Brendan Carr
Chair
Commission
16 reports
U.S. Federal Communications Commission
Government · Holding structure · 2K employees · Washington, DC
Interactive org chart
Explore the agency leadership model, component structure, and reporting layers from official public sources.
Choose a prompt, then open an AI app and paste.
Download the CSV data insteadIndependent U.S. regulatory agency overseeing interstate and international communications by radio, television, wire, satellite, and cable across the nation and territories, led by a five-member commission.
What to model
Start with the public baseline, then use the scenario views and source-backed changes to ask what happens when leadership, span, or team ownership shifts.
The people
12 senior leadership roles or offices from official public sources. Use this section as a current agency-leadership index, not a private-company filing table.
Chair
Commission
16 reports
Commissioner
Commission
0 reports
Commissioner
Commission
0 reports
Commissioner
Commission
0 reports
Chief
Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau
0 reports
Chief
Enforcement Bureau
0 reports
Chief
Media Bureau
0 reports
Chief
Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau
0 reports
Chief
Space Bureau
0 reports
Chief
Wireline Competition Bureau
0 reports
Chief
Wireless Telecommunications Bureau
0 reports
Chief
Office of Engineering and Technology
0 reports
The operating model
5 offices, branches, or components organize the agency mission. Tile size scales with estimated staff where public estimates exist.
p5
Handles consumer outreach, complaints, disability access, and intergovernmental coordination.
p6
Investigates and enforces compliance with communications laws and FCC rules.
p7
Oversees broadcast radio, television, and cable policy and licensing.
p11
Administers domestic wireless communications and spectrum policy.
p10
Develops policy for telephone landlines and fixed broadband services.
The agency brief
The comparison
Compared with executive-branch departments such as the Department of Commerce, the FCC is smaller and operates under a commission model similar to the SEC or FTC. Unlike DHS or DOJ, it lacks a single chain-of-command hierarchy, instead relying on majority votes of Commissioners with independent bureaus executing …
Current signals
No recent leadership changes documented in the provided official sources.
The FCC is led by the Chair, currently Brendan Carr, along with four additional Commissioners appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate.
The FCC regulates interstate and international communications by radio, television, wire, satellite, and cable to serve the public interest.
Major components include the Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau, Enforcement Bureau, Media Bureau, Wireless Telecommunications Bureau, Wireline Competition Bureau, Space Bureau, and several specialized offices.
The FCC is an independent agency overseen by Congress and does not report to an executive department.
The org chart helps policymakers, researchers, and the public understand how communications regulation responsibilities are distributed across the FCC’s bureaus and leadership.
Reference
If you reference this page in research, analysis, or news writing, use one of the formats below. Citation includes the SEC filing source where applicable.
Creately. (2026). U.S. Federal Communications Commission organizational structure. Creately. Retrieved , from https://creately.com/org-chart/us-government/federal-communications-commission/"U.S. Federal Communications Commission Organizational Structure." Creately, April 1, 2026, https://creately.com/org-chart/us-government/federal-communications-commission/. Accessed .Creately. "U.S. Federal Communications Commission Organizational Structure." Last modified April 1, 2026. https://creately.com/org-chart/us-government/federal-communications-commission/.Permanent URL: https://creately.com/org-chart/us-government/federal-communications-commission/ · last updated 2026-04-01