September 10, 2014

The FCC has adjusted very slightly downward — to $21.40 — its proposed Amateur Service vanity call sign regulatory fee for fiscal 2014. In a June Notice of Proposed Rule Making (NPRM), the commission said it was planning to hike the current $16.10 vanity fee to $21.60 for the 10-year license term. The FCC released a Report and Order and Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (R&O) in the proceeding on Aug. 29, in which it recalculated the fee to $21.40. The $5.30 increase still represents the largest vanity fee hike in many years. The $21.40 fee does not go into effect until 30 days after the R&O is published in the Federal Register.
In the R&O, the FCC said it considered eliminating the regulatory fee for amateur radio vanity call sign applications, but decided not to do so “at this time” because it lacks “adequate support to determine whether the cost of recovery and burden on small entities outweighs the collected revenue; or whether eliminating the fee would adversely affect the licensing process.” The commission said it would re-evaluate this issue in the future to determine if it should eliminate other fee categories.
The FCC’s Office of Managing Director sets the actual vanity call sign fee, based on Wireless Telecommunications Bureau projections of new applications and renewals and taking into consideration existing commission licensee databases, such as the Universal Licensing System (ULS) database.
The FCC reported 11,500 “payment units” in fiscal 2014. The commission said the vanity program generated an estimated $230,230 in fiscal 2013 revenue, and estimated that it would collect nearly $246,100 in fiscal 2014.
The vanity call sign regulatory fee is payable when applying for a new vanity call sign or when renewing any vanity call sign designated as "HV" in the FCC's ULS database.