 WTLJ 1,738,667 1,736,853 $ 12,083 65046 WTLV 2,041,165 2,022,822 $ 14,073 74098 WTMJ-TV 3,139,304 3,123,411 $ 21,730 74109 WTNH 7,999,974 7,453,267 $ 51,852 19200 WTNZ 1,790,817 1,598,570 $ 11,121 590 WTOC-TV 1,061,993 1,061,993 $ 7,388 74112 WTOG 6,239,245 6,236,871 $ 43,390 4686 WTOK-TV 391,847 386,112 $ 2,686 13992 WTOL 4,534,147 4,527,590 $ 31,498 21254 WTOM-TV 120,159 116,524 $ 811 74122 WTOV-TV 3,866,114 3,605,421 $ 25,083 82574 WTPC-TV 2,138,494 2,132,635 $ 14,837 86496 WTPX-TV 258,246 258,154 $ 1,796 6869 WTRF-TV 2,938,363 2,562,114 $ 17,825 67798 WTSF 879,853 811,994 $ 5,649 11290 WTSP 6,538,906 6,515,239 $ 45,327 4108 WTTA 6,656,303 6,639,930 $ 46,194 74137 WTTE 2,926,672 2,885,004 $ 20,071 22207 WTTG 8,945,253 8,890,093 $ 61,848 56526 WTTK 3,074,975 3,055,143 $ 21,255 74138 WTTO 1,966,252 1,931,949 $ 13,441 56523 WTTV 2,752,635 2,749,080 $ 19,125 10802 WTTW 9,929,487 9,929,071 $ 69,077 74148 WTVA 807,017 794,561 $ 5,528 22590 WTVC 1,828,040 1,618,274 $ 11,258 8617 WTVD 4,201,042 4,188,018 $ 29,136 55305 WTVE 5,368,807 5,365,301 $ 37,326 36504 WTVF 2,816,921 2,798,755 $ 19,471 74150 WTVG 4,440,934 4,429,742 $ 30,818 74151 WTVH 1,375,016 1,313,054 $ 9,135 10645 WTVI 3,286,073 3,261,428 $ 22,690 63154 WTVJ 6,009,434 6,009,434 $ 41,808 52280 WTVK 7,403,075 7,395,979 $ 51,454 595 WTVM 1,577,223 1,471,502 $ 10,237 72945 WTVO 1,413,778 1,400,377 $ 9,742 28311 WTVP 660,258 660,214 $ 4,593 51597 WTVQ-DT 1,060,102 1,054,409 $ 7,336 57832 WTVR-TV 1,998,729 1,990,377 $ 13,847 16817 WTVS 5,607,125 5,606,929 $ 39,007 68569 WTVT 6,511,462 6,491,829 $ 45,164 3661 WTVW 839,062 833,035 $ 5,795 35575 WTVX 3,558,645 3,556,727 $ 24,744 4152 WTVY 1,032,612 1,029,898 $ 7,165 40759 WTVZ-TV 2,251,663 2,251,580 $ 15,664 66908 WTWC-TV 1,078,213 1,078,166 $ 7,501 20426 WTWO 716,304 710,680 $ 4,944 81692 WTWV 1,529,924 1,528,555 $ 10,634 51568 WTXF-TV 11,330,716 11,023,958 $ 76,694 41065 WTXL-TV 1,071,056 1,070,908 $ 7,450 8532 WUAB 4,198,546 4,095,152 $ 28,490 12855 WUCF-TV 4,516,827 4,516,827 $ 31,424 36395 WUCW 4,213,867 4,205,494 $ 29,258 69440 WUFT 1,524,792 1,524,792 $ 10,608 413 WUHF 1,161,377 1,157,795 $ 8,055 8156 WUJA 2,449,731 2,192,227 $ 15,251 69080 WUNC-TV 4,701,102 4,682,210 $ 32,574 69292 WUND-TV 1,526,704 1,526,704 $ 10,621 69114 WUNE-TV 3,449,284 2,886,515 $ 20,081 69300 WUNF-TV 2,825,704 2,517,064 $ 17,511 69124 WUNG-TV 4,065,099 4,049,218 $ 28,170 60551 WUNI 7,755,236 7,627,170 $ 53,062 69332 WUNJ-TV 1,224,449 1,224,449 $ 8,518 69149 WUNK-TV 2,105,575 2,099,533 $ 14,606 69360 WUNL-TV 3,243,843 3,015,382 $ 20,978 69444 WUNM-TV 1,370,547 1,370,547 $ 9,535 69397 WUNP-TV 1,488,708 1,474,989 $ 10,261 69416 WUNU 1,212,006 1,210,875 $ 8,424 83822 WUNW 2,012,283 1,476,883 $ 10,275 6900 WUPA 6,845,271 6,764,030 $ 47,057 13938 WUPL 1,833,116 1,833,116 $ 12,753 10897 WUPV 2,142,407 2,122,016 $ 14,763 19190 WUPW 2,136,541 2,135,020 $ 14,853 23128 WUPX-TV 1,182,585 1,166,267 $ 8,114 65593 WUSA 9,654,785 9,309,845 $ 64,769 4301 WUSI-TV 320,658 320,658 $ 2,231 60552 WUTB 9,293,641 9,148,848 $ 63,649 30577 WUTF-TV 8,479,857 8,266,141 $ 57,508 57837 WUTR 511,394 470,311 $ 3,272 415 WUTV 1,611,128 1,579,265 $ 10,987 16517 WUVC-DT 4,224,285 4,208,453 $ 29,278 48813 WUVG-DT 6,908,879 6,834,542 $ 47,548 3072 WUVN 1,236,426 1,156,397 $ 8,045 60560 WUVP-DT 10,944,731 10,756,717 $ 74,834 9971 WUXP-TV 2,749,827 2,737,094 $ 19,042 417 WVAH-TV 1,295,710 1,222,075 $ 8,502 23947 WVAN-TV 1,118,534 1,117,845 $ 7,777 65387 WVBT 1,964,109 1,964,109 $ 13,664 72342 WVCY-TV 3,149,773 3,140,719 $ 21,850 60559 WVEA-TV 5,324,315 5,322,343 $ 37,028 74167 WVEC 2,217,117 2,216,436 $ 15,420 5802 WVEN-TV 4,749,513 4,749,513 $ 33,042 61573 WVEO 962,531 803,553 $ 3,105 69946 WVER 903,858 770,412 $ 5,360 10976 WVFX 688,514 596,278 $ 4,148 47929 WVIA-TV 3,472,501 2,879,994 $ 20,036 3667 WVII-TV 368,499 348,813 $ 2,427 70309 WVIR-TV 2,140,100 2,107,081 $ 14,659 74170 WVIT 5,920,252 5,425,459 $ 37,745 18753 WVIZ 3,694,957 3,687,740 $ 25,656 70021 WVLA-TV 1,969,063 1,969,000 $ 13,698 81750 WVLR 1,483,484 1,376,091 $ 9,573 35908 WVLT-TV 1,983,974 1,714,780 $ 11,930 74169 WVNS-TV 889,675 560,472 $ 3,899 11259 WVNY 755,448 673,828 $ 4,688 29000 WVOZ-TV 981,832 762,182 $ 3,105 71657 WVPB-TV 