[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 47, Volume 5]
[Revised as of October 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 47CFR97.303]

[Page 605-609]
 
                       TITLE 47--TELECOMMUNICATION
 
        CHAPTER I--FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION (CONTINUED)
 
PART 97_AMATEUR RADIO SERVICE--Table of Contents
 
                      Subpart D_Technical Standards
 
Sec. 97.303  Frequency sharing requirements.

    The following is a summary of the frequency sharing requirements 
that apply to amateur station transmissions on the frequency bands 
specified in Sec. 97.301 of this part. (For each ITU Region, each 
frequency band allocated to the amateur service is designated as either 
a secondary service or a primary service. A station in a secondary 
service must not cause harmful interference to, and must accept 
interference from, stations in a primary service. See Sec. Sec. 2.105 
and 2.106 of the FCC Rules, United States Table of Frequency Allocations 
for complete requirements.)
    (a) Where, in adjacent ITU Regions or sub-Regions, a band of 
frequencies is allocated to different services of the same category 
(i.e., primary or secondary allocations), the basic principle is the 
equality of right to operate. Accordingly, stations of each service in 
one Region or sub-Region must operate so as not to cause harmful 
interference to any service of the same or higher category in the other 
Regions or sub-Regions. (See ITU Radio Regulations, edition of 2004, No. 
4.8.)
    (b) No amateur station transmitting in the 1900-2000 kHz segment, 
the 70 cm band, the 33 cm band, the 23 cm band, the 13 cm band, the 9 cm 
band, the 5 cm band, the 3 cm band, the 24.05-24.25 GHz segment, the 76-
77.5 GHz segment, the 78-81 GHz segment, the 136-141 GHz segment, and 
the 241-248 GHz segment shall not cause harmful interference to, nor is 
protected from interference due to the operation of, the Federal 
radiolocation service.
    (c) No amateur station transmitting in the 1900-2000 kHz segment, 
the 3 cm band, the 76-77.5 GHz segment, the 78-81 GHz segment, the 136-
141 GHz segment, and the 241-248 GHz segment shall cause harmful 
interference to, nor is protected from interference due to the operation 
of, stations in the non-Federal radiolocation service.
    (d) No amateur station transmitting in the 30 meter band shall cause 
harmful interference to stations authorized by other nations in the 
fixed service. The licensee of the amateur station must make all 
necessary adjustments, including termination of transmissions, if 
harmful interference is caused.
    (e) In the 1.25 m band:
    (1) Use of the 219-220 MHz segment is limited to amateur stations 
participating, as forwarding stations, in point-to-point fixed digital 
message forwarding systems, including intercity packet backbone 
networks. It is not available for other purposes.
    (2) No amateur station transmitting in the 219-220 MHz segment shall 
cause harmful interference to, nor is protected from interference due to 
operation of Automated Maritime Telecommunications Systems (AMTS), 
television broadcasting on channels 11 and 13, 218-219 MHz Service 
systems, Land Mobile Services systems, or any other service having a 
primary allocation in or adjacent to the band.
    (3) No amateur station may transmit in the 219-220 MHz segment 
unless the licensee has given written notification of the station's 
specific geographic location for such transmissions in order to be 
incorporated into a data base that has been made available to the 
public. The notification must be given at least 30 days prior to making 
such transmissions. The notification must be given to: The American 
Radio Relay, Inc., 225 Main Street, Newington, CT 06111-1494.
    (4) No amateur station may transmit in the 219-220 MHz segment from 
a location that is within 640 km of an AMTS Coast Station that uses 
frequencies in the 217-218/219-220 MHz AMTS bands unless the amateur 
station licensee has given written notification of the station's 
specific geographic location for such transmissions to the AMTS 
licensee. The notification must be given at least 30 days prior to 
making such transmissions. The location of AMTS Coast Stations using the 
217-218/219-220 MHz channels may be obtained from either:

The American Radio Relay League, Inc., 225 Main Street, Newington, CT 
06111-1494;


or

Interactive Systems, Inc., Suite 1103, 1601 North Kent Street, 
Arlington, VA 22209; Fax: (703) 812-8275; Phone: (703) 812-8270.

