Montero Sánchez, DavidTreré, EmilianoCandón Mena, Jose2026-02-162026-02-162026-01-31Montero-Sánchez, D., Treré, E., Candón-Mena, J.: Community Media Sustainability in the UK. The case of GTFM Radio. Journal of Alternative & Community Media - Volume 10, Issue 1, 2025, 73-91, https://doi.org/10.1386/jacm_00148_12634-4726https://hdl.handle.net/10347/45944© David Montero-Sánchez, Emiliano Treré and José Candón-Mena, 2026. The definitive, peer reviewed and edited version of this article is published in Journal of Alternative & Community Media - Volume 10, Issue 1, 2025, 73-91, https://doi.org/10.1386/jacm_00148_1Recently, the issue of community media sustainability has attracted an increasing amount of attention among media scholars worldwide. The ways in which media sustainability is being discussed in this context have changed markedly, widening the debate to encompass aspects such as participation, diversity, organizational structures, respect for the environment, technological innovation and community service. However, in the United Kingdom the evolution of the community media sector around ambiguous concepts such as ‘access’ and ‘social gain’ has shaped the sector into a neutral, non-specific area, devoid of a clearly recognizable stance in relation to commercial and public media. In turn, sustainability has centred around funding and competition for scarce resources. This article joins recent contributions in UK literature by authors such as Coleman and Padfield in calling for a clear understanding of community media as an alternative to state and market broadcasters and link community engagement and social capital to sustainability as a whole. This article takes as its point of departure an extensive literature review on the topic of community media sustainability, examining the latter as inextricably linked to its social role and proposing a multi-layered approach to the concept that incorporates areas such as technological and environmental sustainability to more traditional takes on the subject. A case-study methodology is used to engage with the experience of Welsh community radio station GTFM over a number of years. Currently covering significant areas of the Rhondda, Cynon and Taf valleys in Wales (RCT), with a potential audience of approximately 165,000 people, the case of GTFM illustrates the ways in which sustainable strategies based on cooperation, such as shared local newsrooms, a clear focus on local volunteers, collaborative approaches to fundraising or pooling technological resources, might play an integral part in the strategies used by community media to achieve sustainability.engAccessCooperationFundingSocial capitalSocial gainTechnological innovationCommunity media sustainability in the UK. The case of GTFM Radiojournal article10.1386/jacm_00148_1open access