939,383 910,465 $ 6,334 60111 WVPT 995,523 887,449 $ 6,174 70491 WVPX-TV 4,131,639 4,098,980 $ 28,517 66378 WVPY 917,535 855,616 $ 5,953 67190 WVSN 2,593,148 2,271,512 $ 15,803 69940 WVTB 468,294 246,240 $ 1,713 74173 WVTM-TV 2,101,947 2,026,895 $ 14,101 74174 WVTV 3,130,664 3,122,630 $ 21,724 77496 WVUA 2,305,621 2,250,337 $ 15,656 4149 WVUE-DT 1,781,266 1,781,266 $ 12,392 4329 WVUT 267,531 267,450 $ 1,861 74176 WVVA 997,556 690,651 $ 4,805 3113 WVXF 70,673 66,853 $ 465 12033 WWAY 1,328,366 1,328,366 $ 9,241 30833 WWBT 2,109,206 2,074,930 $ 14,435 20295 WWCP-TV 2,798,717 2,540,105 $ 17,672 24812 WWCW 1,390,908 1,210,482 $ 8,421 23671 WWDP 6,230,964 5,959,061 $ 41,457 21158 WWHO 2,994,400 2,952,760 $ 20,542 14682 WWJE-DT 7,755,236 7,627,170 $ 53,062 65919 WWJS 3,798,882 3,731,768 $ 25,962 72123 WWJ-TV 5,653,566 5,653,219 $ 39,329 166512 WWJX 524,625 524,579 $ 3,649 6868 WWLP 3,866,407 3,097,621 $ 21,550 74192 WWL-TV 1,908,335 1,908,335 $ 13,276 3133 WWMB 1,596,320 1,591,501 $ 11,072 74195 WWMT 2,667,986 2,657,016 $ 18,485 68851 WWNY-TV 368,613 341,101 $ 2,373 74197 WWOR-TV 21,146,732 20,904,564 $ 145,433 65943 WWPB 3,531,585 3,086,500 $ 21,473 23264 WWPX-TV 2,612,045 2,544,163 $ 17,700 68547 WWRS-TV 2,376,549 2,354,442 $ 16,380 61251 WWSB 3,830,838 3,830,838 $ 26,651 23142 WWSI 11,821,594 11,646,436 $ 81,024 16747 WWTI 195,127 188,538 $ 1,312 998 WWTO-TV 6,837,732 6,837,732 $ 47,570 26994 WWTV 1,047,227 1,032,448 $ 7,183 84214 WWTW 1,529,924 1,528,555 $ 10,634 26993 WWUP-TV 114,688 108,690 $ 756 23338 WXBU 4,219,869 3,695,568 $ 25,710 61504 WXCW 2,000,927 2,000,927 $ 13,920 61084 WXEL-TV 5,976,331 5,976,331 $ 41,577 60539 WXFT-DT 10,428,632 10,421,900 $ 72,505 23929 WXGA-TV 618,176 616,843 $ 4,291 51163 WXIA-TV 7,067,151 6,920,534 $ 48,146 53921 WXII-TV 3,895,811 3,546,156 $ 24,671 146 WXIN 3,066,589 3,043,020 $ 21,170 39738 WXIX-TV 3,033,449 3,023,049 $ 21,031 414 WXLV-TV 4,920,177 4,882,710 $ 33,969 68433 WXMI 2,110,083 2,109,607 $ 14,677 64549 WXOW 433,343 422,605 $ 2,940 6601 WXPX-TV 5,414,068 5,411,832 $ 37,650 74215 WXTV-DT 21,842,105 21,428,169 $ 149,076 12472 WXTX 745,811 742,438 $ 5,165 11970 WXXA-TV 1,691,753 1,553,272 $ 10,806 57274 WXXI-TV 1,192,140 1,176,310 $ 8,184 53517 WXXV-TV 1,235,520 1,233,511 $ 8,582 10267 WXYZ-TV 5,716,967 5,716,632 $ 39,771 77515 WYCI 32,321 21,447 $ 149 70149 WYCW 3,717,232 3,549,667 $ 24,695 62219 WYDC 542,984 435,924 $ 3,033 18783 WYDN 2,760,323 2,697,351 $ 18,765 35582 WYDO 1,340,990 1,340,990 $ 9,329 25090 WYES-TV 1,776,818 1,776,667 $ 12,360 53905 WYFF 2,836,376 2,609,544 $ 18,155 49803 WYIN 7,062,511 7,062,511 $ 49,134 24915 WYMT-TV 1,144,097 819,069 $ 5,698 17010 WYOU 2,912,468 2,246,394 $ 15,628 77789 WYOW 94,927 94,486 $ 657 13933 WYPX-TV 1,547,670 1,434,147 $ 9,977 4693 WYTV 4,870,043 4,522,748 $ 31,465 5875 WYZZ-TV 1,008,995 1,002,743 $ 6,976 15507 WZBJ 1,603,364 1,421,509 $ 9,889 28119 WZDX 1,714,034 1,633,019 $ 11,361 70493 WZME 22,102,923 21,652,522 $ 150,637 81448 WZMQ 73,784 73,510 $ 511 71871 WZPX-TV 2,165,413 2,165,333 $ 15,064 136750 WZRB 1,007,172 1,006,731 $ 7,004 418 WZTV 2,743,270 2,733,978 $ 19,020 83270 WZVI 64,187 63,279 $ 440 19183 WZVN-TV 2,331,155 2,331,155 $ 16,218 49713 WZZM 1,678,220 1,652,095 $ 11,494 1 Call signs WIPM and WIPR are stations in Puerto Rico that are linked together with a total fee of $21,567. 2 Call signs WNJX and WAPA are stations in Puerto Rico that are linked together with a total fee of $21,567. 3 Call signs WKAQ and WORA are stations in Puerto Rico that are linked together with a total fee of $21,567. 4 Call signs WOLE and WLII are stations in Puerto Rico that are linked together with a total fee of $21,567. 5 Call signs WVEO and WTCV are stations in Puerto Rico that are linked together with a total fee of $21,567. 6 Call signs WJPX and WJWN are stations in Puerto Rico that are linked together with a total fee of $21,567. 7 Call signs WAPA and WTIN are stations in Puerto Rico that are linked together with a total fee of $21,567. 8 Call signs WSUR and WLII are stations in Puerto Rico that are linked together with a total fee of $21,567. 9 Call signs WVOZ and WTCV are stations in Puerto Rico that are linked together with a total fee of $21,567. 