The station first signed on December 7, 1974 as KPGA and broadcast a
middle of the road music format. In 1975, original owner James M. Strain sold KPGA to Jack and Lois Gale for $70,000; the deal was approved by the U.S.
Federal Communications Commission on October 17. In May 1978, owing to his declining health, Jack Gale sold his share in KPGA to his business partners Charles A. and Patricia Kent, doing business as KPGA Inc., for $6,000. The Kents sold the
adult contemporary music-formatted station to Five Cities Broadcasting Corporation for $500,000 in April 1985. In September 1989, U.S. Media Company, who took possession of KPGA's license after Five Cities defaulted on a loan in 1986, sold the station to James H. Elison for $1.05 million. On March 2, 1990, KPGA changed its
call letters to KWBR. Elison's Maverick Broadcasting Company had reached an agreement to sell KWBR to
American General Media for $500,000 in December 1996; however, the deal fell through. Instead, the following March, the rock-formatted station was purchased for $350,000 by Winsome Media LLC, based in
Cambria, California and owned by Walter D. Howard and Delbert E. Cleft, Jr. On April 17, 1998, the station adopted the KXTZ call sign. In April 2002, Howard Broadcasting, Inc. sold KXTZ to
Mapleton Communications as part of a three-station deal valued at $1.5 million. The deal was approved by the FCC on May 23, 2002 and the transaction was consummated on July 19. In late 2014, Mapleton Communications sold KXTZ and sister stations
KPYG,
KWWV,
KXDZ, and
KYNS to Martha Fahnoe's Dimes Media Corporation for $1 million. The sale closed on January 15, 2015. ==References==