Center frequencies While all countries use FM
channel center frequencies ending in 0.1, 0.3, 0.5, 0.7, and 0.9 MHz, some countries also use center frequencies ending in 0.0, 0.2, 0.4, 0.6, and 0.8 MHz. A few others also use 0.05, 0.15, 0.25, 0.35, 0.45, 0.55, 0.65, 0.75, 0.85, and 0.95 MHz. An
ITU conference in
Geneva,
Switzerland, on December 7, 1984, resolved to discontinue the use of 50 kHz channel spacings throughout
Europe. • Most countries have used 100 kHz or 200 kHz channel spacings for FM broadcasting since this ITU conference in 1984. • Some digitally-tuned FM radios are unable to tune using 50 kHz or even 100 kHz increments. Therefore, when traveling abroad or importing receivers, stations that broadcast on certain frequencies using such increments may not be heard clearly. This problem will not affect reception on an analog-tuned radio. • A few countries, such as
Italy, which have heavily congested FM bands, still allow a station on any multiple of 50 kHz wherever one can be squeezed in. • The 50 kHz channel spacings help prevent
co-channel interference, and these take advantage of FM's
capture effect and
receiver selectivity.
ITU Region 2 bandplan and channel numbering The original frequency allocation in
North America used by
Edwin Armstrong used the frequency band from 42 through 50 MHz, but this allocation was changed to a higher band beginning in 1945. In
Canada, the
United States,
Mexico,
the Bahamas, etc., there are 101
FM channels numbered from
200 (center frequency 87.9 MHz) to
300 (center frequency 107.9 MHz), though these numbers are rarely used outside the fields of
radio engineering and government. The center frequencies of the FM channels are spaced in increments of 200 kHz. The frequency of 87.9 MHz, while technically part of TV channel 6 (82 to 88 MHz), is used by just two
FM class-D stations in the United States. Portable radio
tuners often tune down to 87.5 MHz, so that the same radios can be made and sold worldwide.
Automobiles usually have FM radios that can tune down to 87.7 MHz, so that TV channel 6's audio at 87.75 MHz (±10 kHz) could be received while driving. This is largely no longer possible due to the 2009
digital television transition, though in 2023, the FCC authorized 14
low-powered Channel 6 television stations to continue to operate radio services indefinitely. In the United States, the 21 channels with center frequencies of 87.9–91.9 MHz (channels 200 through 220) constitute the
reserved band, exclusively for
non-commercial educational (
NCE) stations. The other channels (92.1 MHz through 107.9 MHz (Channels 221–300) may be used by both commercial and non-commercial stations. (Note that in Canada and in Mexico, this reservation does not apply; Mexico introduced a reservation of 106.1–107.9 MHz for community and indigenous stations in 2014, though dozens of stations are grandfathered due to lack of space to relocate them.) Originally, the American
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) devised a
bandplan in which FM radio stations would be assigned at intervals of four channels (800 kHz separation) for any one geographic area. Thus, in one area, stations might be at 88.1, 88.9, 89.7, etc., while in an adjacent area, stations might be at 88.3, 89.1, 89.9, 90.7 etc. Certain frequencies were designated for Class A only (see
FM broadcasting), which had a limit of 3
kilowatts of
effective radiated power (ERP) and an
antenna height limit for the center of radiation of 300 feet (91.4 m) height above average terrain (
HAAT). These frequencies were 92.1, 92.7, 93.5, 94.3, 95.3, 95.9, 96.7, 97.7, 98.3, 99.3, 100.1, 100.9, 101.7, 102.3, 103.1, 103.9, 104.9, 105.5, 106.3 and 107.1. On other frequencies, a station could be Class B (50 kW, 500 feet) or Class C (100 kW, 2,000 feet), depending on which zone it was in. In the late 1980s, the FCC switched to a bandplan based on a distance separation table using currently operating stations, and subdivided the class table to create extra classes and change antenna height limits to meters. Class A power was doubled to six kilowatts, and the frequency restrictions noted above were removed. As of late 2004, a station can be "squeezed in" anywhere as long as the location and class conform to the rules in the FCC separation table. The rules for second-adjacent-channel spacing do not apply for stations licensed before 1964. In 2017, Brazil laid the groundwork to reclaim channels 5 and 6 (76.1–87.5 MHz) for sound broadcasting use and required new radio receivers to be able to tune into the new
extended band (, abbreviated eFM). Five transmitters of public broadcaster
Brazil Communication Company were the first extended-band stations to begin broadcasts on May 7, 2021. In 2023, Chile announced the expansion of the FM band to 76-108 MHz as part of the analog TV shutdown, scheduled for April 2024.
Deviation and bandpass Normally each channel is 200
kHz (0.2 MHz) wide, and can pass
audio and
subcarrier frequencies up to 100 kHz.
Deviation is typically limited to 150 kHz total (±75 kHz) in order to prevent
adjacent-channel interference on the band. Stations in the U.S. may go up to 10% over this limit if they use non-stereo
subcarriers, increasing total
modulation by 0.5% for each 1% used by the subcarriers. Some stations may be limited to (±50 kHz) deviation in order to reduce transmitted bandwidth so that additional stations can be squeezed in. ==OIRT bandplan==