* AM broadcast band (530?1610kHz, to 1700 in the Americas)
    * Shortwave bands (5.9?26.1 MHz)
    * Citizens' band
    * Television stations 2?6 (54?88 MHz in the Americas)
    * FM broadcast band (88?108 MHz, except 76?90 in Japan)
    * Aircraft band (108?136 MHz), for air traffic control
    * Television stations 7?13 (174?216 MHz in the Americas)
    * L band (1452?1492 MHz) for digital radio (DAB) outside the US
    * Amateur radio bands among several different frequencies
    * Military bands
          o X-Band 8?10 GHz
          o S-Band 1750?2400 MHz
    * Radionavigation beacons, such as LORAN and GPS
Each of these bands has a basic bandplan which dictates how it is to be used and shared, to avoid interference and to set protocol for the compatibility of transmitters and receivers.
Note that as a matter of physics, bands are divided at wavelengths of 10^n metres, or frequencies of 3×10^n hertz. For example, 30 MHz or 10 m divides shortwave (lower and longer) from VHF (shorter and higher). These are the parts of the radio spectrum, and not its frequency allocation.