10 Call signs WJPX and WKPV are stations in Puerto Rico that are linked together with a total fee of $21,567. 11 Call signs WMTJ and WQTO are stations in Puerto Rico that are linked together with a total fee of $21,567. 12 Call signs WIRS and WJPX are stations in Puerto Rico that are linked together with a total fee of $21,567. 13 Call signs WRFB and WORA are stations in Puerto Rico that are linked together with a total fee of $21,567. APPENDIX G FY 2025 Schedule of Regulatory Fees Regulatory fees for the first eight categories listed, identified with an *, are collected by the Commission in advance to cover the term of the license and are submitted at the time the application is filed. Fee Category Annual Regulatory Fee ($) *PLMRS (per license) (Exclusive Use) (47 CFR part 90) 25 *Microwave (per license) (47 CFR part 101) 25 *Marine (Ship) (per station) (47 CFR part 80) 15 *Marine (Coast) (per license) (47 CFR part 80) 40 *Rural Radio (47 CFR part 22) (previously listed under the Land Mobile category) 10 *PLMRS (Shared Use) (per license) (47 CFR part 90) 10 *Aviation (Aircraft) (per station) (47 CFR part 87) 10 *Aviation (Ground) (per license) (47 CFR part 87) 20 CMRS Mobile/Cellular Services (per unit) (47 CFR parts 20, 22, 24, 27, 80 and 90) (Includes Non-Geographic telephone numbers) 0.16 CMRS Messaging Services (per unit) (47 CFR parts 20, 22, 24 and 90) 0.08 Broadband Radio Service (formerly MMDS/ MDS) (per license) (47 CFR part 27) Local Multipoint Distribution Service (per call sign) (47 CFR, part 101) 760 760 AM Radio Construction Permits 570 FM Radio Construction Permits 1,000 AM and FM Broadcast Radio Station Fees See Table Below Full Power TV (47 CFR part 73) VHF and UHF Commercial Fee Factor .006674 See Appendix F of FY 2025 Report and Order for fee amounts due, also available at https://www.fcc.gov/licensing-databases/fees/regulatory-fees Full Power TV Construction Permits 5,200 Low Power TV, Class A TV, TV/FM Translators & FM Boosters (47 CFR part 74) 275 CARS (47 CFR part 78) 1,945 Cable Television Systems (per subscriber) (47 CFR part 76), Including IPTV and Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS) 1.47 Interstate Telecommunication Service Providers (per revenue dollar) .005125 Toll Free (per toll free subscriber) (47 CFR section 52.101 (f) of the rules) 0.10 Earth Stations: Transmit/Receive & Transmit only (per authorization or registration) 2,060 Space Stations (per authorized station in geostationary orbit) (47 CFR part 25) 141,790 Space Stations (per authorized system in non-geostationary orbit) (47 CFR part 25) – Small Constellation (fewer than 1000 authorized space stations) 375,140 Space Stations (per authorized system in non-geostationary orbit) (47 CFR part 25) – Large Constellation (1000 or more authorized space stations) 1,917,390 Space Stations (per license/call sign in non-geostationary orbit) (47 CFR part 25) (Small Satellite) 12,330 International Bearer Circuits - Terrestrial/Satellites (per Gbps circuit) 14 Submarine Cable Landing Licenses Fee (per cable system) See Table Below FY 2025 Radio Station Regulatory Fees Population Served AM Class A AM Class B AM Class C AM Class D FM Classes A, B1 & C3 FM Classes B, C, C0, C1 & C2 <=10,000 $545   $395   $340   $375   $600   $685   10,001 - 25,000 $910   $655   $570   $625   $1,000   $1,140   25,001 – 75,000 $1,365   $985   $855   $940   $1,500   $1,710   75,001 – 150,000 $2,050   $1,475   $1,285   $1,405   $2,250   $2,565   150,001 – 500,000 $3,075   $2,215   $1,925   $2,115   $3,380   $3,855   500,001 – 1,200,000 $4,605   $3,315   $2,885   $3,160   $5,060   $5,770   1,200,001 – 3,000,000 $6,915   $4,980   $4,330   $4,750   $7,600   $8,665   3,000,001 – 6,000,000 $10,365   $7,460   $6,490   $7,120   $11,390   $12,985   >6,000,000 $15,550   $11,195 $9,740   $10,680 $17,090   $19,485   FY 2025 International Bearer Circuits - Submarine Cable Systems Submarine Cable Systems (capacity as of December 31, 2024) Fee Ratio FY 2025 Regulatory Fees Less than 50 Gbps 0.0625 Units $5,510 50 Gbps or greater, but less than 250 Gbps 0.125 Units $11,015 250 Gbps or greater, but less than 1,500 Gbps 0.25 Units $22,030 1,500 Gbps or greater, but less than 3,500 Gbps 0.5 Units $44,065 3,500 Gbps or greater, but less than 6,500 Gbps 1.0 Unit $88,130 6,500 Gbps or greater 2.0 Units $176,260 2 APPENDIX H Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis 1. