List of FRS channels
| Channel | Frequency (MHz) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 462.5625 | Unofficially designated the National Call Channel. Shared with GMRS |
| 2 | 462.5875 | Shared with GMRS |
| 3 | 462.6125 | Shared with GMRS |
| 4 | 462.6375 | Shared with GMRS |
| 5 | 462.6625 | Shared with GMRS |
| 6 | 462.6875 | Shared with GMRS |
| 7 | 462.7125 | Shared with GMRS |
| 8 | 467.5625 | FRS use ONLY (GMRS not allowed) |
| 9 | 467.5875 | FRS use ONLY (GMRS not allowed) |
| 10 | 467.6125 | FRS use ONLY (GMRS not allowed) |
| 11 | 467.6375 | FRS use ONLY (GMRS not allowed) |
| 12 | 467.6625 | FRS use ONLY (GMRS not allowed) |
| 13 | 467.6875 | FRS use ONLY (GMRS not allowed) |
| 14 | 467.7125 | FRS use ONLY (GMRS not allowed) |
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Family Radio Service (FRS)The Official FCC Rules and Regulations for Family Radio Service |
Family Radio Service (FRS) is one of the Citizens Band Radio
Services. It is used by family, friends and associates to
communicate within a neighborhood and while on group outings and
has a communications range of less than one mile. You can not
make a telephone call with an FRS unit. You may use your FRS
unit for business-related communications.
Family Radio Service (FRS) Licensing
License documents are neither needed nor issued. You are
provided authority to operate a FRS unit in places where the FCC
regulates radio communications as long as you use only an
unmodified FCC certified FRS unit. An FCC certified FRS unit has
an identifying label placed on it by the manufacturer. There is
no age or citizenship requirement.
Family Radio Service (FRS) Operations
You may operate your FRS unit within the territorial limits
of the fifty United States, the District of Columbia, and the
Caribbean and Pacific Insular areas ("U.S."). You may also
operate your FRS unit on or over any other area of the world,
except within the territorial limits of areas where radio-
communications are regulated by another agency of the U.S. or
within the territorial limits of any foreign government.
FRS/GMRS Dual Service Radios
Some manufacturers have received approval to market radios that are certified for use in both the Family Radio Service (FRS) and the General Mobile Radio Service (GMRS). Other manufacturers have received approval of their radios under the GMRS rules, but market them as FRS/GMRS radios on the basis that:
- Some channels are authorized to both services, or
- A user of the radio may communicate with stations in the other service.
Radios marketed as 'FRS/GMRS' or 'dual-service radios' are available from many manufacturers and many retail or discount stores. The manual that comes with the radio, or the label placed on it by the manufacturer, should indicate the service the unit is certified for. If you cannot determine what service the unit may be used in, contact the manufacturer.
If you operate a radio that has been approved exclusively under the rules that apply to FRS, you are not required to have a license. FRS radios have a maximum power of ½ watt (500 milliwatt) effective radiated power and integral (non-detachable) antennas. If you operate a radio under the rules that apply to GMRS, you must have a GMRS license. GMRS radios generally transmit at higher power levels (1 to 5 watts is typical) and may have detachable antennas.


