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Starlink Mini: How Much It Costs Per Month

Budget Seniors, May 22, 2026May 22, 2026
πŸ›°οΈπŸŽ’
Starlink Mini Β· Kit Price Β· Monthly Plans Β· Standard vs. Mini Β· Hidden Costs Explained

Starlink Mini starts at $50 per month for 100 GB of portable satellite internet β€” but the real monthly cost depends on which plan you pair it with, whether you qualify for a free Mini deal, and what the Standard dish delivers that the Mini cannot. This guide answers every question, from the $40 plan mystery to whether Mini works as your only home internet.

πŸ”₯
What’s Happening Right Now

Starlink dropped the Mini hardware price to $199 for new customers with an activation benefit β€” down from $599 at launch. Residential MAX plan subscribers currently get a free Mini kit rental included at no extra cost, plus 50% off Roam plan pricing. Separately, Amazon is preparing to launch Project Kuiper’s “Nano” dish β€” a direct Mini competitor roughly 7Γ—7 inches β€” as a portable satellite internet device in 2026, signaling the portable satellite market is heating up fast. SpaceX is also rolling out Starlink V3 satellites in early 2026, expected to dramatically increase network capacity and reduce the congestion that slows Mini speeds during peak evening hours.

πŸ“‘ What the Starlink Mini Actually Is β€” The Plain-English Version

The Starlink Mini is SpaceX’s compact, portable satellite dish β€” roughly the size of a hardcover book (11.5 Γ— 10 inches), weighing about 2.4 pounds, and designed to slip into a backpack. Unlike the Standard home dish, which requires a fixed installation and connects to a separate router, the Mini has its router and antenna built into a single unit and powers via standard USB-C. That means you can set it on a picnic table, a boat railing, or an RV roof, plug into a power bank, and be online within four minutes in places with no cell towers for miles. In independent real-world testing across seven different environments β€” deserts, mountains, forests, and open highway β€” the Mini consistently delivered 50 to 150 Mbps download speeds as long as a clear view of the sky existed. At $199 to $249 for the hardware and $50/month for a 100 GB Roam plan, the Mini is currently the most practical portable broadband device available in the United States. The catch β€” and there is a real one β€” is that it is not designed to replace a full home internet setup for a family or anyone who streams heavily.

πŸ’° Starlink Mini Plans & Monthly Costs β€” Every Option

The Starlink Mini is designed for Roam plans β€” portable use that works across states and territories. You can also add it as a second dish to an existing Residential account. Hardware pricing varies by whether you are a new or existing customer and whether the free Mini promotion applies to your address.

Plan Monthly Cost Data Best For
Roam 100 GB Most Popular Mini Plan $50/mo50 GB Residential MAX add-on: $25/mo 100 GB priority, then slower Weekend trips, camping, travel, seasonal cabins β€” light mobile use
Roam 300 GB $120/moResidential MAX add-on: $60/mo 300 GB priority, then slower Frequent travelers, remote workers who use data-heavy apps on the road
Roam Unlimited Best Value for Full-Timers $165/moResidential MAX add-on: $82.50/mo Unlimited (priority during off-peak) Full-time RV living, van life, boating, or anywhere without other internet
Roam Global $200/moWorks across continents Unlimited (regional priority) International travelers, sailors, and remote workers moving between countries
Add-on to Residential MAX +$30/moFree Mini rental included with MAX 50 GB included, 50% off Roam plans Residential MAX subscribers who also travel β€” most cost-effective path to Mini
Standby Mode $5/moKeeps account active Unlimited slow-speed Seasonal use β€” pause full service without canceling; reactivate instantly
⚠️ The Mini Hardware Price Changes β€” Check Before Ordering

Starlink Mini hardware pricing is actively shifting. New customers currently qualify for an activation benefit bringing the hardware down to $199 in most areas. The standard price is $249. Some sources still reference the original $599 launch price β€” that is no longer current. Residential MAX plan subscribers currently receive the Mini as a free rental β€” no hardware purchase required β€” with service billed at 50% off standard Roam pricing. These promotions change without notice. Always check your specific address at starlink.com before ordering, as pricing and availability differ by location and demand.

