6 January – Due to financial cutbacks at the BBC, BBC1 scales back its weekday early afternoon programming. Consequently, apart from schools programmes, adult education and live sport, the channel now shows a trade test transmission between 2pm and the start of children's programmes and when not broadcasting actual programmes, BBC2 begins fully closing down on weekdays between 11:30am and 4pm.
22 January–26 February – Drama series The Love School, about the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, is broadcast on BBC2.
1 April – Premiere of Edward the Seventh, a drama series made by ATV in 13 one-hour episodes and based on the biography of King Edward VII by Sir Philip Magnus.
11 June – A pilot of the sitcom The Melting Pot, written by and starring Spike Milligan (in brownface) with Neil Shand, is broadcast on BBC2. The following year, a full series of six episodes is recorded but never broadcast.
19 September – BFBS Television broadcasts for the first time, in Celle, near Hanover in the West Germany from Trenchard Barracks.[5] The service consists of taped broadcasts from the BBC and ITV, flown to Germany from London which are then rebroadcast using low-power UHF transmitters.[6]
19 September – John Cleese's much-loved hotel comedy series Fawlty Towers debuts on BBC2, with the episode "A Touch of Class".
25 September – Yorkshire Television premieres Animal Kwackers, the British version of the American television series The Banana Splits Adventure Hour which ended almost six years earlier but shorter and very different from the U.S. version. It goes on to air for 3 series.
9 December – 15th anniversary of the first episode of Coronation Street.
16 December – BBC1 show the courtroom drama Rumpole of the Bailey, as part of the Play for Today series. The titular character played by Leo McKern proves so popular that the ITV would develop it into a full series in 1978.
24 December – BBC1 show the 1974 animated film version of Oscar Wilde's children's story The Happy Prince, narrated by Christopher Plummer. The short film would be shown several times on the BBC until 1986.
25 December – As part of the Christmas Day highlights BBC1 screens the UK television premiere of the 1939 MGM fantasy musical The Wizard of Oz, starring Judy Garland. The film will go on to be shown regularly on the BBC during the Christmas period until the 1990s. Also receiving a world television premiere on BBC1 is Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid starring Robert Redford and Paul Newman.[8]