BBC Radio 1 Dance is one of the most influential radio stations dedicated entirely to electronic dance music, broadcasting 24/7 from the BBC's studios in London. Whether you're into house, drum and bass, techno, or anything in between, this station delivers a nonstop mix of tracks curated by some of the biggest names behind the decks.
But figuring out how to actually tune in, especially from outside the UK, plus keeping track of which DJs are on and when, isn't always straightforward. That's exactly what this guide covers: how to listen live from anywhere, the full 2026 schedule, and a breakdown of the resident DJs who shape the station's sound week after week.
At RIKIO ROCKS, we cover the electronic dance music scene daily, pulling together news from across the industry so you don't have to. A station like BBC Radio 1 Dance sits right at the center of that ecosystem, breaking new tracks and platforming artists before they blow up. Below, we break down everything you need to know to get the most out of it this year.
What BBC Radio 1 Dance is
BBC Radio 1 Dance launched as a dedicated digital spin-off of the main BBC Radio 1 station, built specifically for listeners who want electronic music without the pop and chart content that fills the flagship station's schedule. It runs 24 hours a day, seven days a week, streaming continuously online and through digital radio platforms. The BBC designed it as a place where the dance music community could find programming that goes deeper than a single weekly show.
How it fits within the BBC Radio 1 family
The main BBC Radio 1 station has always had a strong connection to dance music, running specialist shows on weekend nights for decades. BBC Radio 1 Dance takes that foundation and builds an entire station around it. Think of Radio 1 as the broad channel that covers everything from pop to indie to hip-hop, and BBC Radio 1 Dance as the branch that narrows all the way down to house, techno, drum and bass, jungle, garage, and electronica.
BBC Radio 1 Dance functions as a 24/7 home for the genres that Radio 1 specialists like Pete Tong helped put on the map decades ago.
Both stations share some programming DNA. You'll hear mixes from artists and DJs who also appear on the main BBC Radio 1 lineup, but the Dance station gives them more space, longer sets, and a format built specifically around extended DJ sets and mix-led programming rather than presenter-heavy talk radio.
The genres and format it covers
Radio 1 Dance does not stick to one corner of electronic music. On any given day, you might hear deep house pulled from an Essential Mix archive, a live set from a major festival, a dedicated drum and bass hour, or a techno mix from a producer with a global following. That range is intentional. The BBC uses BBC Radio 1 Dance as a platform to showcase the full width of the global dance music scene, not just whatever subgenre is currently getting the most attention.
Format-wise, the station leans heavily on recorded DJ sets and curated mixes rather than live presenter chat. That means fewer interruptions, longer unbroken listening windows, and an experience that feels closer to a club night than a traditional radio broadcast.
What the station is not
It's worth being clear about what BBC Radio 1 Dance is not. It is not a podcast network, not a streaming playlist service, and not a chart countdown show. It is a licensed broadcast radio station operated by the BBC, which means it follows broadcast regulations around music licensing, content standards, and scheduling, the same as any other BBC station.