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended (RFA), 5 U.S.C. §§ 601 et seq., as amended by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement and Fairness Act (SBREFA), Pub. L. No. 104-121, 110 Stat. 847 (1996). the Federal Communications Commission (Commission) has prepared this Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) of the policies and rules proposed in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) assessing the possible significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. The Commission requests written public comments on this IRFA. Comments must be identified as responses to the IRFA and must be filed by the deadlines for comments specified on the first page of the NPRM. The Commission will send a copy of the NPRM, including this IRFA, to the Chief Counsel for the Small Business Administration (SBA) Office of Advocacy. 5 U.S.C. § 603(a). In addition, the NPRM and IRFA (or summaries thereof) will be published in the Federal Register. Id. A. Need for, and Objectives of, the Proposed Rules 2. Each fiscal year, the Commission is required to collect regulatory fees in an amount equal to our annual salaries and expenses (S&E) appropriation by the end of September. Pursuant to section 9 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended (Communications Act or Act), 47 U.S.C. § 159 (requiring the Commission to assess and collect regulatory fees to recover the costs of carrying out its activities in the total amounts provided for in Appropriations Acts). and the fiscal year (FY) 2026 Further Consolidation Appropriations Act, the Commission must collect $416,112,000, which is an amount equal to its fiscal year (FY) 2026 salaries and expenses (S&E) appropriation. The regulatory fee collection is guided by both the statutory authority in sections 6 and 9 of the Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. §§ 156, 159, and the explicit language of each fiscal year’s S&E appropriation directing the amount to be collected as an offsetting collection. See FY 2026 Consolidated Appropriations Act (appropriating “[f]or necessary expenses of the Federal Communications Commission, as authorized by law, … $416,112,000, to remain available until September 30, 2029: Provided, That $416,112,000, of offsetting collections shall be assessed and collected pursuant to section 9 of title I of the Communications Act of 1934, shall be retained and used for necessary expenses and shall remain available until September 30, 2029: Provided further, That the sum herein appropriated shall be reduced as such offsetting collections are received during fiscal year 2026 so as to result in a final fiscal year 2026 appropriation estimated at $0”). The Commission’s methodology for assessing regulatory fees must “reflect the full-time equivalent number of employees within the bureaus and offices of the Commission, adjusted to take into account factors that are reasonably related to the benefits provided to the payor of the fee by the Commission’s activities.” Id. § 159(d). The total amount we must collect in an offsetting collection generally changes each fiscal year, and payors’ regulatory fees will also typically change each fiscal year as a mathematical consequence of the changes in the total amount to be collected, the number of full-time equivalents (FTEs), and projected unit estimates for each regulatory fee category. The NPRM seeks comment on the proposed regulatory fees and methodology for FY 2026, as set forth in Appendices A and B. The NPRM also seeks comment on the calculation of television broadcaster regulatory fees as set forth in Appendix F, whether we should reexamine the “indirect” classification of FTEs in its non-core bureaus and offices, and whether to use a different data source for our assessment of fees on CMRS providers. Finally, we seek comment on whether there are ways to improve our regulatory fee process in order to meet our statutory obligations to assess and collect regulatory fees from payors, some of which are small entities. B. Legal Basis 3. The proposed action is authorized pursuant to sections 4(i), 4(j), 9, 9A, and 303(r) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. §§ 154(i), 154(j), 159, 159A, and 303(r). C. