''The Six O'Clock News'', as the bulletin was originally titled, was part of the second revamp of BBC1's early evening news and current affairs lineup in as many years. In October 1983, the BBC had replaced the long-running 5:40 pm
BBC Evening News, as well as current affairs and regional news programme
Nationwide, with
Sixty Minutes, an attempt to integrate regional and national news and current affairs in a single broadcast; it began with a fifteen-minute news segment similar to the
Evening News. However, it lasted less than a year, ending the following July, and for the next five weeks, the
BBC Evening News was reinstated at 5:40 pm, finally ending on 31 August 1984. and
Nicholas Witchell. This set design was in use from 3 September 1984 to 12 April 1993. The new programme launched the following Monday, 3 September, and was originally presented by
Sue Lawley and
Nicholas Witchell with future
Newsnight presenter
Jeremy Paxman as the first relief newsreader.
Andrew Harvey,
Philip Hayton, and Frances Coverdale were also regular relief presenters in the early years. The new programme was twice as long as the previous bulletins, with a running time of 30 minutes. In 1988, the ''Six O'Clock News'' studio was invaded during a live broadcast by a female group protesting against Britain's
Section 28 (a law against the "promotion" of
homosexuality in schools). Witchell grappled with the protesters and is said to have sat on one woman, provoking the memorable front-page headline in the
Daily Mirror, "Beeb man sits on lesbian". Lawley left the ''Six O'Clock News'' later that year, followed by Witchell a year later, although he would return as a relief presenter intermittently until 1999. From 1989, the programme was mainly presented by two of
Peter Sissons,
Anna Ford, Andrew Harvey and
Moira Stuart, with other BBC journalists such as Witchell, Hayton,
John Humphrys,
Michael Buerk,
Jill Dando,
Laurie Mayer,
Mike Smartt and
Chris Lowe also occasionally presenting. On 13 April 1993, the bulletin was relaunched with a more coherent look that was adopted across all BBC newscasts on the same day. A year later, Sissons departed to present the ''
Nine O'Clock News'', swapping positions with
Martyn Lewis. From 1994 to 1999 the programme was generally presented by Lewis as lead presenter of the programme on Monday, Tuesday and Friday, with Ford taking on the lead role on Wednesday and Thursday, although both would cover each other's absences. Stuart was co-presenter on Monday and Tuesday, Harvey on Wednesday and Dando on Thursday and Friday. Other BBC journalists, in particular
Jennie Bond, covered in the absence of co-presenters, with future lead presenters Huw Edwards and Fiona Bruce making occasional appearances. Senior journalists, including Witchell, Sissons and
John Humphrys would present as lead anchor when both Lewis and Ford were unavailable. On 10 May 1999, the bulletin was relaunched again, along with the rest of the BBC News programmes and the new presenter was Huw Edwards with Fiona Bruce as the deputy presenter. During Bruce's maternity leave in 2001,
Sian Williams, who was special correspondent for the programme at this time, covered as deputy presenter. Both Edwards and Bruce left the ''Six O'Clock News
on 19 January 2003 to front the Ten O'Clock News''. On 20 January 2003, as George Alagiah and Sophie Raworth took over, the bulletin was relaunched along with the rest of BBC One's news bulletins. During Raworth's first maternity leave in 2004, Sian Williams stood in for her for over the six months. However, during Raworth's second maternity leave at the end of 2005,
Natasha Kaplinsky stood in, originally as a temporary measure. As part of a presenter reshuffle in April 2006, Kaplinsky was confirmed as the new full-time presenter. Sophie Raworth was later named as the main presenter of the
BBC News at One. Raworth is now a regular presenter on the
News at Six and
BBC News at Ten, covering for main presenters during their absences. Since April 2005, the programme has formed the first half-hour of the ''Six O'Clock Newshour'' on the BBC News Channel. The second half-hour consists of business and sport updates presented from within the News Channel studio by one of the News Channel presenters. As before, the bulletin still completes at 6:30pm before splitting off to regional news programmes on BBC One. On 5 October 2007 it was announced that Natasha Kaplinsky was leaving the BBC to replace
Kirsty Young on
5 News, taking up her new role on 18 February 2008 presenting two half-hour evening bulletins. She left at the end of the ''Six O'Clock News'' on the same day. For a while Sian Williams filled in as co-presenter, but on 3 December 2007 the programme went single-headed, with George Alagiah as main presenter, and Sian Williams as deputy presenter. A few months into the new arrangement Fiona Bruce took over from Sian as the main Friday presenter. On 28 January 2008, the programme moved studios, from N6 to TC7, as part of a restructuring across BBC News. On 21 April 2008 the programmes, along with the rest of BBC News, underwent a refresh, taking on new titles and a new set. On 17 March 2013, the
BBC News at Six bulletin presented by Sophie Raworth was the final programme to be broadcast from TC7 in BBC Television Centre, after
BBC Breakfast and
Newsnight vacated the studio in 2012. The studio was demolished later in 2013 as part of the redevelopment of the site. On 18 March 2013, the programme moved to
Broadcasting House, along with the BBC News channel and the other BBC One bulletins, and began broadcasting in
high-definition.
George Alagiah was diagnosed with bowel cancer in 2014, and took leave from presenting duties. Raworth and Bruce were the main cover presenters during this time, which also saw regular appearances from Reeta Chakrabarti and
Jane Hill. Alagiah returned in late 2015, but saw his cancer return in 2018, and once again took leave to undergo further treatment. Raworth once again covered Alagiah during his absence, with Bruce, Chakrabarti, Hill and Clive Myrie also regularly appearing on the programme. Alagiah returned to his presenting duties in January 2019. He last presented the
BBC News at Six in 2022. In July 2023, he died from bowel cancer at the age of 67. After eleven years in the role, in January 2019, Fiona Bruce stepped down as the programme's regular presenter on Fridays in order to replace
David Dimbleby on
Question Time. Sophie Raworth then began to present on Fridays. After the unification of BBC News for
UK viewers and
international viewers, the programme continues to be simulcast only on the
UK feed. The presentation after the merge remains identical except for the new titles with chameleon-style branding. From February 2026, as part of an expansion of
British Sign Language coverage, the news channel announced it would now like this programme to join the
BBC News at One and the 8am hour in providing BSL weeknights, Mondays to Fridays. ==Presenters==