List of television stations in Hawaii
This is a list of broadcast television stations serving cities in the U.S. state of Hawaii. Each of the three municipal counties — Honolulu County, Maui County and Hawaii County — has its own set of stations. Kauai County has repeaters which broadcast Honolulu's stations through its islands.
Full-power stations
VC refers to the station's PSIP virtual channel. RF refers to the station's physical RF channel.
Area served | City of license | VC | RF | Callsign | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hilo | Hilo | 2 | 22 | KHBC-TV | NBC | satellite of KHNL ch. 13 Honolulu |
Hilo | Hilo | 9 | 9 | KGMD-TV | CBS | satellite of KGMB ch. 9 Honolulu |
Hilo | Hilo | 11 | 11 | KHAW-TV | Fox | satellite of KHON-TV ch. 2 Honolulu; CW on 11.2 |
Hilo | Hilo | 13 | 13 | KHVO | ABC | satellite of KITV ch. 4 Honolulu |
Hilo | Hilo | 14 | 23 | KWHD | LeSEA | satellite of KWHE ch. 14 Honolulu |
Honolulu | Honolulu | 2 | 8 | KHON-TV | Fox | CW on 2.2 (first air date, as KONA: December 15, 1952) |
Honolulu | Honolulu | 4 | 40 | KITV | ABC | (first air date, as KULA: April 16, 1954) |
Honolulu | Honolulu | 5 | 23 | KGMB | CBS | (first air date, as KGMB, Hawaii's initial TV station: December 1, 1952) |
Honolulu | Honolulu | 9 | 22 | KFVE | MNT | (first air date: February 7, 1988) |
Honolulu | Honolulu | 11 | 11 | KHET | PBS | (first air date: April 15, 1966) |
Honolulu | Honolulu | 13 | 35 | KHNL | NBC | (first air date, as KTRG: July 4, 1962) |
Honolulu | Honolulu | 14 | 31 | KWHE | LeSEA | (first air date: August 23, 1986) |
Honolulu | Honolulu | 20 | 19 | KIKU | Ind. | (first air date, as KHAI: December 30, 1983) |
Honolulu | Honolulu | 26 | 27 | KAAH-TV | TBN | (first air date, as KSHO, Hawaii's initial UHF station: December 23, 1982) |
Honolulu | Honolulu | 32 | 33 | KBFD-DT | Ind. | (first air date: March 24, 1986) |
Honolulu | Honolulu | 38 | 38 | KALO | ETV | (first air date, as KAIE: July 9, 1999) |
Honolulu | Honolulu | 44 | 43 | KWBN | ETV | (started broadcasting in 1999) |
Honolulu | Kailua | 50 | 50 | KKAI | Ind. | (started broadcasting in 2004) |
Honolulu | Waimānalo | 56 | 15 | KUPU | Ind. | (first air date, as KMGT: October 1, 2003) |
Honolulu | Kāne'ohe | 66 | 41 | KPXO-TV | ION | (first air date: August 31, 1998) |
Kailua-Kona | Kailua-Kona | 6 | 25 | KLEI-TV | Telemundo | (first air date: August 1, 1988) |
Wailuku | Wailuku | 3 | 24 | KGMV | CBS | satellite of KGMB ch. 9 Honolulu |
Wailuku | Wailuku | 7 | 7 | KAII-TV | Fox | satellite of KHON-TV ch. 2 Honolulu; CW on 7.2 |
Wailuku | Wailuku | 10 | 10 | KMEB | PBS | satellite of KHET ch. 11 Honolulu |
Wailuku | Wailuku | 12 | 12 | KMAU | ABC | satellite of KITV ch. 4 Honolulu |
Wailuku | Wailuku | 15 | 16 | KOGG | NBC | satellite of KHNL ch. 13 Honolulu |
Wailuku | Wailuku | 21 | 21 | KWHM | LeSEA | satellite of KWHE ch. 14 Honolulu |
Defunct full-power stations
- Channel 13: KHVH-TV (original) - Honolulu (5/5/1957-7/16/1958)
Low-power broadcasting stations
- Channel 2 (RF channel 2): KITM-LD - (Silent) - Lahaina
- Channel 17: K17GR - Kula
- Channel 19: K19FV - Kula
- Channel 26: K26HL - Holualoa
- Channel 32: KKAM-LP - (Silent) - Kailua-Kona
- Channel 51: KAUI-LP - (Daystar) - Wailuku
- Channel 48: KHHI-LP - Honolulu
Island of Hawaii
from Hilo
- Channel 10: K28JV-D - (PBS), "Hawaii Educational Television" (KHET retransmission, formerly K04FE Channel 4)[1]
- Channel 34: K34HC - (RTN) (currently silent)
- Channel 45: K45CT - (CBS) (KGMB retransmission)
Island of Maui
From Wailuku
- Channel 27: K27DW - (MyNetworkTV) (KFVE retransmission)
- Channel 61: KAMN-LP - (TBN) (Religious)
Island of Kauai
From Anahola
- Channel 36: K36IJ-D - PBS - Repeats KHET
From Kilauea
- Channel 62: K62AQ - PBS - Repeats KHET
From Lihue
- Channel 30: K30JE-D - PBS - Repeats KHET
- Channel 51: K51BB - ABC - Repeats KITV
- Channel 55: K55DZ - FOX - Repeats KHON
- Channel 65: K65BV - NBC - Repeats KHNL
- Channel 69: K69BZ - CBS - Repeats KGMB
From Princeville/Hanalei
- Channel 29: K29HL-D - PBS - Repeats KHET
From Waimea
- Channel 57: K57BI - CBS - Repeats KGMB
From Waipake
- Channel 21: K21IA-D - PBS - Repeats KHET
Other islands
Many inhabited areas of Molokai and Lanai are within range of TV stations and repeaters located on facing areas of Oahu and Maui. Likewise, viewers on Niihau are served by transmitters on the west of Kauai.
Early conversion to digital
On January 15, 2009, Hawaii became the first state in the United States to permanently have its television stations switch from analog to digital early. Hawaii's full-power TV stations, including network affiliates and independent stations, ceased analog broadcasting at noon on that date. With the exception of residents on Kauai, households that receive TV signals over the air will need to connect a converter box to sets in order to continue watching TV, since Kauai is the only part of Hawaii that receives over-the-air television signals via low-power translators that are not affected by the DTV transition.
Existing analog facilities at Maui's Haleakalā volcano are to be removed due to ongoing interference with astronomy equipment operated under the watchful eye of the United States Department of Defense and the University of Hawaiʻi.[2] The digital stations are being deployed using new facilities at Ulupalakua and the old towers will be removed before the Hawaiian petrels' nesting season begins in March. By making the switch early, the broadcast towers atop Haleakalā near the birds' nesting grounds can be dismantled without interfering with their habits.[3]
References
- ^ "TV Query K28JV-D". Federal Communications Commission. Retrieved 2013-07-18.
- ^ DTV.gov Frequently Asked Questions - Hawaii
- ^ "Hawaii first state to make DTV switch" from Honolulu Star-Bulletin (October 15, 2008)