    (5) No amateur station may transmit in the 219-220 MHz segment from 
a location that is within 80 km of an

[[Page 606]]

AMTS Coast Station that uses frequencies in the 217-218/219-220 MHz AMTS 
bands unless that amateur station licensee holds written approval from 
that AMTS licensee. The location of AMTS Coast Stations using the 217-
218/219-220 MHz channels may be obtained as noted in paragraph (e)(4) of 
this section.
    (f) In the 70 cm band:
    (1) No amateur station shall transmit from north of Line A in the 
420-430 MHz segment.
    (2) The 420-430 MHz segment is allocated to the amateur service in 
the United States on a secondary basis, and is allocated in the fixed 
and mobile (except aeronautical mobile) services in the International 
Table of allocations on a primary basis. No amateur station transmitting 
in this band shall cause harmful interference to, nor is protected from 
interference due to the operation of, stations authorized by other 
nations in the fixed and mobile (except aeronautical mobile) services.
    (3) The 430-440 MHz segment is allocated to the amateur service on a 
secondary basis in ITU Regions 2 and 3. No amateur station transmitting 
in this band in ITU Regions 2 and 3 shall cause harmful interference to, 
nor is protected from interference due to the operation of, stations 
authorized by other nations in the radiolocation service. In ITU Region 
1, the 430-440 MHz segment is allocated to the amateur service on a co-
primary basis with the radiolocation service. As between these two 
services in this band in ITU Region 1, the basic principle that applies 
is the equality of right to operate. Amateur stations authorized by the 
United States and radiolocation stations authorized by other nations in 
ITU Region 1 shall operate so as not to cause harmful interference to 
each other.
    (4) No amateur station transmitting in the 449.75-450.00 MHz segment 
shall cause interference to, nor is protected from interference due to 
the operation of stations in, the space operation and space research 
services.
    (g) In the 33 cm band:
    (1) In the States of Colorado and Wyoming, bounded by the area of 
latitude 396[deg] N. to 42[deg] N. and longitude 103[deg] W. to 108[deg] 
W., an amateur station may transmit in the 902 MHz to 928 MHz band only 
on the frequency segments 902.0-902.4, 902.6-904.3, 904.7-925.3, 925.7-
927.3, and 927.7-928.0 MHz. This band is allocated on a secondary basis 
to the amateur service subject to not causing harmful interference to, 
and not receiving any interference protection from, the operation of 
industrial, scientific and medical devices, automatic vehicle monitoring 
systems, or Government stations authorized in this band.
    (2) No amateur station shall transmit from those portions of the 
States of Texas and New Mexico bounded on the south by latitude 
31[deg]41[min] N., on the north by latitude 34[deg]30[min] N., on the 
east by longitude 104[deg]11[min] W., and on the west by longitude 
107[deg]30[min] W.
    (h) No amateur station transmitting in the 23 cm band, the 3.3-3.4 
GHz segment, the 3 cm band, the 24.05-24.25 GHz segment, the 76-77.5 GHz 
segment, the 78-81 GHz segment, the 136-141 GHz segment, and the 241-248 
GHz segment shall cause harmful interference to, nor is protected from 
interference due to the operation of, stations authorized by other 
nations in the radiolocation service.
    (i) In the 23 cm band, no amateur station shall cause harmful 
interference to, nor is protected from interference due to the operation 
of, stations in the radionavigation-satellite service, the aeronautical 
radionavigation service, the Earth exploration-satellite service 
(active), or the space research service (active).
    (j) In the 13 cm band:
    (1) The amateur service is allocated on a secondary basis in all ITU 
Regions. In ITU Region 1, no amateur station shall cause harmful 
interference to, and shall be not protected from interference due to the 
operation of, stations authorized by other nations in the fixed and 
mobile services. In ITU Regions 2 and 3, no amateur station shall cause 
harmful interference to, and shall not be protected from interference 
due to the operation of, stations authorized by other nations in the 
fixed, mobile and radiolocation services.
    (2) In the United States:
    (i) The 2300-2305 MHz segment is allocated to the amateur service on 
a secondary basis. (Currently the 2300-2305

[[Page 607]]

