Residential plan price has been set at a monthly ₹8,600, that too after a steep ₹34,000 one-off payment for the necessary hardware. But that’s a beginning. Starlink, the satellite internet division of tech business tycoon Elon Musk’s SpaceX, formally entered the massive Indian market by announcing the prices for its its services for homes. This comes after months of regulatory groundwork and technical preparations.
But what does this mean for the end user? Here are key points on what Starlink brings to India: For now, the announced prices immediately set the Starlink service apart as a premium offering. This led to questions about its immediate accessibility to the masses, especially when the bigger promise is of providing low-cost internet to the rural masses.
The residential plan has been set at a monthly ₹8,600, that too after a steep ₹34,000 one-off payment for the necessary hardware. This positions Starlink significantly above the established fiber-optic broadband services in metro areas. There will be a 30-day free trial period, though. Prices for a planned commercial package were not out yet. The cost stands in sharp contrast to Elon Musk’s stated vision. In a recent interview with Indian entrepreneur Nikhil Kamath, Musk said SpaceX or Starlink now offers “low-cost, dependable internet across more than 150 countries”.
But Starlink is usually pricier than fibre-optic or broadband internet in the US, too. In cities and suburbs, users can get a broadband connection between $50 and $100 a month. It was not immediately clear which areas in India will first get the Starlink connectivity, but the company is reported to have set up hubs in major cities like Mumbai, Delhi, Noida and Pune, among others.
An official announcement on this, and the exact launch date, is awaited as of December 8, 2025; and the Starlink website said “pending regulatory approval” when any Indian address was checked for connectivity. This showed that the full commercial rollout is pending final regulatory and compliance clearances from India’s Department of Telecommunications (DoT).
What difference will Starlink tech make to Indian internet market?
Despite the steep pricing, Starlink’s entry holds promise for the specific demographic it plans to serve eventually — the large rural population and remote areas. The company’s network is powered by satellite, which makes its expanse wider. It is engineered to provide an uptime of more than 99.9 per cent, with its equipment capable of withstanding various weather conditions, the company has said.
This can mean a more robust and reliable service for, say, students and small businesses, even local administrations, in rural areas where traditional broadband networks are either non-existent or suffer from poor reliability. Maharashtra became the first Indian state to formally collaborate with Starlink in November 2025, marking a major milestone in India’s digital infrastructure push.
Plans are long-term, hiring done too
Starlink’s intent to build a long-term presence in India was evident through its recent hiring drive. In late October, SpaceX posted job openings for key role s— including Payments Manager, Accounting Manager, Senior Treasury Analyst, and Tax Manager — all based in Bengaluru. For the Indian consumer, Starlink essentially presents a trade-off: reliability and coverage in remote regions, but a price point that is premium, at least for now.

