Audacy St. Louis finally has a number attached to its sale. A new FCC filing confirms Hoffmann Media Group is paying $20 million for the entire six-station cluster anchored by KMOX.
The deal also includes 97.1 FM Talk, 96.3 R&B, Y98, 102.5 KEZK, and Hot 98.7. Split evenly, that works out to roughly $3.3 million per station.
For context, Urban One agreed in April to pay $22 million for just two Dallas stations, KKDA and KRNB, in a deal with Service Broadcasting Group. That’s about $11 million per station — more than three times what Hoffmann is paying per signal in St. Louis.
But that comparison needs a caveat that could be easily skipped.
Dallas is the number 5 radio market in the country. St. Louis sits at No. 24. That gap looks modest on a ranking sheet, but it isn’t modest in practice. The Dallas metro’s population is nearly three times the size of St. Louis. Comparing the sale prices of brands in those two markets isn’t exactly apples-to-apples. The numbers tell you less than they seem to.
A Better Benchmark
Finding a truly comparable sale takes some digging, and even then, the picture stays messy.
Radio One bought the Indianapolis cluster from Emmis just over four years ago for $25 million, a much closer market-size match to St. Louis. That deal alone suggests Hoffmann’s $20 million wasn’t wildly out of line for a market this size.
Other recent sales complicate the story further. Connoisseur Media bought Bonneville’s four Bay Area stations last year for just $10 million total. That number looks tiny until you learn Bonneville paid $141 million for those same four stations back in 2018.
Values in this industry can swing dramatically within a single ownership cycle, and San Francisco’s collapse shows just how far a cluster’s worth can fall.
St. Louis has its own history worth revisiting, too. Hubbard bought two Emmis stations in the market, KSHE 95 and 105.7 The Point, in 2018 for $45 million. Audacy bought the other two Emmis stations that same year, 97.1 FM Talk and what’s now 96.3 R&B, for $15 million.
Furthermore, Cox Media Group sold its Tulsa cluster last year to a local owner, in a deal incredibly similar to the Audacy/Hoffman situation. It featured a heritage news/talk brand — in this case, 102.3 KRMG — with some supplemental signals. The sale price to that local ownership group? $20 million.
Go back further, and KFNS 590 sold in 2004 for $11.5 million, a package that also included two other signals, 100.7 FM KFNS and 1190 KRFT-AM. None of these numbers move in a straight line, and that’s exactly the point.
Sale price depends heavily on timing, format, and who’s buying — not just market size or signal strength alone.
A Different Kind of Value
Money isn’t the only currency in a deal like this, and St. Louis proves it. Hoffmann Media Group isn’t a stranger to the market; the Hoffmann Family of Companies already controls Lee Enterprises, which owns the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, and that print foothold changes the calculus here. Buying KMOX doesn’t just add radio revenue to the ledger — it adds instant credibility in a market where the family already has skin in the game.
There are only two ways to earn that kind of standing: build it over decades or buy it outright. KMOX has been St. Louis’s dominant news voice for a century, and it remains the flagship home of Cardinals baseball.
No amount of organic growth replicates that overnight. Hoffmann didn’t just purchase six transmitters. It purchased trust that took generations to accumulate. Now, it absolutely has to work to keep that trust. But it now has it. And that’s half the battle.
Turner’s Case for Local
Audacy CEO Kelli Turner has framed the sale as a deliberate choice rather than a distress signal. She told St. Louis employees the deal “While we were not actively looking to sell these stations, HF Companies presented an opportunity for the Company that ultimately made strong business sense for both parties.”
Those aren’t the words of an executive looking to clear inventory. Turner has also told staff that day-to-day operations, reporting structures, compensation, and benefits aren’t expected to change. Does she have any bearing over that? No, of course not. But she also didn’t say it out of pure boredom, either.
Also, it wasn’t that long ago that Audacy went through the process of shifting KMOX to a full-market FM signal on 104.1 FM. I would find it unlikely that they went through that process of rebranding a strong, heritage signal to simply offload it at the first opportunity.
Will the $20 million figure raise questions elsewhere? Almost certainly. Audacy still owns clusters in Memphis, Kansas City, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and Buffalo, and every one of those markets could easily see potential ownership groups studying the St. Louis number closely.
But I keep coming back to fit, though. A higher number doesn’t guarantee a better outcome for KMOX’s newsroom, its staff, or its listeners, and in St. Louis, I think the right buyer mattered more than the biggest check. I genuinely believe that a local operator was high on Audacy’s priority list for any interested party. It sounds a deal that worked for everyone. You’d be hard-pressed, from where I sit, to knock it from any one side.
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Garrett Searight is Barrett Media’s News Editor, which includes writing daily news stories, features, and opinion columns. He joined Barrett Media in 2022 after a decade leading several radio brands in several formats, as well as a 5-year stint working in local television. In addition to his work with Barrett Media, he is a radio and TV play-by-play broadcaster. Reach out to him at Garrett@BarrettMedia.com.

