RadioRanked verdict
Radioddity
Radioddity GM-30
The GM-30 is usually the least expensive FCC-certified GMRS handheld still worth recommending, and it earns that spot by keeping operation dead simple: pick a channel by number, key up, done. There is no frequency display to puzzle over and no menu diving required to get on the air. The receiver is average, and the included programming software is clunky enough that most owners just use the channel-number workflow and skip it entirely. It also ships with a genuinely useful accessory kit for the price, two batteries, a speaker mic, and a programming cable, so there is little to buy afterward. For putting a legal, working GMRS radio in every glovebox and daypack for the least money, it does the job well. Buyers who want better receive audio or sturdier build quality should look at the UV-9G or Rocky Talkie instead.
FCC Certified for GMRS
Part 95E is the FCC rule part that covers GMRS: a radio must hold a Part 95E grant to be legal to transmit on GMRS channels.
- FCC ID
- 2AN62-GM30
- Rule parts
- Part 95E, Part 15B
- Grant date
- 2021-04-19
Decision helper
Is this GMRS radio right for you?
Yes, if you're…
- ✓The cheapest legal GMRS radio worth buying
- ✓Families who want simple, foolproof operation
- ✓A glovebox or daypack backup radio
Tradeoffs
The good and the bad
What we like
- Cheapest certified GMRS handheld worth owning
- Simple channel-by-number operation anyone in the family can use
- Comes with two batteries and a full accessory kit
- USB-C charging for the radio and spare batteries
What we don't
- Average receive audio compared to pricier certified radios
- Included programming software is clunky; most owners skip it
- Build quality reflects the budget price
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Overview
The GM-30 is usually the least expensive FCC-certified GMRS handheld that is still worth recommending. It keeps operation simple: you pick channels by number, the way GMRS is meant to work, so anyone in the family can use it without a walkthrough.
It will not match pricier radios on receive audio or build quality, and that is fine. Its job is to put a legal, working GMRS radio in every glovebox and daypack for the least money, and it does that well.
Specifications
| FCC ID | 2AN62-GM30 |
| FCC Rule Parts | Part 95E, Part 15B |
| FCC Grant Date | 2021-04-19 |
| color | Black |
Key Features
- Up to 250 channels: 30 default (22 GMRS, 8 repeater) plus 24 extra GMRS repeater channels
- Channels selected by number rather than frequency, the way GMRS is meant to work
- 5 watts of output with a 0.5W low-power mode
- USB-C charging for both the radio and spare batteries
- Full accessory kit: two batteries (1,500 mAh and 2,200 mAh), speaker mic, programming cable, antenna, earpiece, belt clip
- NOAA weather scanning, FM radio, SOS alarm, and flashlight
- FCC Part 95E and Part 15B certified, FCC ID 2AN62-GM30, granted April 2021
