This page only shows primary logo variants. For other related logos and images, see:
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1962–1969 | 1970–1978 | 1974–1978 | 1978–1981 | 1978–1980 | 1980–1981 |
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1981–1984 | 1984–1989 | March–July 1989 | July 1989–1991 | 1991–1995 | 1995–1999 |
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1999–2002 | 2002–2005 | 2005–2016 | 2016–2021 | 2021-2025 | 2025-present |
CTC-7 Canberra[]
1962–1969[]

BETTER LOGO NEEDED |
CTC-7 Canberra began transmission on 2 June 1962. Shortly after commencing transmission, relay stations would be installed at both Goulburn and Cooma on VHF-10. The callsign stood for Capital Television Canberra.
1970–1978[]
1974–1978[]

1978–1981[]

1978–1980[]

BETTER LOGO NEEDED |
1980–1981[]

BETTER LOGO NEEDED |
Capital 7 - Australian Capital Television[]
1981–1989[]
1981–1984[]

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On 15 July 1981, CTC-7 underwent a major rebranding and renamed themselves Capital 7 - Australian Capital Television with their new logo based on the design and colours of the Australian flag.
1984–1989[]

The flag logo was modified in 1984, making it more wavy in design.
By the 1980's, CTC-7 was broadcasting to both Goulburn and Cooma on VHF-10, with translators at Bombala on VHF-2, Tuggeranong Valley on UHF-63, and Jindabyne on UHF-66.
On 7 August 1987, Kerry Stokes sold CTC to Northern Star Holdings, owners of Network Ten. With a swap to VHF-10 not viable due to CTC already broadcasting on said signal in Cooma and Goulburn, the name Capital 7 would remain.
Capital Television (first era)[]
By the end of 1988, Capital 7's news bulletin would be rebranded Ten News and the station would be renamed Capital Television.
March–July 1989[]

On 31 March 1989 to affiliate itself with Network Ten, CTC launched its Illawarra & Regional Sydney (Wollongong) service on UHF-62.
10 TV Australia Capital[]
July 1989–1991[]
On 27 October 1989, the station was sold to Charles Curran's Capital Television Group so the network could be rescued from its financial difficulties, thus ending CTC's brief stint as a fully-fledged member of Network Ten.
On 30 December 1989, the channel expanded to the Central Tablelands (Orange) on UHF-33, and to the Central Western Slopes (Dubbo) and South Western Slopes/Eastern Riverina (Wagga-Wagga) on UHF-35.
Capital Television (second era)[]
1991–1995[]
On 1 January 1992, the channel expanded to Upper Murray (Albury) on UHF-39.
Ten Capital[]
1995–1999[]

In December 1994, Southern Cross Broadcasting brought CTC and thus Capital Television was rebranded in January to Ten Capital. Local content wasn’t axed until 2001.
1999–2002[]

Southern Cross Ten Southern NSW[]
2002–2005[]

2005–2016[]

Nine Canberra[]
2016–2021[]

CTC switched affiliation from Network Ten to the Nine Network on 1 July 2016 after they signed a new affiliation deal with Nine in April 2016. It used Nine's current metro branding.
10 Canberra[]
2021-2025[]
In March 2021 it's announced that the Nine Network would switch its affiliation back to WIN Television beginning on 1 July. In response, SCA entered into a 2-year network deal with Network 10 from 25 June.
2025-present[]
Television in New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory
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Sydney ABN (ABC TV) | ATN (Seven) | TCN (Nine) | TEN (10) Northern NSW Southern NSW and ACT Griffith and MIA Broken Hill Remote Areas |
Predecessors Southern Cross Broadcasting | Austereo Southern Cross News Audio
Defunct/divested Notes |