Albania The Albanian licence fee is 100
lekë per month, paid as part of the electricity bill. This makes up part of
RTSH's funding: 58 per cent comes directly from the government through taxes with the remainder from commercials and the licence fee.
Austria Under
Austria's TV and Radio Licence Law (
Fernseh- und Hörfunklizenzrecht), all operational broadcast reception equipment must be registered. Since 1998, the (GIS) has been responsible for licence administration. GIS was renamed ORF-Beitragsservice (OBS) in 2024. It is a fully owned subsidiary of the Austrian public broadcaster, (
ORF) and an agency of the
Federal Ministry of Finance. GIS aims to inform people about licensing, using a four-channel communication strategy consisting of: • advertising campaigns in printed media, radio and television, • direct mail, • outlets such as post offices, banks, tobacconists and the five GIS Service Centres where people can register, • field service customer consultants visiting households not yet registered. In 2007 the total licensing income was €682 million, 66 per cent of which was allocated to the ORF. The remaining 34 per cent was allocated to the federal government and local governments to fund cultural activities. GIS employs 191 people and has approximately 125 freelancers in the field service. 3.4 million Austrian households are registered with the GIS with 2.5 per cent evading the licence. The television & radio licence fee varies between
states. As of 2022,
Styria has the highest annual television licence cost, at €343.80, and
Salzburg and
Burgenland have the highest annual radio licence cost, at €94.92. Annual fees from July 2022 are: In 2024, the broadcasting fee was replaced by a household tax that every household pays, currently €15.30 per month. In the federal states of Burgenland, Carinthia, Styria and Tyrol, an additional state tax must be paid - this amounts to between €3.10 and €4.70 per month.
Bosnia and Herzegovina The licence fee in
Bosnia and Herzegovina is approximately €46 per year. The
Bosnian War and associated collapse of infrastructure caused very high evasion rates. This has partly been resolved by collecting the licence fee as part of each household's monthly telephone bill. The licence fee is divided between three broadcasters: • 50 per cent to
BHRT (Radio and Television of Bosnia and Herzegovina), the main radio and television broadcaster in
Bosnia and Herzegovina at national level, and Bosnia's only member of the
European Broadcasting Union. • 25 per cent to
RTVFBiH (Radio-Television of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina), a radio and television broadcaster that primarily serves the
Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. • 25 per cent to
RTRS (Radio-Television of the Republika Srpska), a radio and television broadcaster which primarily serves the
Republika Srpska.
Croatia The licence fee in
Croatia is regulated by the Croatian Radiotelevision Act. This legislation ensures compliance with European broadcasting standards and regulates advertising, limiting
HRT to 9 per cent of airtime for commercials. The fee is mandatory for all owners of broadcast receiving equipment and is legally set at 1.5 per cent of the average national salary. It is the main source of revenue for the national broadcaster
Hrvatska Radiotelevizija (HRT). Within HRT, 66 per cent of the licence fee income goes to television and 34 per cent to radio.
Czech Republic The licence fee in the
Czech Republic is 150 Kč per month for television and 55 Kč per month for radio, amounting to 2460 Kč per year. Businesses and institutions must pay, based on factors including numbers of employees, vehicles and, for hotels, beds. The fee is billed monthly but typically paid quarterly or yearly. It is collected by
Beitragsservice von ARD, ZDF und Deutschlandradio which is sometimes criticised for its enforcement measures. Since 2013, only recipients of certain social benefits such as
Arbeitslosengeld II or
student loans and grants are exempt from the licence fee. People with certain disabilities can apply to pay a reduced fee of €5.83. Low income, in general, is no longer a reason for exemption. Since the fee is billed to a person and not to a dwelling, empty dwellings are exempt. The licence fee is used to fund the public broadcasters
ZDF and
Deutschlandradio, as well as the nine regional broadcasters of the
ARD network. Together, they run 22 television channels (10 regional, 10 national, 2 international:
Arte and
3sat) and 61 radio stations (58 regional, 3 national). Two national television stations and 32 regional radio stations carry limited advertising. The 14 regional regulatory authorities for private broadcasters are also funded by the licence fee, and in some states, non-profit community radio stations get small amounts of the licence fee. Germany's international broadcaster,
Deutsche Welle, is fully funded by the German federal government, though much of its new content is provided by the ARD. Germany's per capita budget for public broadcasting is close to the European average but the total is one of the largest in the world. In 2006, annual income from licence fees was more than €7.9 billion. The board of public broadcasters sued the German states for interference with their budgeting process, and on 11 September 2007, the Supreme Court decided in their favour. This effectively rendered the public broadcasters independent and self-governing. Public broadcasters have announced that they are determined to use all available ways to reach their "customers" and as such have started a very broad Internet presence with media portals, news and TV programs. National broadcasters abandoned an earlier pledge to restrict their online activities. This resulted in newspapers taking court action against the ARD, claiming that its
Tagessschau smartphone app was unfairly subsidised by the licence fee, to the detriment of free-market providers of news content apps. The case was dismissed with the court advising the two sides to find a compromise.
