Community radio is one of Australia's largest cultural sectors — with over 450 licensed community radio stations, reaching approximately 5.5 million listeners weekly. Community broadcasting provides local content, Indigenous language programming, ethnic and multilingual broadcasting, specialist music, and community news that commercial broadcasters don't deliver. Community radio is a pillar of Australian democracy, local culture, and community connection. Grant funding from the Community Broadcasting Foundation and other funders supports content creation, training, equipment, and the station operations that keep community voices on air.
Scale
Types of community radio
What community radio provides
Community Broadcasting Foundation (CBF)
Major funder of community broadcasting — independent statutory body:
- Content development grants
- Technology and innovation grants
- Training and professional development
- Station operations support
- Indigenous broadcasting grants
ACMA (Australian Communications and Media Authority)
Licensing and regulation.
NITV and SBS
Some support for community Indigenous broadcasting.
Department of Infrastructure
Some infrastructure support.
Community Broadcasting Foundation (CBF)
The primary philanthropic/statutory funder — approximately $8 million per year.
State arts agencies
Some content funding for community media.
Australian Music Foundation
Music content support.
Film Victoria, Create NSW, Screen Queensland
Some support for audio/media content including radio.
Content development
Indigenous broadcasting
Ethnic and multilingual broadcasting
Training and capacity
Technology and infrastructure
Disaster and emergency broadcasting
Music and arts
Fine music
Youth broadcasting
Indigenous community radio — stations like 98.9 Brisbane Black, Koori Radio (Sydney), 3KND Melbourne, and the remote TEABBA network — provides something no commercial broadcaster does: Aboriginal language broadcasting.
For languages spoken by small numbers of people in remote communities, radio is one of the most powerful tools for language maintenance:
- Native speakers hear their language daily
- Children grow up hearing the language
- Language is associated with media and modernity
Grant funding for Indigenous community radio is an investment in language and cultural survival.
Content quality
The CBF prioritises content quality and distinctiveness — community radio that provides what commercial radio doesn't. Applications with clearly distinctive, local, and community-serving content are more competitive.
Indigenous broadcasting
Indigenous language and cultural broadcasting has the strongest public interest rationale. Applications for Indigenous radio content and capacity are consistently high-priority.
Diversity of voice
Community broadcasting's core rationale is diversity of voice — communities speaking to themselves. Applications that demonstrate genuine community ownership and volunteer participation are more authentic.
Emergency preparedness
Community radio is a critical local emergency communication channel. Applications that include disaster and emergency broadcasting capacity are increasingly relevant given Australia's escalating disaster risk.
Tahua's grants management platform supports community broadcasting funders and radio organisations — with programming data, volunteer hours, audience reach measurement, and the reporting tools that help community broadcasting funders demonstrate their investment in local voice and diverse media across Australia.