
RTÉ Radio One is owned and operated by RTÉ the Irish Public Service Broadcaster which is ultimately controlled by the RTÉ Board, chaired by Siún Ní Raghallaigh. Day to day operations and management of RTÉ is the responsibility of the RTÉ Executive Board, which reports to the RTÉ Board. The RTÉ Executive is a committee of senior management in RTÉ led by the Director General, and includes Directors of television, radio, news and current affairs, Heads of channels and content as well as heads of corporate divisions such as marketing, finance, legal and strategy. Following the RTÉ payments controversy, which emerged in summer 2023, new Director General Kevin Bakhurst disbanded the RTÉ Executive and replaced it with an Interim Leadership Team.
The most recent data available shows that RTÉ Radio One reaches 20.7% of Irish adults and has a 19.8% share of the Irish radio audience (Ipsos JNLR (Joint National Listenership Research Report August 2023).
RTÉ Radio One broadcasts a variety of programme genres including news and current affairs, music, drama, documentary, talk shows and radio phone in. News and current affairs programming are a core component of the radio schedule for RTÉ Radio On with flagship morning, lunchtime and early evening news programmes, Morning Ireland, News at One and Drivetime. Throughout the schedule there are also daily current affairs discussion shows such as Today with Claire Byrne and the Late Debate. At the weekend the schedule includes The Business and the Brendan O’Connor show which examines key news stories of the week with a panel of journalists and experts.
RTÉ Radio One traces its origins back to 1926 when the 2RN radio service began broadcasting from Dublin. 2RN was established within the Department of Post and Telegraphs to manage and run the public service broadcaster. It was funded through a listener paid licence fee and advertising revenue. In 1938 it was renamed Radio Éireann. Until the mid 20th Century the station only broadcast live in the evening due to budget constraints. Up until 1960 the broadcasting service was a section of the Department of Posts and Telegraphs and everyone working within it were civil servants, directly employed by the Government.
Under the Broadcasting Act of 1960 the government established a statutory company Radio Éireann to manage Irish radio and television, moving management and operation of the corporation outside the direct ownership and control of the Civil Service. The Government established the Authority Board to manage and operate the corporation. In 1966 the name was changed under legislation to Radio Telefís Éireann (RTÉ).
Originally the radio station production studios were located in the General Post Office on O’Connell Street in Dublin. Following the establishment of RTÉ as a statutory state corporation responsible for the management of TV and Radio in 1966, the Department of Post and Telegraphs no longer had direct involvement in the radio service. In 1971 the station moved from the city centre to the purpose built Radio Centre on the newly built RTÉ Campus in Donnybrook, south Dublin where it continues to broadcast from. In 1979 the name was changed from Radio Éireann to RTÉ Radio One when a second station RTÉ Radio Two (now 2FM) was launched.
In 2011 RTÉ launched the RTÉ Radio Player, offering listeners an app to listen to live RTÉ radio online and on demand programming via a digital app for radio programming.
More recently, the payments controversy that emerged in RTÉ in summer 2023 has impacted on RTÉ Radio One where Ryan Tubridy hosted his daily radio show in the 9am to 10am slot from Monday to Friday. One of the fallouts from this controversy was his suspension and then permanent removal from hosting this programme. Since his departure the programme has been hosted by a number of different presenters, at this time no permanent host has been appointed.
Key Facts
| Audience Share | 19.8% |
|---|---|
| Ownership Type | Public |
| Geographic Coverage | National |
| Content Type | Free |
| Active Transparency | company/channel informs proactively and comprehensively about its ownership, data is constantly updated and easily verifiable |
Ownership
| Ownership Structure | RTÉ is Ireland’s Public Service Broadcaster, as such it is publicly funded and is set up as a Statutory State Body. It is owned by the RTÉ Board and for the purposes of this project we treat the chair of the board Siún Ní Raghallaigh as the ultimate global owner. We also provide details of every board and interim leadership team member. Within this structure there are no shareholders and no dividends are paid, RTÉ operates a dual funding model where income is derived from a public Licence Fee, collected by An Post for the State and advertising revenue from its various platforms. |
|---|---|
| Individual Owner |
Media Companies / Groups
Facts
| Founding Year | 1926 |
|---|---|
| Founder |
|
| CEO |
|
| Editor-In-Chief |
|
| Other Important People |
|
| Contact | RTÉ Donnybrook Dublin 4 +353 (0) 1 208 3111 www.rte.ie |
| Revenue | Missing Data |
|---|---|
| Operating Profit | Missing Data |
| Advertising (in % of total funding) | Missing Data |
| Market Share | Missing Data |
| Headlines | ||
|---|---|---|
| Meta Data | RTÉ does not provide financial data for individual stations/outlets. Within the media industry in Ireland reporting on income levels are generally at group level rather than individual title level. On top of this, overall revenue details for the market as a whole are unavailable. Due to these factors it is not possible to report accurately on market share for individual titles or groups. | |
| Sources |
|


