From lively morning talk shows to late-night salsa marathons, Connecticut’s Spanish-language dial pulses with culture, news, and music 24/7. Below is a practical round-up of every station you can receive—over the air or online—plus quick tips on how to tune in, what each outlet specializes in, and why hosts say these frequencies keep the state’s Hispanic communities connected.
1. La Mega 810 AM (WPRX) – Bridgeport
Format: Regional Mexican & Tropical
Signature Programs: “Despierta Connecticut” (5–9 a.m.) blends traffic, immigration Q&A and local politics; “Sábado Gigante de la Tarde” spins three uninterrupted hours of bachata.
How to Listen: 810 kHz on any AM dial, or stream via the free La Mega CT phone app.
2. Ritmo 95.9 FM (WFOX-HD2) – Stamford/Norwalk
Format: Reggaetón & Latin Pop
Power: 160 watts HD2 side-channel (main 95.9 FM is classic rock)
Specialty: Friday-night mix show recorded live at Harbor Point clubs.
Tip: If your radio lacks HD, ask Alexa “Enable Ritmo Connecticut” for the TuneIn skill.
3. Radio Cumbre 1450 AM (WACM) – Springfield MA / Enfield CT line
Format: News-Talk & Spanish AC
Streaming: wacmradio.com and the Cumbre app push notifications when breaking news affects northern CT.
4. El Show de Rumbón – 94.3 FM WYBC-HD3 (New Haven) Saturday 6–10 p.m.
Although Yale’s student station carries it only four hours weekly, the program is Connecticut’s only salsa/son block with historical commentary—DJ “Tío Johnny” names the musicians who once lived in Fair Haven.
5. 107.9 FM WIHS – “Hora Hispana” Sundays 7–9 a.m.
Non-commercial Christian content in Spanish; statewide translators in Meriden and Willimantic boost coverage to I-91 corridor.
6. Digital-Only Contenders
CTlatinoradio.net is an Internet station started by ECSU students; expect indie rock en español and Tejano rarely heard elsewhere.
“Hartford Latin Media” Facebook page occasionally FB-Lives bilingual town-hall audio; follow to catch archived streams.
How to Receive Weak AM Signals at Night
Finding Translators on Car Radios
HD-2 and HD-3 sub-channels won’t appear in older vehicles. If you drive a 2016+ Honda or VW, press “Seek” long enough to jump past the primary frequency; Spanish sub-channels appear with a “.2” or “.3” suffix.
Community Events Tied to the Dial
La Mega sponsors the annual “Festival del Huapango” in Seaside Park every August, while Ritmo partners with the Puerto Rican Day Parade in Hartford—both events recruit on-air talent for live remotes and give away concert tickets; listen two weeks prior for RSVP codes.
Quick Reference Scan List (save in your phone)
810 La Mega – Regional Mexican
1450 Cumbre – News/Talk
95.9-2 Ritmo – Reggaetón
94.3-3 Rumbón – Salsa classics
Whether you want to practice your Spanish, discover a new merengue hit, or hear local political debates that only make it to English media days later, Connecticut’s Spanish radio scene keeps growing—on traditional dials, inside HD side-channels, and across unlimited online streams. Scan, save, and sonido lleno!










