Number of Ham Radio Licenses to Reach 750,000 by 2017
The number of unexpired amateur radio licenses in the United States was 733,594 in November 2015, an annual growth rate of 1.05% and five year growth rate of 4.52%.
If this growth trend continues, the number of licensed amateur radio operators in the United States will reach 750,000 by 2017.
Nearly half of all US licensees hold the Technician license (49.4%), followed by General (23.5%), Amateur Extra (19.0%), Advanced (6.6%), and Novice (1.5%). Despite the large number of Technician licensees, the Amateur Extra class license continues to have the fastest growth rate at a average of 2.54% per year since 2011. The number of Amateur Extra licenses increased 10.5% since 2011 to 139,515.
The FCC’s restructuring of license classes in 2000 continues to affect the number of Advanced and Novice class licenses.
Since 2011, Advanced class licenses dropped 16.7% to 48,272 from 57,989.
Novice class licenses have dropped 25.2% since 2011, down to 10,988 at the end of 2015. If the number of Novice licenses continues to drop at this rate, the number of unexpired Novice licenses will dip below 10,000 for the first time in late 2016 or early 2017.
Novice Class Licenses | Annual Growth/(Decline) | |
2011 | 14,687 | |
2012 | 13,850 | (5.70 %) |
2013 | 13,116 | (5.30 %) |
2014 | 12,112 | (7.65 %) |
2015 | 10,988 | (9.28 %) |
2016 (Predicted) | 10,221 | (6.98 %) |
2017 (Predicted) | 9,507 | (6.98%) |
Growth in amateur radio licenses remains strong since the elimination of the Morse code requirement in February 2007. Coupled with significant changes to the General class question pool that same year, the number of US licenses has increased 11.8% from its post-2000 low of 655,842 at the end of 2006.
Hello Brian necessarily go all the digital Ham Radio, and little in SSB