MHz segment is not allocated to any service on a primary basis.);
    (ii) The 2305-2310 MHz segment is allocated to the amateur service 
on a secondary basis to the fixed, mobile, and radiolocation services;
    (iii) The 2390-2417 MHz segment is allocated to the amateur service 
on a primary basis.
    (A) The 2390-2395 MHz segment is shared with Federal and non-Federal 
Government mobile services on a co-equal basis. See 47 CFR 2.106, 
footnote US276.
    (B) Amateur stations operating in the 2400-2417 MHz segment must 
accept harmful interference that may be caused by the proper operation 
of industrial, scientific and medical equipment.
    (iv) The 2417-2450 MHz segment is allocated to the amateur service 
on a co-secondary basis with the Federal Government radiolocation 
service. Amateur stations operating within the 2417-2450 MHz segment 
must accept harmful interference that may be caused by the proper 
operation of industrial, scientific, and medical devices operating 
within the band.
    (k) No amateur station transmitting in the following segments shall 
cause harmful interference to stations in the radio astronomy service: 
3.332-3.339 GHz, 3.3458-3.3525 GHz, 76-77.5 GHz, 78-81 GHz, 136-141 GHz, 
241-248 GHz, 275-323 GHz, 327-371 GHz, 388-424 GHz, 426-442 GHz, 453-510 
GHz, 623-711 GHz, 795-909 GHz, and 926-945 GHz. No amateur station 
transmitting in following segments shall cause harmful interference to 
stations in the Earth exploration-satellite service (passive) and space 
research service (passive): 275-277 GHz, 294-306 GHz, 316-334 GHz, 342-
349 GHz, 363-365 GHz, 371-389 GHz, 416-434 GHz, 442-444 GHz, 496-506 
GHz, 546-568 GHz, 624-629 GHz, 634-654 GHz, 659-661 GHz, 684-692 GHz, 
730-732 GHz, 851-853 GHz, and 951-956 GHz.
    (l) In the 9 cm band:
    (1) In ITU Regions 2 and 3, the 9 cm band is allocated to the 
amateur service on a secondary basis. In ITU Region 1, the segment 3.4-
3.475 GHz is allocated to the amateur service on a secondary basis for 
use only in Germany, Israel, and the United Kingdom.
    (2) In the United States, the 9 cm band is allocated to the amateur 
and non-Federal radiolocation services on a secondary basis.
    (3) In the 3.4-3.5 GHz segment, no amateur station shall cause 
harmful interference to, nor is protected from interference due to the 
operation of, stations in the fixed and fixed-satellite services.
    (4) In the 3.4-3.5 GHz segment, no amateur station shall cause 
harmful interference to, nor is protected from interference due to the 
operation of, stations authorized by other nations in the fixed and 
fixed-satellite service.
    (m) In the 5 cm band:
    (1) In the 5.650-5.725 GHz segment, the amateur service is allocated 
in all ITU Regions on a co-secondary basis with the space research (deep 
space) service.
    (2) In the 5.725-5.850 GHz segment, the amateur service is allocated 
in all ITU Regions on a secondary basis. No amateur station shall cause 
harmful interference to, nor is protected from interference due to the 
operation of, stations authorized by other nations in the fixed-
satellite service in ITU Region 1.
    (3) No amateur station transmitting in the 5.725-5.875 GHz segment 
is protected from interference due to the operation of industrial, 
scientific and medical devices operating on 5.8 GHz.
    (4) In the 5.650-5.850 GHz segment, no amateur station shall cause 
harmful interference to, nor is protected from interference due to the 
operation of, stations authorized by other nations in the radiolocation 
service.
    (5) In the 5.850-5.925 GHz segment, the amateur service is allocated 
in ITU Region 2 on a co-secondary basis with the radiolocation service. 
In the United States, the segment is allocated to the amateur service on 
a secondary basis to the non-Government fixed-satellite service. No 
amateur station shall cause harmful interference to, nor is protected 
from interference due to the operation of, stations authorized by other 
nations in the fixed, fixed-satellite and mobile services. No amateur 
station shall cause harmful interference to, nor is protected from 
interference due to the operation of, stations in the non-Government 
fixed-satellite service.
    (n) In the 3 cm band:

[[Page 608]]

