SpaceX's Starlink has fundamentally changed how we think about satellite internet. Available in Greece since April 2022, the service is especially significant for a country with thousands of islands, mountainous terrain, and rural areas without fiber. With over 10 million subscribers worldwide and 9,422+ active satellites as of January 2026, Starlink is the ultimate connectivity game changer. In this article, we break down pricing, speeds, installation, and the real-world experience of using Starlink in Greece.
📖 Read more: Starlink vs Fixed Internet: 2026 Comparison
🛰️ What Is Starlink — The Technology Explained Simply
Starlink is a Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellite constellation built by SpaceX. Unlike traditional geostationary (GEO) satellites orbiting at ~36,000 km, Starlink satellites fly at just 550 km above Earth. This low orbit means dramatically lower latency: 25-35ms compared to the 600ms+ of older satellite services.
Each Starlink satellite weighs approximately 260 kg and uses Hall-effect thrusters with krypton or argon propellant for orbital maneuvering. SpaceX launches dozens of satellites simultaneously aboard Falcon 9 rockets, building the largest satellite constellation in history. As of January 2026, active Starlink satellites account for roughly 65% of all active satellites orbiting Earth — a staggering figure.
💰 Starlink Pricing in Greece — February 2026
Here's a detailed look at what Starlink costs in Greece today. Prices cover the Residential plan and the portable Starlink Mini.
Starlink Greece Price List 2026
| Plan | Hardware | Monthly Fee | Speed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Residential | ~€349 (kit) | ~€65/month | 50-150 Mbps |
| Starlink Mini | ~€229 | ~€65/month | Up to 100 Mbps |
The standard Residential kit includes the dish (Dishy), a router, and all necessary cables. Installation is entirely self-service — place the dish somewhere with a clear sky view, plug it in, download the Starlink app, and follow the instructions. The dish auto-orients for optimal reception. The entire setup takes less than 30 minutes.
Key Cost Considerations
- No contract commitment — cancel anytime
- 1 TB monthly data cap on Residential plans (since 2023)
- After 1 TB, speeds may be throttled during peak hours
- Shipping cost for hardware: approximately €50 extra
- Free 30-day trial with full refund option
Starlink Mini — The Portable Option
The Starlink Mini is a more compact, portable version ideal for travelers, campers, or as a backup connection. At ~€229, it's significantly cheaper upfront. It delivers speeds up to 100 Mbps — plenty for streaming, video calls, and web browsing. Its compact size and USB-C power capability make it extremely convenient for on-the-go use.
📶 Speeds & Performance in Greece
In Greece, typical Starlink download speeds range from 50 to 150 Mbps, depending on time of day, location, and the number of users in the area. Average upload speeds run at 10-20 Mbps, while latency hovers around 25-35ms. Compared to traditional satellite internet (600ms+ latency, 2-10 Mbps), the improvement is dramatic.
📖 Read more: Satellite Internet for Greek Islands: Complete Guide 2026
It's worth noting that speeds can dip during peak hours (evenings, weekends) as more users share the same satellite capacity. Weather can also affect the connection — heavy rain or thick cloud cover may cause brief interruptions. However, these outages typically last seconds to minutes and aren't an issue for most everyday use.
Download Speed
50-150 Mbps typically in Greece. More than enough for 4K streaming, gaming, and remote work. Performance continues to improve as new satellite batches are deployed.
Latency
25-35ms — sufficient for video calls, online gaming, and real-time applications. Comparable to fixed-line VDSL and vastly better than GEO satellites (600ms+).
Data Cap
1 TB/month on Residential plans. Sufficient for the vast majority of households. After 1 TB, deprioritization occurs only during peak hours.
🏝️ Starlink on Greek Islands — The Perfect Fit
Greece, with over 6,000 islands (227 inhabited), faces connectivity challenges that few European countries share. Many islands lack fiber, rely on sluggish VDSL or even ADSL connections, and 4G/5G mobile coverage can be spotty at best. This is precisely where Starlink shines brightest.
For residents on small islands, hotels, vacation rentals, and businesses in tourist destinations, Starlink may be the only viable high-speed internet solution. Installation is self-contained, requires no technician or pre-existing infrastructure, and the connection works the moment the dish is set up.