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which the Proposed Rules Will Apply 4. The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of and, where feasible, an estimate of the number of small entities that may be affected by the proposed rules, if adopted. 5 U.S.C. § 603(b)(3). The RFA generally defines the term “small entity” as having the same meaning as the terms “small business,” “small organization,” and “small governmental jurisdiction.” Id. § 601(6). In addition, the term “small business” has the same meaning as the term “small business concern” under the Small Business Act. Id. § 601(3) (incorporating by reference the definition of “small-business concern” in the Small Business Act, 15 U.S.C. § 632). Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. § 601(3), the statutory definition of a small business applies “unless an agency, after consultation with the Office of Advocacy of the Small Business Administration and after opportunity for public comment, establishes one or more definitions of such term which are appropriate to the activities of the agency and publishes such definition(s) in the Federal Register.” A “small business concern” is one which: (1) is independently owned and operated; (2) is not dominant in its field of operation; and (3) satisfies any additional criteria established by the SBA. 15 U.S.C. § 632. The SBA establishes small business size standards that agencies are required to use when promulgating regulations relating to small businesses; agencies may establish alternative size standards for use in such programs, but must consult and obtain approval from SBA before doing so. 13 CFR 121.903. 5. Our actions, over time, may affect small entities that are not easily categorized at present. We therefore describe, at the outset, three broad groups of small entities that could be directly affected herein. 5 U.S.C. § 601(3)-(6). First, while there are industry specific size standards for small businesses that are used in the regulatory flexibility analysis, according to data from the Small Business Administration’s (SBA) Office of Advocacy, in general a small business is an independent business having fewer than 500 employees. See SBA, Office of Advocacy, Frequently Asked Questions About Small Business 1 (July 23, 2024), https://advocacy.sba.gov/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/Frequently-Asked-Questions-About-Small-Business_2024-508.pdf. These types of small businesses represent 99.9% of all businesses in the United States, which translates to 34.75 million businesses. Id. Next, “small organization” are not-for-profit enterprises that are independently owned and operated and not dominant in their field.” 5 U.S.C. § 601(4). While we do not have data regarding the number of non-profits that meet that criteria, over 99 percent of nonprofits have fewer than 500 employees. See SBA, Office of Advocacy, Small Business Facts, Spotlight on Nonprofits (July 2019), https://advocacy.sba.gov/2019/07/25/small-business-facts-spotlight-on-nonprofits/. Finally, “small governmental jurisdiction” are defined as cities, counties, towns, townships, villages, school districts, or special districts with a populations of less than fifty thousand. 5 U.S.C. § 601(5). Based on the 2022 U.S. Census of Governments data, we estimate that at least 48,724 out of 90,835 local government jurisdictions have a population of less than 50,000. See U.S. Census Bureau, 2022 Census of Governments –Organization, https://www.census.gov/data/tables/2022/econ/gus/2022-governments.html, tables 1-11. 