Early history In 1977, the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) received two applications to build new television stations in Denver. One came from a subsidiary of the
Trinity Broadcasting Network, while the other was filed by La Unidad Broadcasting Corporation, headed by Denver broadcaster George Sandoval. While the commission adjudicated the applications, channel 31 in Denver made television history in February 1980 as the first ever satellite-fed translator with a direct program source, KA2XEG (also known as K31AA), was launched by the
Spanish International Network. On February 24, 1981, the FCC granted the
construction permit to La Unidad Broadcasting. Two months later, however, their plans for a Spanish-language television station would prove unviable. The
1980 United States census reported that 92,000 Hispanics lived in the Denver city limits. While Sandoval suspected that was an undercount of what he estimated were 125,000 Hispanics, the reliance of advertisers and other groups on census figures convinced the company that there was no market at the time for a Spanish-language station in Denver. As a result, La Unidad opted to pivot its plans for what was originally designated KTMX-TV. In late 1981, it sold 80 percent of the construction permit to Centennial Broadcasting Corporation, a subsidiary of
Camellia City Telecasters and majority-owned by
Business Men's Assurance Company (BMA) of
Kansas City, Missouri (with Sandoval staying as manager). The reorganized ownership shifted its plan to operate a full-service English-language
independent station incorporating programming for Hispanics in Denver. At that time, work was already underway on constructing a new tower atop Lookout Mountain and remodeling the former studios of
KWGN-TV at 550 Lincoln Street. KTMX-TV was initially planned to share KWGN-TV's tower, but that station began stalling on a previous agreement once the possibility emerged that channel 31 might be an English-language station and its principal competitor. Construction stretched into 1983, intermittently affected by weather at the transmitter site, and the station began broadcasting on August 10—23 days late due to technical issues. It was the first new commercial station in Denver since
KBTV (channel 9) debuted in 1953 and offered a mix of syndicated reruns and movies. Centennial spent $7 million on the station's facilities. The station also joined a consortium of Spanish-language TV stations outside of the Spanish International Network for advertising sales in Spanish. Camellia City Telecasters launched a third independent station in October 1983,
KPDX serving the
Portland, Oregon, market. It then sued
Tribune Broadcasting and
Chris-Craft Industries, alleging that the two groups (which owned KWGN-TV in Denver and
KPTV in Portland, their two independents' chief competition) had pooled their buying power and denied Camellia City the ability to bid on syndicated shows for their stations. KDVR became a charter affiliate of Fox at its launch in October 1986. Fox programming helped the station charge higher advertising rates to close the gap with KWGN; from sign-on to sign-off, by February 1990, channel 31's ratings were only slightly behind those of channel 2.
Chase and Renaissance ownership BMA put its Denver and Sacramento television stations on the market in October 1988. It was the second time the company had done so; in 1985, all three had been on the market and attracted bids from such major players as
Taft Broadcasting and
Gaylord Broadcasting, but the startup KDVR and KPDX weighed down the value of the highly profitable KTXL. While a buyer was found for KTXL in December 1988, KDVR was sold to Chase Communications of
Hartford, Connecticut, in March 1989 as the company's third television station. The sale announcement came days before founder Sandoval was killed in a car accident at the age of 57; when KDVR moved from 550 Lincoln to a building at 5th and Wazee streets later that year, it was dedicated in his honor. The former studio building was then demolished three years later. The new facility, however, soon proved inadequate for the station's long-term goals. It was cramped, isolated, and suffered from cellular interference issues. Chase closed on its purchase of KDVR in March 1990. Between Hartford's
WTIC-TV, KDVR, its acquisition of two stations owned by
Outlet Communications, and the affiliation of Chase-owned
WPTY-TV in
Memphis, Tennessee, with Fox, the group grew to five Fox affiliates by that July. In 1991, Chase Broadcasting announced it would sell some or all of its properties to invest in new business ventures in Eastern Europe after the end of the Cold War, particularly successful cable television systems in Poland. The next year, it sold four of the five Fox affiliates, including KDVR, to
Renaissance Communications of
Greenwich, Connecticut. Chase was approved by the FCC in 1992 for a construction permit to build channel 22 in Fort Collins (located north of Denver) as a satellite of KDVR. In November 1994, the station signed on the air as KFCT, expanding coverage to parts of northern Colorado and far southern Wyoming.