    (1) In the United States, the 3 cm band is allocated to the amateur 
service on a co-secondary basis with the non-government radiolocation 
service.
    (2) In the 10.00-10.45 GHz segment in ITU Regions 1 and 3, no 
amateur station shall cause interference to, nor is protected from 
interference due to the operation of, stations authorized by other 
nations in the fixed and mobile services.
    (o) No amateur station transmitting in the 1.2 cm band is protected 
from interference due to the operation of industrial, scientific and 
medical devices on 24.125 GHz. In the United States, the 24.05-24.25 GHz 
segment is allocated to the amateur service on a co-secondary basis with 
the non-government radiolocation and Government and non-government Earth 
exploration-satellite (active) services.
    (p) The 2.5 mm band is allocated to the amateur service on a 
secondary basis. No amateur station transmitting in this band shall 
cause harmful interference to, nor is protected from interference due to 
the operation of, stations in the fixed, inter-satellite and mobile 
services.
    (q) No amateur station transmitting in the 244-246 GHz segment of 
the 1 mm band is protected from interference due to the operation of 
industrial, scientific and medical devices on 245 GHz.
    (r) In the 4 mm band:
    (1) Authorization of the 76-77 GHz segment of the 4 mm band for 
amateur station transmissions is suspended until such time that the 
Commission may determine that amateur station transmissions in this 
segment will not pose a safety threat to vehicle radar systems operating 
in this segment.
    (2) No amateur or amateur-satellite station transmitting in the 
75.5-76 GHz segment shall cause interference to, nor is protected from, 
interference due to the operation of stations in the fixed service. 
After January 1, 2006, the 75.5-76 GHz segment is no longer allocated to 
the amateur service or to the amateur-satellite service.
    (3) No amateur or amateur-satellite station transmitting in the 
75.5-76 GHz segment shall cause interference to, nor is protected from, 
interference due to the operation of stations in the fixed service. 
After January 1, 2006, the 75.5-76 GHz segment is no longer allocated to 
the amateur service or to the amateur-satellite service.
    (s) An amateur station having an operator holding a General, 
Advanced or Amateur Extra Class license may only transmit single 
sideband, suppressed carrier, (emission type 2K8J3E) upper sideband on 
the channels 5332 kHz, 5348 kHz, 5368 kHz, 5373 kHz, and 5405 kHz. 
Amateur operators shall ensure that their transmission occupies only the 
2.8 kHz centered around each of these frequencies. Transmissions shall 
not exceed an effective radiated power (e.r.p) of 50 W PEP. For the 
purpose of computing e.r.p. the transmitter PEP will be multiplied with 
the antenna gain relative to a dipole or the equivalent calculation in 
decibels. A half wave dipole antenna will be presumed to have a gain of 
0 dBd. Licensees using other antennas must maintain in their station 
records either manufacturer data on the antenna gain or calculations of 
the antenna gain. No amateur station shall cause harmful interference to 
stations authorized in the mobile and fixed services; nor is any amateur 
station protected from interference due to the operation of any such 
station.
    (t)(1) The 7-7.1 MHz segment is allocated to the amateur and 
amateur-satellite services on a primary and exclusive basis throughout 
the world, except that the 7-7.05 MHz segment is:
    (i) Additionally allocated to the fixed service on a primary basis 
in the countries listed in 47 CFR 2.106, footnote 5.140; and
    (ii) Alternatively allocated to the fixed service on a primary and 
exclusive basis (i.e., the segment 7-7.05 MHz is not allocated to the 
amateur service) in the countries listed in 47 CFR 2.106, footnote 
5.141.
    (2) The 7.1-7.2 MHz segment is allocated to the amateur service on 
an exclusive basis in Region 2. Until March 29, 2009, the 7.1-7.2 MHz 
segment is allocated to the amateur and broadcasting services on a co-
primary basis in Region 1 and Region 3 and the use of the 7.1-7.2 MHz 
segment by the amateur service shall not impose constraints on the 
broadcasting service intended for use within Region 1 and Region 3. 
After March 29, 2009, the 7.1-7.2 MHz segment

[[Page 609]]

is allocated to the amateur service on a primary and exclusive basis 
throughout the world, except that the 7.1-7.2 MHz segment is 
additionally allocated to the fixed and mobile except aeronautical 
mobile (R) services on a primary basis in the countries listed in 47 CFR 
2.106, footnote 5.141B.
    (3) The 7.2-7.3 MHz segment is allocated to the amateur service on 
an exclusive basis in Region 2 and to the broadcasting service on an 
exclusive basis in Region 1 and Region 3. The use of the 7.2-7.3 MHz 
segment in Region 2 by the amateur service shall not impose constraints 
on the broadcasting service intended for use within Region 1 and Region 
3.

[54 FR 25857, June 20, 1989; 54 FR 39536, Sept. 27, 1989, as amended at 
56 FR 19611, Apr. 29, 1991; 56 FR 23025, May 20, 1991; 56 FR 32518, July 
17, 1991; 56 FR 40801, Aug. 16, 1991; 57 FR 40344, Sept. 3, 1992; 60 FR 
15687, Mar. 27, 1995; 61 FR 15386, Apr. 8, 1996; 62 FR 9673, Mar. 3, 
1997; 63 FR 42280, Aug. 7, 1998; 68 FR 33026, June 3, 2003; 69 FR 3265, 
Jan. 23, 2004; 69 FR 77950, Dec. 29, 2004; 70 FR 46681, Aug. 10, 2005; 
71 FR 66464, Nov. 15, 2006]