6. The rules proposed in the NPRM will apply to small entities in the industries identified in the chart below by their six-digit North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) The North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) is the standard used by Federal statistical agencies in classifying business establishments for the purpose of collecting, analyzing, and publishing statistical data related to the U.S. business economy. See www.census.gov/NAICS for further details regarding the NAICS codes identified in this chart. codes and corresponding SBA size standard. The size standards in this chart are set forth in 13 CFR 121.201, by six digit North American Industrial Classification System (NAICS) code. Based on currently available U.S. Census data regarding the estimated number of small firms in each identified industry, we conclude that the proposed rules will impact a substantial number of small entities. Where available, we also provide additional information regarding the number of potentially affected entities in the industries identified below. Table 1. 2022 U.S. Census Bureau Data by NAICS Code Regulated Industry (Footnotes specify potentially affected entities within a regulated industry where applicable) NAICS Code SBA Size Standard Total Firms U.S. Census Bureau, “Selected Sectors: Employment Size of Firms for the U.S.: 2022.” Economic Census, ECN Core Statistics Economic Census: Establishment and Firm Size Statistics for the U.S., Table EC2200SIZEEMPFIRM, 2025, “Selected Sectors: Sales, Value of Shipments, or Revenue Size of Firms for the U.S.: 2022.” Economic Census, ECN Core Statistics Economic Census: Establishment and Firm Size Statistics for the U.S., Table EC2200SIZEREVFIRM, 2025. Total Small Firms Id. % Small Firms Radio Broadcasting Stations 516110 $47 million 2,616 2,136 81.65% Television Broadcasting Stations 516120 $47 million 413 316 76.51% Wired Telecommunications Carriers Affected Entities in this industry include Cable Companies and Systems (Rate Regulation), Cable System Operators (Telecom Act Standard), Competitive Local Exchange Carriers (CLECs), Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS), Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers (Incumbent LECs), Interexchange Carriers (IXCs), Local Exchange Carriers (LECs), and Other Toll Carriers. 517111 1,500 employees 3,403 3,027 88.95% Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite) 517112 1,500 employees 1,184 1,081 91.30% Telecommunications Resellers Affected Entities in this industry include Local Resellers, Prepaid Calling Card Providers, and Toll Resellers. 517121 1,500 employees 955 847 88.69% Satellite Telecommunications 517410 $44 million 332 195 58.73% All Other Telecommunications 517810 $40 million 1,673 1,007 60.19% Other Management Consulting Services 541618 $19 million 10,446 6,383 61.10% Other Services Related to Advertising 541890 $19 million 7,067 4,850 68.63% Table 2. Telecommunications Service Provider Data 2024 Universal Service Monitoring Report Telecommunications Service Provider Data Federal-State Joint Board on Universal Service, Universal Service Monitoring Report at 26, Table 1.12 (2024), https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DOC-408848A1.pdf. (Data as of December 2023) SBA Size Standard (1500 Employees) Affected Entity Total # FCC Form 499A Filers Small Firms % Small Entities Competitive Local Exchange Carriers (CLECs) Affected Entities in this industry include all reporting local competitive service providers. 3,729 3,576 95.90 Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers (Incumbent LECs) 1,175 917 78.04 Interexchange Carriers (IXCs) 113 95 84.07 Local Exchange Carriers (LECs) Affected Entities in this industry include all reporting fixed local service providers (CLECs & ILECs). 4,904 4,493 91.62 Local Resellers 222 217 97.75 Other Toll Carriers 74 71 95.95 Prepaid Card Providers 47 47 100.00 Toll Resellers 411 398 96.84 Telecommunications Resellers 633 615 97.16 Wired Telecommunications Carriers Local Resellers fall into another U.S. Census Bureau industry (Telecommunications Resellers) and therefore data for these providers is not included in this industry. 4,682 4,276 91.33 Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite) Affected Entities in this industry include all reporting wireless carriers and service providers. 