[ADXA] What the Heck is the "DXCC Desk"

Michael Reynolds, NO6O Michael at NO6O.com
Mon Feb 9 11:03:04 EST 2026


Hi Joel,

I did a search on this:  "Why is the dxcc program referenced as a dxcc 
desk?"

----
The ARRL DX Century Club (DXCC) program is often referred to as a "DXCC 
desk" because it operates as a dedicated administrative department 
within the American Radio Relay League (ARRL) headquarters. This "desk" 
is responsible for processing applications, verifying submitted contacts 
(QSL cards or Logbook of the World records), and maintaining the 
official list of countries and entities for the award.
----

Michael, NO6O


On 2026-02-09 9:43 AM, w5znjoel at gmail.com wrote:
>
> Thanks Michael.
>
> This describes the DXCC program and its origin, not specifically the 
> “DXCC Desk”! I actually looked this up as well prior to my post.
>
> 73 Joel W5ZN
>
> *From:*adxa-bounces at mailman.qth.net <adxa-bounces at mailman.qth.net> *On 
> Behalf Of *Michael Reynolds, NO6O
> *Sent:* Monday, February 9, 2026 9:22 AM
> *To:* adxa at mailman.qth.net
> *Subject:* Re: [ADXA] What the Heck is the "DXCC Desk"
>
> Hi Joel,
>
> I did an AI search on "dxcc desk origin", and got this:
>
> ----
> The DXCC desk originated from a 1935 article by Clinton B. DeSoto, 
> W1CBD, which introduced a scoring system for amateur radio operators 
> to count the countries they contacted. This system has evolved over 
> time and remains the standard for DXers today*
>
> *Origin of the DXCC DeskHistorical Background*
> *The DX Century Club (DXCC) was established based on an article by 
> Clinton B. DeSoto, W1CBD, published in 1935. This article introduced a 
> scoring system for amateur radio operators, known as DXers, to count 
> the countries they contacted. The first DXCC List was published in 1937.
>
> *Purpose and Function**
> *The DXCC Desk is part of the American Radio Relay League (ARRL) and 
> serves to manage the DXCC program. Its primary role is to maintain the 
> DXCC List, which includes distinct geographical or political entities 
> recognized for amateur radio contacts. The list has evolved over time, 
> with criteria changing to reflect current geopolitical realities.
>
> *Key FeaturesEntity Recognition*
> Each entity on the DXCC List is considered a separate country for the 
> purpose of amateur radio contacts.*
>
> *Award System**
> The DXCC Desk oversees various awards for operators who achieve 
> specific contact milestones, such as the DXCC Award for confirming 
> contacts with at least 100 entities.
>
> *Database Management*:
> The DXCC Desk maintains a database that tracks callsigns, entities, 
> and their associated properties, ensuring accurate record-keeping for 
> DXers.The DXCC program has become a standard for amateur radio 
> operators worldwide, promoting international communication and 
> understanding
> ----
>
>
> Michael, NO6O
>
>
> On 2026-02-09 7:09 AM, w5znjoel at gmail.com wrote:
>
>     Quite often I’ll make reference to something from long ago and
>     younger folks, or those new to an activity I’ve been involved in
>     for years, will look at me like I’m from Mars. Once such phrase I
>     like to use in scheduling is “Book it Dano”, a reference to a line
>     from the original Hawaii Five-0 series that ran from the late 60’s
>     and 70’s. Today that usually requires a follow up explanation of
>     who Dano is and why I just called someone by a name other than
>     their own!
>
>     In recent posts I’ve made reference to the “DXCC Desk” at ARRL HQ
>     and a few have asked what that is and what the significance of a
>     “desk” is, especially in regard to the DXCC program. Well, I don’t
>     know the specific origin! Obviously the DXCC program is not
>     managed by a desk but for as many years as I can remember
>     beginning in 1971 when I became an ARRL member there has always
>     been reference made to the “DXCC Desk” when a decision, rules, or
>     a question were addressed by ARRL HQ. It obviously references the
>     place where the person who managed the program at any one
>     particular time sat and conducted the daily business of the DXCC
>     program. Maybe it took the heat of a controversial decision away
>     from an individual, the DXCC manager, and placed it on an object.
>
>     Maybe some of the “older” ADXA folks know more about the origin
>     than I do but if you see me reference the “DXCC Desk” its
>     referring to the person, or persons, at ARRL HQ managing the DXCC
>     program at any one time and not a benign piece of wood to stack
>     papers on.
>
>     73 Joel W5ZN
>
>
>
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