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Starlink’s In-Flight Wi-Fi Is Faster Than Its Home Internet Speeds: Here’s Why

Starlink is the fastest in-flight internet option by far.

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Headshot of Joe Supan
Joe Supan Senior Writer
Joe Supan is a senior writer for CNET covering home technology, broadband, and moving. Prior to joining CNET, Joe led MyMove's moving coverage and reported on broadband policy, the digital divide, and privacy issues for the broadband marketplace Allconnect. He has been featured as a guest columnist on Broadband Breakfast, and his work has been referenced by the Los Angeles Times, Forbes, National Geographic, Yahoo! Finance and more.
Joe Supan
2 min read
Starlink logo on a phone.

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Starlink is nearly twice as fast as any other in-flight Wi-Fi option, according to the latest report by the speed test site Ookla. (Disclaimer: Ookla is owned by the same parent company as CNET, Ziff Davis.)

The satellite internet company from SpaceX clocked median download speeds of 152 megabits per second and upload speeds of 24Mbps. That means that Starlink’s speeds in the air are faster than some internet providers on the ground.

Those download and upload speeds were nearly twice as fast as any other in-flight internet option, but latency was where it really blew the competition away. Starlink’s in-flight latency came in at just 44ms; the next-closest, MTN Satellite Communications, was at 667ms. With those kinds of numbers, you could realistically game online or make a video call on a Starlink-equipped flight. 

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How is it possible that Starlink-equipped planes lap the competition so completely? The answer lies with Starlink’s unique fleet of 7,000 low-Earth orbit satellites. These operate about 342 miles above the ground, compared with over 22,000 miles for geostationary satellites used by providers like Hughesnet and Viasat. 

“That's just physics, right? You're going to have a latency of nearly a second when you're 22,000 miles versus 300 miles,” Kerry Baker, the author of Ookla’s report, told CNET. “What was fun then was to see the data and the airlines line up just as you'd expect from the physics.”

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in-flight-wifi-speeds-ookla
Ookla

Surprisingly, Starlink’s speeds were actually faster in the air than on the ground. According to Ookla’s speed test results from the first quarter of 2025, Starlink users in the US received median download speeds of 105Mbps, upload speeds of 15Mbps and latency of 45ms.  

The other major satellite internet providers, Hughesnet and Viasat, also recorded faster speeds in the air than on the ground, although the most recent data from Ookla on these providers is from 2023. 

According to Ookla’s report, Hawaiian Airlines and Qatar Airways recorded speed test results with Starlink in the first quarter of 2025. United Airlines also began installing Starlink on its planes earlier this year, debuting it on some planes on May 15. Scandinavian Airlines inked a deal in January 2025 to outfit its entire fleet with Starlink.