Fox Television Stations ownership Renaissance sold KDVR and KFCT to
Fox Television Stations for $70 million on November 15, 1994, in exchange for acquiring that network's
owned-and-operated station in
Dallas–Fort Worth,
KDAF. Fox was selling KDAF because it was moving its programming to the previous
CBS affiliate,
KDFW, as a result of a
ten-station affiliation deal with
New World Communications. Fox was highly interested in the Denver market. Previous rumors had tied the network to a trade with Tribune of KDAF for KWGN-TV or with relocating the Fox affiliation to KWGN-TV or one of Denver's network affiliates, though the market's ABC, CBS, and
NBC affiliates instead exchanged affiliations among themselves. As part of a series of attempts to prevent
News Corporation, the parent company of Fox, from acquiring additional stations, NBC filed a request to the FCC to reject the trade alleging that the company was in violation of foreign ownership rules (which prohibit a foreign-owned company from maintaining more than a 25 percent interest in a U.S. television station). Foreign ownership had been a sensitive issue for Fox even prior to the New World deal. In 1993, its attempt to acquire
WGBS-TV in
Philadelphia was derailed after the
NAACP objected on ownership grounds. In the wake of the objection, the FCC opened a foreign ownership review into Murdoch's existing station holdings; had it ruled negatively, a forced ownership change or license loss could have meant the end of the network. In July 1995, when the FCC granted Fox approval to buy KDVR and two additional stations in
Boston and Memphis, the foreign-ownership issue was resolved, removing a roadblock to purchases by the company. Even then, Fox's desire for a lower channel number in Denver was the subject of rumors; one October 1995 article in
Variety suggested that Fox wanted to sell KDVR to Qwest Broadcasting, a company backed by
Quincy Jones and Tribune, and move its affiliation to KWGN-TV, leaving KDVR with
The WB. That possibility was floated again in July 1996. A February 1997 article in
Mediaweek floated that KDVR could have been part of a trade with
Belo Corporation to acquire
a station in
Seattle. Fox desired to begin airing local news programming, but it lacked the space to do so. On February 21, 1998, the company announced it would build a facility on the corner of Speer and Lincoln—the site from which KWGN-TV and KDVR had each started broadcasting, 30 years apart. This would be the third building overhaul project in the Fox Television Stations group in three years, following previous builds for
KTTV in Los Angeles and
KRIV in Houston. Once the building was complete, the station would add 60 employees and launch a 9 p.m. newscast. Ground was broken in April 1998, and the first KDVR newscast aired on July 16, 2000.
Local TV and Tribune ownership On December 22, 2007, Fox Television Stations agreed to sell KDVR and seven other Fox owned-and-operated stations to
Local TV LLC, a holding company operated by
private equity firm Oak Hill Capital Partners), adding to the nine stations that the group had acquired that May from
The New York Times Company. The sale was finalized on July 14, 2008. On September 17, Tribune Broadcasting announced that Local TV would begin managing KWGN-TV under a
local marketing agreement and consolidate its operations with KDVR effective October 1. It was one of two markets where Local TV-owned Fox stations and Tribune-owned CW affiliates would share resources, alongside
KTVI–
KPLR-TV in
St. Louis, and built on an existing management relationship between the companies. KWGN vacated its longtime studios in
Greenwood Village and consolidated its operations with KDVR at its Speer Boulevard facility. Tribune bought KDVR outright in 2013 as part of its $2.75 billion acquisition of Local TV LLC. Tribune sold the KDVR–KWGN studio to Urban Renaissance Group, a real estate firm from Seattle, in 2017, continuing to lease it back under a long-term agreement.
Sinclair purchase attempt; sale to Nexstar In May 2017,
Sinclair Broadcast Group announced its intention to buy Tribune Media. KDVR was then identified as one of 23 stations that Sinclair would divest to obtain regulatory approval for the merger, with Fox Television Stations agreeing to a repurchase as part of a $910 million deal. Both transactions were nullified on August 9, 2018, following Tribune Media's termination of the merger agreement and FCC chairman
Ajit Pai's public rejection of the deal.
Nexstar Media Group announced it would acquire the assets of Tribune Media on December 3, 2018, for $6.4 billion in cash and debt. The deal closed on September 19, 2019. On August 19, 2025, Nexstar Media Group agreed to acquire
Tegna for $6.2 billion. In Denver, Tegna already owned KUSA and
KTVD (channel 20). The deal was approved and completed on March 19, 2026. As part of the transaction, Nexstar committed to the divestiture of KTVD within two years, along with five other stations in markets where the two companies combined held four TV station licenses. KDVR continues to operate separately from KUSA as the legality of the merger is challenged, with
Phil Weiser of Colorado among eight state attorneys general who have filed to block the deal. ==Local programming==