Cumulus Media filed for a prepackaged Chapter 11 bankruptcy Thursday in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas, backed by a restructuring support agreement with key lenders. The move aims to eliminate approximately $600 million in debt—roughly 85% of its funded obligations—allowing the company to emerge later this year as a stronger, privately held entity with a significantly deleveraged balance sheet.
The prepackaged plan is designed to cause no disruption to daily operations, employees, programming, or listener experience.
Cumulus has secured up to $100 million in liquidity through an amended asset-based lending facility and lender consent to use existing cash collateral, ensuring business continuity during the process.
The restructuring is expected to save about $49 million annually in interest expenses. This freed-up cash flow will support growth initiatives, digital transformation, content innovation, and brand enhancement providing the radio broadcaster with greater financial flexibility amid industry challenges like shifting audience behaviors and high debt burdens.
Cumulus began exploring restructuring options in late 2025 due to these pressures, including approaching debt maturities. CFO Francisco J. Lopez-Balboa stated in a court declaration that the prepackaged approach—anchored by stakeholder agreement—avoids a destructive freefall bankruptcy, minimizes risk and costs, and best serves all stakeholders.
The company plans to seek court confirmation of its reorganization plan in mid-April 2026, followed by FCC approvals expected to take three to four months. This timeline targets an emergence between August and October 2026. During Chapter 11, Cumulus will continue required SEC filings (such as Q4 2025 earnings), though earnings calls will pause. Post-emergence as a private company, public disclosure requirements will decrease, sharpening focus on long-term strategy.
The filing does not affect separate ongoing legal matters, including issues with Nielsen. This strategic reset sheds years of accumulated debt, positioning Cumulus for a more agile future centered on broadcast radio growth, digital expansion, talent investment, and premium content.