Greece The licence fee in
Greece is paid through electricity bills. It is charged to every electricity account, including private residences and businesses. There has been discussion of replacing it with a direct licence fee after complaints from people who do not own a television set. An often-quoted joke is that even the dead pay the licence fee, since graveyards have electricity bills. Licensing income is paid to the state broadcaster,
Ellinikí Radiofonía Tileórasi (ERT). In June 2013, ERT was closed down to save money for the Greek government and licence fees were temporarily suspended. Later,
NERIT licence fees were reduced to 3 euros per month, a reduction from €4.24 paid before the shutdown. In June 2015, ERT reopened and the licence fee resumed at a rate of €36 per year.
Ireland As of 2020, the cost of a television licence in Ireland is €160 per year. The licence applies to premises so a separate licence is required for holiday homes or motor vehicles which contain a television. The licence must be paid for premises that have any equipment that can potentially decode TV signals, regardless of whether they view RTÉ's content. The licence is free to anyone over the age of 70, to some people over 66, to people on a disability allowance, and people who are blind (these licences are paid for by the state). The Irish post office,
An Post, is responsible for the collection of the licence fee and commencement of prosecution proceedings in cases of non-payment, but An Post has signalled its intention to withdraw from its licence fee business. The licence fee makes up 50 per cent of the revenue of
RTÉ, the national broadcaster with the rest coming from radio and television advertisements. Some RTÉ services have not historically relied on the licence for income, such as
RTÉ 2fm,
RTÉ Aertel,
RTÉ.ie but since 2012 RTÉ 2FM has had some financial support from the licence. The
RTÉ Transmission Network operates on an entirely commercial basis. Five per cent of the licence fee goes to the
Broadcasting Authority of Ireland's "Sound and Vision Scheme", which provides funds for programme production and restoration of archive material. From 2011 until 2018, five per cent of RTÉ's licence income was granted to
TG4. RTÉ is now required to provide TG4 with programming. The remainder of TG4's funding is from direct state grants and commercial income.
Italy The licence fee in
Italy is charged to each household with a television set, regardless of use, and to all public premises with one or more televisions or radios. In 2016, the government reduced the licence fee to €100 per household and incorporated it into electricity bills in an attempt to eliminate evasion, and as of 2018, the fee was €90.00. Sixty-six per cent of
RAI's income comes from the licence fee (up from about half of total income seven years ago), with another twenty-five per cent from advertising, which is aired pretty regularly every 20 minutes or so, with very few exceptions (football matches, special events, Eurovision Song Contest)
Montenegro Under the Broadcasting Law of December 2002, each household and legal entity in
Montenegro able to receive radio or television programmes is required to pay a broadcasting subscription fee. The monthly fee is €3.50, or €42.00 per annum. Funds are distributed, • 75 per cent to the republic's public broadcasting radio and television services, • 10 per cent to support local public broadcasting services • 10 per cent to support commercial broadcasting services, • 5 per cent to support the Broadcasting Agency of Montenegro. The Broadcasting Agency of Montenegro collected the fee through telephone bills, but after the privatization of
Telekom, the new owners, T-com, announced they would not administer the fee after July 2007.
Poland As of 2023, the licence fee in
Poland for a television set is 27.30
zł per month, or for radio only is 8.70
zł per month. One licence is required per household, irrespective of the number of sets. The fee is waived for people over 75. Public health institutions, nurseries, educational institutions, hospices and retirement homes need only one licence per building or building complex they occupy. Commercial premises need a licence for each set, including radios and televisions in company vehicles. Around 60 per cent of the fee goes to
Telewizja Polska with the rest going to
Polskie Radio. Advertisements are allowed between programmes on public television but it is not permitted to interrupt its programmes for advertisements. The licence is collected and maintained by the Polish post office,
Poczta Polska. There is a major problem with licence evasion in Poland: in 2012 around 65 per cent of households evaded the licence fee (compared to an average of 10 per cent in the
European Union), and in 2020, only 8 per cent of Polish households paid the licence fee. Reasons for non-payment include the
opt-in system in which there is no effective means to compel people to register or to prosecute those who fail to do so. Licensing inspectors, who are usually
postal workers, do not have the right of entry to inspect premises and must get the owner's or occupier's permission to enter. Also, the public media are frequently accused of producing pro-government propaganda and not being independent public broadcasters. Due to widespread non-payment of the licence fee, in 2020 the government gave a 2 billion złoty grant for public media.
