The station's construction permit was originally owned by Tim Hoehn, Gary Savoie, and local resident Michael Carr who wound up selling a controlling interest to Jeff Shapiro. Although the transmitter is located a distance from Brandon, the tower site on Grandpa's Knob, in Castleton, Vermont, was the only place that would suffice to get a city grade signal over the majority of Brandon. An FCC waiver permitted this operation. A story in the Rutland Herald depicted a large type balloon being raised over a hilltop in Pittsford to describe how high a proposed tower could be. Several hunters shot the balloon down, since the people there did not want a tower erected in their town. WEXP went on the air in April 1999 under "Program Test Authority" from the FCC with no sales staff, no disc jockeys and only a Technics CD player airing the same repeating dance music CD with a legal ID imbedded, calling itself "Express 101". A contract engineer, Neil Langer, oversaw the operation and kept the station's public file at his residence. Langer built the facility where the station is currently housed in the Howe Center complex in Rutland. In October 2000, WEXP began to simulcast its signal over WVAY 100.7 in Wilmington, Vermont and its translator W284AB in Jamaica, Vermont. On May 16, 2000, at noon, WEXP became Classic Rock 101, The Fox. The very first song played was "Long Live Rock" by The Who. The station's initial lineup included the syndicated Imus In The Morning show. Alicia Ty hosted the midday slot. Baker was the first program director and afternoon host. John Roberts was hired a bit later, and handled the nighttime programming. "The Janitor" was around for the overnights, and was platooned with "Rachel Lee" in the overnight lineup. "Blade Michael" was the stations first part-time announcer hired, and remains with the station to this day. A $1.01 Gas promotion at a Citgo gas station in Fair Haven, Vermont that brought in hundreds of vehicles, over a three-hour time span was a catalyst in establishing the station as a player in the local marketplace. Several early DJs at the station have moved on to other stations such as Baker going to launch the former WRCZ, "Moose" Waters KAZRDes Moines, Iowa and "Sloppy" Joe going to KDAT in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. The station's signal is directional to the southwest since it is short spaced to WNYQ 101.7 Glens Falls, NY and slightly to the southeast to protect WRSY 101.5 in Marlboro, Vermont. At one time, all three radio stations were owned by Vox Radio Group. The original allocation for the Brandon, Vermont frequency was 101.9 FM, and was moved to its current 101.5 frequency when WCVR-FM in Randolph, Vermont upgraded from a class A at 102.3 FM to a class C3 at 102.1. The original call sign for WEXP was WADT, which was used from 1993 to 1998, though the station never made it on the air under the WADT calls. The WEXP calls were previously used on WKOLPlattsburgh, New York until 1995, and on WSGN-FM in Gadsden Alabama from 1975 until 1984. WEXP, along with 29 other Nassau stations in northern New England, was purchased at bankruptcy auction by Carlisle Capital Corporation, a company controlled by Bill Binnie, on May 22, 2012. The station, and 12 of the other stations, would then be acquired by Vertical Capital Partners, controlled by Jeff Shapiro; however, as this would put Shapiro over the Federal Communications Commission's ownership limits in the Lebanon-Rutland-White River Junction market, WEXP and WWOD would be acquired by Electromagnetic Company, a company controlled by William and Gail Goddard. Simulcast station WTHK was not included in this deal and would remain with Shapiro. This transaction was consummated on November 30, 2012, with the WEXP/WWOD portion valued at a price of $600,000. On December 10, 2012, Scott Fybush reported that Radio Vermont paid $475,000 to buy the station. WEXP's simulcast on WTHK ended on January 22, 2013; that station now simulcasts WXXK. The sale to Radio Vermont was completed on March 15, 2013. On June 12, 2014, Radio Vermont announced that WEXP would drop the classic rock format and launch an undisclosed music format branded as "101 The One" on July 1. The newest format is simulcast with WCVT in Stowe, and features what Ken Squier describes as "a new adult service local to Vermont." Station ownership changed in 2019 and new owner David "Uncle Dave" Tibbs relaunched the station as a non-profit with an eclectic music format, branded as "101-5 WEXP, Community Radio for Rutland County and the Killington Valley." WEXP is community oriented, featuring live, daily interviews with community service providers. A primary objective of WEXP is to present live, in studio performances by local area musicians.