One of the most important audio news services in American history is coming to an end.

A vertically oriented infographic image superimposed over a detailed, dimly lit photograph of a photorealistic vintage radio control room featuring reel-to-reel tape decks, an analog console, and a solitary CBS-branded classic silver microphone under a spotlight. Multiple clear text boxes synthesize the shutdown news details. The top headline block declares: "END OF AN ERA: CBS NEWS RADIO (1927 - 2026)". A separate date box specifies: "OFFICIAL SHUTDOWN: MAY 22, 2026". A larger text panel with bullet points summarizes "KEY LEGACY FACTS": "Historic reporting: Murrow’s WWII broadcasts", "Home of ‘World News Roundup’", "Longest-running newscast in the country", "Serves 700+ affiliates nationwide", and "All radio team jobs eliminated". Separate text provided in a dark panel adds an industry quote from Michael Harrison (Talkers magazine): "It's a loss for the country and for the industry." (Precise from source). A source footer is centered at the very bottom reading "SOURCE: CBSNEWS.COM" with the CBS Eye logo.
Final summary infographic over a photorealistic vintage studio scene, specifying the May 22, 2026 operational year and closure date, historic legacy facts, affiliate impact, total job losses, and including an official industry quote sourced from CBSNews.com.

CBS News has confirmed that CBS News Radio will sign off for the final time on May 22, closing a chapter that dates back to the early days of modern broadcasting. The decision, according to leadership, reflects “challenging economic realities” and a rapidly changing media landscape.

A Tremendous Loss for Audio Information

This is more than an industry headline.

For the visually impaired community, audio news is not just convenient — it is essential. Reliable radio broadcasts provide immediate, accessible access to information without the barriers often found in digital platforms.

CBS News Radio currently supplies top-of-the-hour programming to approximately 700 affiliated stations across the country. Its disappearance leaves a major gap in the audio news ecosystem.

As Michael Harrison, publisher of Talkers magazine, put it:

“This is another part of the landscape that has fallen off into the sea. It’s a shame. It’s a loss for the country and for the industry.”

An Unmatched Legacy

The historical significance of CBS News Radio cannot be overstated.

This is the network that delivered Edward R. Murrow’s World War II reports from London into American homes. It is also the home of the World News Roundup, the longest-running newscast in the United States.

As CBS leadership acknowledged, the radio division “served as the foundation for everything we have built since 1927.”

With the elimination of the entire radio team, we are losing not just a service, but the voices behind decades of trusted reporting.