585 498 85.13 Table 3. Cable Entities Data Cable Entities Size Standard Total Firms Small Firms % Small Firms in Industry Cable System Operators (Telecom Act Standard) Small Cable Operator Serves fewer than 498,000 subscribers, either directly or through affiliates Pursuant to 47 U.S.C. § 543(m)(2) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, the size standard for a “small cable operator,” is a cable operator that, directly or through an affiliate, serves in the aggregate fewer than 1% of all U.S. subscribers and has no affiliation with entities with gross annual aggregate revenues exceed $250,000,000. FCC Announces Updated Subscriber Threshold for the Definition of Small Cable Operator, Public Notice, DA 23-906 (MB 2023) (2023 Subscriber Threshold PN). In the Public Notice, the Commission determined that there were approximately 49.8 million cable subscribers in the United States at that time using the most reliable source publicly available. This threshold will remain in effect until the Commission issues a superseding Public Notice. See 47 CFR § 76.901(e)(1). 530 Based on Commission staff review of S&P Global Market Intelligence, S&P Capital IQ Pro, U.S., Broadband & Video Subscribers by Geography Q3-2025(June 2025) data. (last visited Sept. 15, 2025). 524 Id. 98.87% Cable Companies and Systems (Rate Regulation) Small Cable Company Serves 400,000 or fewer subscribers nationwide 47 CFR § 76.901(d). Id. 530 Based on Commission staff review of S&P Global Market Intelligence, S&P Capital IQ Pro, U.S., Broadband & Video Subscribers by Geography Q3-2025(June 2025) data. (last visited Sept. 15, 2025). 523 Id. 98.51% Cable Companies and Systems (Rate Regulation) Small Cable System (headends) Serves 15,000 or fewer subscribers 47 CFR § 76.901(c). 4,545 Based on Commission staff review of S&P Global Market Intelligence, S&P Capital IQ Pro, U.S. MediaCensusDW, Operator Subscribers by Geography Q3-2025(June 2025) data. (last visited Sept. 15, 2025). 3,965 Id. 87.24% D. Description of Economic Impact and Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping and Other Compliance Requirements for Small Entities 7. The RFA directs agencies to describe the economic impact of proposed rules on small entities, as well as projected reporting, recordkeeping and other compliance requirements, including an estimate of the classes of small entities which will be subject to the requirements and the type of professional skills necessary for preparation of the report or record. 5 U.S.C. § 603(b)(4). 8. The NPRM does not propose any changes to the Commission’s current information collection, reporting, recordkeeping, or compliance requirements for collecting regulatory fees from small entities. Small and other regulated entities are required to pay regulatory fees on an annual basis. The cost of compliance with the annual regulatory assessment for small entities is the amount assessed for their regulatory fee category, which may increase or decrease based upon the methodology employed by the Commission in FY 2026 to determine the allocation of direct FTEs within the core bureaus, and indirect FTEs in non-core bureaus and offices. Complying with their annual regulatory assessment should not require small entities to hire professionals to comply, as they are accustomed to paying the annual fees and most should be familiar with both the Commission’s current collection process. 9. For small licensees experiencing financial hardship, access to fee relief, via options such as waiver, reduction, deferral and/or installment payment of their regulatory fees may be available, and small entities may be exempt from paying a regulatory fee if the assessed fee is below the de minimis threshold that the Commission has established. 47 U.S.C. § 159A(d); 47 CFR § 1.1166. The standard for waiver, reduction and/or deferral of a regulatory fee in any specific instance under section 9A of the Communications Act and section 1.1166 of the Commission’s regulations is for good cause if the waiver, reduction, or deferral (collectively, waiver) would serve the public interest. The Commission will not act on and will dismiss a request for waiver, reduction, deferral and/or installment payment relief filed by a fee payor if the fee payor is on red light, in accordance with the requirements of section 1.1910. See 47 CFR § 1.1910. E. Discussion of Significant Alternatives Considered That Minimize the Significant Economic Impact on Small Entities 10. The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of any significant alternatives to the proposed rules that would accomplish the stated objectives of applicable statutes, and minimize any significant economic impact on small entities. 