📱 Installation & the Starlink App
One of Starlink's greatest virtues is installation simplicity. It's a fully self-install system — no technician required. Unbox the equipment, place the dish in a spot with a clear view of the sky (rooftop, garden, balcony), connect the cables, and open the Starlink app on your phone.
📖 Read more: EETT & Telecom Consumer Rights in Greece
The Starlink app (iOS & Android) guides you step by step. It uses augmented reality to show whether your chosen location has sufficient sky visibility — trees, buildings, and other obstructions can degrade the signal. The Dishy dish electronically auto-orients itself for optimal reception. Within minutes, you're online.
Through the app, you can also monitor speed, latency, uptime, data consumption, and diagnose issues. It provides detailed reports on when outages occurred and whether they were caused by obstructions, weather, or network congestion.
🏢 Starlink Financials & Competition
SpaceX achieved something remarkable: Starlink turned its first profit in 2024, earning $72.7 million. Revenue for 2024 reached $7.7 billion, with $11.8 billion projected for 2025. This proves that mass-scale satellite internet can be a viable business.
SpaceX plans 12,000 satellites in the first generation, with possible expansion to 34,400. The current 9,422+ satellites in orbit represent about 65% of all active satellites — a testament to SpaceX's unmatched launch cadence.
The Competition — Amazon Kuiper, OneWeb, AST SpaceMobile
The primary competitor is Amazon's Project Kuiper, planning 3,236 LEO satellites. However, Amazon is well behind schedule — its first commercial satellites are expected later this year. OneWeb (now part of Eutelsat OneWeb) focuses primarily on B2B solutions, while AST SpaceMobile is developing direct-to-cell technology competing with Starlink's own initiative.
📡 Direct-to-Cell — The Future Without a Dish
One of the most exciting developments is Starlink's Direct-to-Cell technology. These are satellites that can communicate directly with regular mobile phones — no special equipment needed. In July 2025, SMS service launched in the US and New Zealand through T-Mobile, AT&T, and Verizon. Expansion to more countries and addition of data connectivity is expected to roll out gradually.
For Greece, Direct-to-Cell could be transformative in remote areas, mountain roads, and open sea routes. Imagine having a mobile signal on the most isolated mountain peak or in the middle of the Aegean — using nothing more than the phone already in your pocket.
📖 Read more: Starlink Maritime: Internet on Ships & Yachts
⚠️ Limitations & Drawbacks
Starlink isn't perfect. There are several limitations worth knowing before you commit:
Points to Consider
- Weather sensitivity: Heavy rain, snow, or thick clouds can cause temporary outages
- Sky visibility: The dish needs an unobstructed view of the sky — trees and buildings can block the signal
- 1 TB data cap: Heavy users (e.g., families with multiple 4K streams) may find this limiting
- Variable speeds: Speeds fluctuate significantly — 50 Mbps during peak hours, 150 Mbps off-peak
- Higher cost: ~€65/month + €349 upfront, while a VDSL connection costs ~€25-35/month
🎯 Who Should Get Starlink
Starlink isn't for everyone — but for many people, it's the only reliable option. It's ideally suited for rural and mountainous areas without fiber or good 4G coverage, Greek island residents with sluggish internet, hotels and rentals in tourist areas, digital nomads based outside cities, boats and RVs, and businesses in remote locations.
For urban dwellers with access to fiber or solid VDSL, Starlink likely isn't worth it — fixed-line connections will be faster, more stable, and cheaper. That said, even in urban areas, it can serve as a backup connection for businesses that cannot afford downtime.
📝 Conclusion
As of February 2026, Starlink is a mature and reliable satellite internet solution. With 10+ million subscribers, 9,422+ satellites, and 50-150 Mbps speeds, it's no longer an experiment — it's a reality. For Greece, a country plagued by chronic connectivity gaps on islands and in the countryside, Starlink may well be the most important telecom development of the past decade. It won't replace fiber in urban centers, but for hundreds of thousands of Greeks in remote areas, it brings city-grade internet where there was nothing before.
