Skip to main content

Elon Musk reveals upcoming internet speeds for Starlink service

SpaceX’s Starlink service is already serving more than 10,000 people with broadband beamed down from space.

Recommended Videos

Elon Musk, the chief of California-based SpaceX, has just revealed how he sees the $10 billion project progressing over the next couple of years as the company continues with regular rocket launches to deploy its Starlink satellites in low-Earth orbit. More than 1,000 of the small satellites are already in operation high above the clouds.

SpaceX said recently that the current beta service offers folks in parts of the U.S., Canada, and U.K. internet speeds of around 100 megabits per second (Mbps), but in a tweet posted on Monday, February 22, Musk said this should increase to 300 Mbps later this year. This may not be the kind of super-fast speed that some people are already enjoying, but as Musk points out, it’s a clear improvement on the kind of speeds experienced by many people living in the low-to-medium population density areas that Starlink has in its sights.

Musk added that Starlink’s latency — the time it takes for data to transfer between its original source and its destination — should improve to around 20 milliseconds “later this year.” That’s twice as fast as some of Starlink’s beta customers are thought to be currently experiencing.

The SpaceX boss also believes that by the end of this year his rocket company will have deployed enough Starlink satellites to provide “most of Earth” with some degree of internet service, with the entire planet covered at some point in 2022. “Then it’s about densifying coverage,” Musk said.

Most of Earth by end of year, all by next year, then it’s about densifying coverage.

Important to note that cellular will always have the advantage in dense urban areas.

Satellites are best for low to medium population density areas.

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 22, 2021

SpaceX began a low-key beta test of the $99-a-month service for select users in the summer of 2020. Earlier this month it opened it up to more people by accepting online applications via its website.

The private space company says the aim of its ambitious Starlink project is to offer “fast, reliable internet to locations where access has been unreliable, expensive, or completely unavailable.”

The initiative has the potential to turn into a big money-spinner for SpaceX, too, with Musk suggesting in 2019 that Starlink could eventually generate up to $50 billion in annual revenue if it can secure even just a few percent of the global telecommunications market.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
T-Mobile satellite-to-phone service opens for all, and free until July
Showcase of T-Mobile Starlink service on an iPhone.

Two years ago, T-Mobile inked a deal with SpaceX to enable network connectivity via the Starlink constellation of satellites. Late in 2024, the carrier opened registrations for beta testing its direct-to-cell satellite service. Today, the company aired a Super Bowl ad and announced that the beta testing is now open to everyone.

The coolest part is that T-Mobile will offer free access for all registrations until July. Once the beta freebie is phased out, the service will be bundled at no extra cost for subscribers on the Go5G Next plan covering individual and business customers.

Read more
Elon Musk claims Trump’s Stargate backers ‘don’t actually have the money’
Elon musk as a cowboy

Mere hours after the OpenAI announced the ambitious Stargate Project, which would see up to $500 billion in private AI infrastructure construction over the next four years, Tesla CEO and newly-minted presidential advisor Elon Musk alleged on social media that the project's backers, "don’t actually have the money."

https://x.com/OpenAI/status/1881830103858172059

Read more
Elon Musk says the world is running out of data for AI training
Grok app on an iPhone.

Tesla/X CEO Elon Musk seems to believe that training AI models with solely human-made data is becoming impossible. Musk claims that there's a growing lack of real-world data with which to train AI models, including his Grok AI chatbot.

“We’ve now exhausted basically the cumulative sum of human knowledge … in AI training,” Musk said during an X live-stream interview conducted by Stagwell chairman Mark Penn. “That happened basically last year.”

Read more