5 U.S.C. § 603(c). The discussion is required to include alternatives such as: “(1) the establishment of differing compliance or reporting requirements or timetables that take into account the resources available to small entities; (2) the clarification, consolidation, or simplification of compliance and reporting requirements under the rule for such small entities; (3) the use of performance rather than design standards; and (4) an exemption from coverage of the rule, or any part thereof, for such small entities.” Id. § 603(c)(1)-(4). 11. Assessment of Regulatory Fees. The Commission’s long-standing methodology for assessing regulatory fees reflects the full-time equivalent number of employees within the Commission’s bureaus and offices, adjusted to take into account factors that are reasonably related to the benefits provided to the payor of the fee by the Commission’s activities. In making such adjustments to establish our regulatory fee schedule for FY 2026, following a high-level staff analysis of the time utilized in the oversight and regulation of certain segments of the telecommunications industry, we propose reallocating certain indirect FTEs as direct to one of the Commission’s core licensing bureaus. Our proposals reflect our conclusion that we can determine, with reasonable accuracy for this fiscal year, that certain FTE time from the Office of General Counsel, the Office of Economics and Analytics, and the Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau is devoted to work that is sufficiently linked to the oversight and regulation of regulatory fee payors in a core bureau such that the FTE burden of that work should be allocated as direct to a licensing bureau for regulatory fee purposes. 12. For FY 2026, we propose that 61 indirect FTEs could be reallocated as direct FTEs to a relevant core bureau for purposes of calculating regulatory fees for FY 2026, which could reduce regulatory fee obligations for some small and other regulatory payees. Additionally, consistent with the Commission’s determination for the past three fiscal years, we propose to reallocate 2 direct FTEs from the Media Bureau to be indirect FTEs because the nature of their work is sufficiently linked to work that is similar to that performed in the Enforcement Bureau, which has previously been categorized as indirect. See, e.g., FY 2023 Report and Order, 38 FCC Rcd at 8096, para. 70. These reallocations result in an overall proposed increase of 59 indirect FTEs being reallocated as direct FTEs to core bureaus. While we considered alternatives to the reallocations we propose for FY 2026, we find that these proposed reallocations are consistent with section 9 of the Communications Act, which requires us to determine regulatory fees based on FTEs. 47 U.S.C. § 159(d) (providing that ”the Commission shall by rule amend the schedule of regulatory fees established under this section if the Commission determines that the schedule requires amendment so that such fees reflect the full-time equivalent number of employees within the bureaus and offices of the Commission, adjusted to take into account factors that are reasonably related to the benefits provided to the payor of the fee by the Commission’s activities.”). 13. Broadcast Regulatory Fees. The NPRM considers and seeks comment on whether the Commission should continue to assess fees for full-power broadcast television stations based on the population covered by a full-service broadcast television station’s contour, which may reduce the economic impact of the regulatory fees for some small licensees. While the population-based methodology increases fees for some licensees and reduces fees for others, the Commission believes the population-based metric better conforms with the service of broadcasting television to the American people. F. Federal Rules that May Duplicate, Overlap, or Conflict with the Proposed Rules 14. None. 2