Federal regulators (FCC and DOJ) approved, and the $6.2 billion Nexstar-Tegna merger (technically an acquisition) has closed. Nexstar Media Group agreed to acquire TEGNA Inc. in an all-cash transaction announced on August 19, 2025, at $22 per share—representing about a 31% premium to TEGNA’s recent unaffected stock price. The deal includes assumption/refinancing of TEGNA’s net debt and was valued at roughly $6.2 billion total.
Nexstar highlighted benefits such as:
Greater scale to invest in local journalism and programming.
Enhanced advertising options (local + national) for brands.
Roughly $300 million in expected synergies (cost savings through efficiencies).
Ability to better compete against digital giants and fragmented media landscapes.
Preservation of local voices, with commitments not to fully consolidate newsrooms in duopoly markets (e.g., operating like separate newspapers sharing printing).
The deal was framed as essential for sustaining local broadcasting amid industry pressures.
Critics (including media watchdogs like Free Press) argued:
lead to job cuts, raise advertising prices, and concentrate too much control over local news and airwaves
In some markets, the combined entity could control three of the top-four stations.