Portugal From September 2003, the
Rádio e Televisão de Portugal (RTP) was financed through government grants and the "Taxa de Contribuição Audiovisual" (Portuguese for
Broadcasting Contribution Tax), charged monthly through the electricity bills. Following the
2010–2014 Portuguese financial crisis, government grants ended and RTP was financed only through the "Taxa de Contribuição Audiovisual" and advertising. Since July 2016, the fee is €2.85 +
VAT per month.
RTP1 can broadcast only 6 minutes of commercial advertising per hour (commercial channels can broadcast 12 minutes per hour).
RTP2 and the
public radios stations have no commercial advertising.
RTP3 and
RTP Memória can broadcast commercial advertising on cable, satellite and IPTV platforms but not on digital terrestrial television.
Serbia Licence fees in
Serbia are bundled together with electricity bills and collected monthly. Current fee is 349 RSD (the newest price, as of August 2024), which is about €3.
Slovenia Since June 2013, the annual licence fee in
Slovenia is €12.75 per household per month to receive both television and radio services, or €3.77 per month for radio only, regardless of the number of devices capable of receiving television or radio broadcasts. Businesses and the self-employed pay this amount for each set and pay higher rates where they are intended for public viewing rather than private use by employees. The licence fee is used to fund the national broadcaster
RTV Slovenija. In 2007, the licence fee raised €78.1 million, approximately 68 per cent of the broadcaster's operating revenue. RTV Slovenija's advertising income in 2007 was €21.6 million.
Switzerland Any household that receives radio or television programs from the
Swiss national public broadcaster
SRG SSR must be registered and pay licence fees. The fee is
CHF 335 per year for TV and radio for single households, and CHF 670 for multiple households, e.g.
nursing homes. Households unable to receive broadcast transmissions are exempt from the fees until 2023 if residents apply to opt out. Residential licence fees are collected by Serafe AG, a wholly owned subsidiary of the insurance collections agency Secon. Non-payment of licence fees incurs fines of up to CHF 100,000. For businesses, the fee is on a scale based on the company's annual turnover and is collected by the Swiss Federal Tax Administration. The majority of the fee, CHF 1.2 billion, goes to SRG SSR, with the rest going to a collection of small regional radio and television broadcasters. On 4 March 2018, there was
a referendum on whether TV licensing should be scrapped, with the slogan "No Billag", a reference to the previous collector of the licence fees. Parliament have advocated a no vote. Voters overwhelmingly rejected the proposal by 71.6 to 28.4 per cent and in all cantons. Following the vote, the fee was significantly reduced.
Turkey A licence fee of up to 16 per cent is paid to the state broadcaster
TRT by the producer or importer of the equipment that can receive TRT's broadcasts or on-demand content in any manner including internet. Consumers indirectly pay this fee when purchasing equipment. No registration is required for television receiving equipment, except for cellular phones as mandated by a separate law. TRT also receives funding via advertisements. Previously a 2 per cent tax was added to monthly electricity bills but this has been abolished.
United Kingdom A television licence is required for each household where television programmes are watched or recorded as they are broadcast, irrespective of the signal method (terrestrial, satellite, cable or the Internet). As of September 2016, users of
BBC iPlayer must also have a television licence to watch on-demand television content from the service. As of 1 April 2017, after a price freeze that began in 2010, the cost of a licence may now increase to account for inflation. As of April 2025, the licence fee is £174.50 for a colour and £58.50 for a black and white television Licence As it is classified in law as a tax, evasion of licence fees is a criminal offence. 204,018 people were prosecuted or fined in 2014 for TV licence offences: 173,044 in England, 12,536 in Wales, 4,905 people in Northern Ireland and 15 in the Isle of Man. The licence fee is used almost entirely to fund
BBC domestic radio, television and internet services. Money received from the licence represents approximately 75 per cent of the cost of these services, with most of the remainder coming from the profits of
BBC Studios, a commercial arm of the corporation which distributes content outside of the United Kingdom, and operates or licences BBC-branded television services and brands. The BBC also receives some funding from the
Scottish Government via
MG Alba to finance the
BBC Alba Gaelic-language television service in Scotland. The BBC used to receive a direct government grant from the
Foreign and Commonwealth Office to fund television and radio services broadcast to other countries, such as the
BBC World Service radio and
BBC Arabic Television. These services run on a non-profit, non-commercial basis. The grant was abolished on 1 April 2014, leaving these services to be funded by the UK licence fee, a move which has caused some controversy.
Channel 4 is also a public television service but it is funded through advertising. The Welsh language
S4C is funded through a combination of a direct grant from the
Department for Culture, Media and Sport and advertising, and receives some programming free of charge from the BBC. These other broadcasters are much smaller than the BBC. In addition to public broadcasters, the United Kingdom has a wide range of commercial television funded by advertising and subscription. A television licence is still required of viewers who solely watch such commercial channels, although 74.9 per cent of the population watches
BBC One in any given week, making it the most popular channel in the country. A similar licence existed for radio but was abolished in 1971. ==Television licences in Africa==