Knowledge Base

What Are Concurrent Listeners? Radio Hosting Capacity Explained

What Are Concurrent Listeners? Radio Hosting Capacity Explained

What Are Concurrent Listeners?

Concurrent listeners refer to the maximum number of users who can listen to a radio broadcast at the same time.

In radio hosting plans, this value defines how many listeners the server can handle simultaneously.

What Is the Listener Limit Used For?

  • Limits server capacity
  • Maintains broadcast performance
  • Balances bandwidth usage
  • Prevents server overload

What Happens When the Listener Limit Is Reached?

  • New listeners cannot connect
  • Players return connection errors
  • Existing listeners remain connected
  • Audience growth is blocked

How Is Listener Capacity Calculated?

Listener capacity is directly related to the broadcast bitrate.

  • 96 kbps stream × 100 listeners ≈ 9.6 Mbps
  • 128 kbps stream × 100 listeners ≈ 12.8 Mbps

Higher listener counts require proportionally more bandwidth.

Common Mistakes

  • Expecting high traffic on low-tier plans
  • Ignoring the bitrate–listener relationship
  • Not analyzing peak listening hours
  • Lack of alerts when limits are reached

Best Practices

  • Set realistic audience targets
  • Monitor peak usage via logs
  • Review listener limits regularly
  • Plan upgrades as the station grows

From a knowledge base perspective, concurrent listener limits are a core indicator of scalability in radio hosting infrastructure.

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