Lebanon's famously diverse press in one place: An-Nahar, Al Akhbar and Al Joumhouria in Arabic, L'Orient-Le Jour in French, and portals like Naharnet and Lebanon 24 — alongside LBCI, MTV Lebanon and the country's other major broadcasters.
Arabic Newspapers
French Newspapers
English Portals
Digital News Portals
TV Channels
Business and Finance
Sports
News Agencies
Online News Sites
جريدة الديار هي جريدة لبنانية موثوقة تُقدّم نسخ يومية إلكترونية بصيغة PDF.
اطّلع على آخر الأخبار والمقالات من جريدة السفير اللبنانية الرائدة.
ابق على اطّلاع بجريدة اللواء اللبنانية، اليومية الالكترونية.
الاتحاد اللبناني لكرة القدم — الاتحاد الرسمي، المنتخب اللبناني.
كن على اطلاع دائم بآخر الأخبار من جريدة العهد اللبنانية، مصدر يومي إلكتروني موثوق.
Retired Lebanese papers
Older titles that are no longer published or whose website is offline — kept here for reference.
Frequently asked questions
- What was the first newspaper in Lebanon?
- Hadiqat al-Akhbar, published by Khalil al-Khoury in Beirut in 1858, is regarded as Lebanon's first newspaper. An-Nahar, founded in 1933, is among the oldest dailies still in print.
- Which Lebanese newspapers are published in French?
- L'Orient-Le Jour is Lebanon's leading French-language daily; its English-language sister publication is L'Orient Today.
- What is Lebanon's official news agency?
- The National News Agency (NNA), run by the Lebanese Ministry of Information, is the country's official news agency.
Lebanon has one of the Arab world's most vibrant and pluralistic newspaper industries, with a remarkable tradition of press freedom, bold journalism, and a multilingual media landscape that publishes in Arabic, French, and English. Beirut has long served as the region's media capital — home to pan-Arab satellite channels, international wire services, and newspapers that have shaped political discourse across the Arab world for over a century.
Among the most widely read Lebanese newspapers online is An-Nahar, Lebanon's newspaper of record founded in 1933. L'Orient-Le Jour is the leading French-language daily in the Arab world, while L'Orient Today serves English-speaking readers. For TV news, LBCI is Lebanon's most watched network and Al Mayadeen has become one of the Arab world's most influential satellite channels. Digital portals Naharnet and Lebanon 24 provide round-the-clock coverage.
Looking for newspapers from other Levant countries? Explore our collection of Jordanian newspapers, Syrian newspapers, Iraqi newspapers, Palestinian newspapers, and our full Arabic newspapers directory.