πŸ“‹ Key Facts β€” Starlink Mini Answered Directly

Below are the most-searched questions about the Starlink Mini β€” answered plainly, without the satellite industry jargon that makes this harder than it needs to be.

  • 1
    How much is the Starlink Mini per month, total? $50/month for 100 GB Roam plan Β· Hardware: $199–$249 one-time Β· Taxes: $5–$12/month extra Β· Free rental available to Residential MAX subscribers Β· Annual all-in cost: approximately $660–$780 for casual travel use
    The full picture of what Starlink Mini costs per month breaks into two parts: hardware and ongoing service. Hardware is a one-time purchase of $199 to $249 for the dish, power cable, and kickstand (no separate router needed β€” it is built in). Monthly service on the Roam 100 GB plan costs $50, plus state and local taxes of approximately $5 to $12 depending on where you live. For a traveler using the 100 GB plan all year, the total annual cost works out to roughly $660 to $780 in service fees plus the one-time hardware purchase. The free Mini option is genuinely worth knowing: Starlink’s Residential MAX plan ($120/month) currently includes a free Mini kit rental, and Roam plan pricing is discounted by 50% for MAX subscribers β€” meaning the 100 GB Roam plan drops to $25/month as an add-on. If you already have or are considering home Starlink service, that path to the Mini is significantly cheaper than buying the hardware separately and paying full Roam pricing.
  • 2
    What is the $40 Starlink plan β€” is it real? Real β€” but highly limited Β· It is a promotional Residential Lite price that appeared briefly in select low-demand areas in early 2026 Β· Not a permanent tier Β· Completely separate from the Mini Β· Standard entry-level plan is $50–$55/month depending on your address
    The $40 Starlink plan that appears in search results and online discussions is not a myth, but it is not a reliable option you can count on. It is a promotional pricing tier β€” labeled Residential Lite β€” that Starlink has offered temporarily in specific low-congestion areas to attract subscribers in areas with available satellite capacity. In early 2026, a promotional rate of $39 to $40/month appeared for new Residential Lite customers at certain addresses, providing up to 100 Mbps speeds for home use. The promotion lasted roughly ten days in some areas before reverting to the standard $50 to $55/month pricing. This price is not shown at most addresses and is not guaranteed to be available when you check. The way to find out if it applies to your location is to enter your specific address at starlink.com β€” promotions are location-specific and not advertised uniformly. Do not plan your budget around $40/month unless starlink.com shows it explicitly for your address at the time you are ordering.
  • 3
    Can I get a Starlink Mini for free? Yes β€” in two scenarios Β· New Residential MAX plan customers currently receive a free Mini kit as a rental included with the plan Β· Existing MAX subscribers should check their account β€” some have been offered the free Mini as a loyalty benefit Β· No permanent “free Mini” for other plan tiers
    Getting a Starlink Mini for free is genuinely possible right now, but it comes with conditions worth understanding. The primary free-Mini path: sign up for Starlink Residential MAX at $120/month for home internet, and the Mini rental is currently included at no additional hardware cost. You also get Roam plan pricing cut in half β€” so the 100 GB Roam plan drops from $50 to $25/month when combined with your MAX account, and the Unlimited Roam plan drops from $165 to $82.50/month. The word “rental” is important here: if you cancel your MAX plan or downgrade, Starlink expects the Mini returned β€” it does not become yours permanently. For existing MAX subscribers, the Starlink app account section is worth checking β€” Starlink has extended the free Mini offer to existing customers in waves, though not all accounts have received it yet. Beyond the MAX plan path, there is no program offering a free Mini to new customers choosing other plan tiers. The $199 activation-benefit price for new customers is the next-best option for those who want the hardware without subscribing to MAX.
  • 4
    Is Starlink Mini as good as the Standard dish? For travel and portability: yes β€” often better Β· For whole-home coverage: no β€” Standard is 40–60% faster in real-world testing and covers a larger area Β· Mini’s Wi-Fi range is shorter, has no Ethernet port without an adapter, and uses Wi-Fi 5 vs. the Standard’s Wi-Fi 6
    The honest answer depends on what “good” means for your specific use. In five months of real-world testing across mountains, deserts, and forests, the Mini delivered speeds between 50 and 150 Mbps download β€” fast enough for 4K streaming, video calls, and working remotely when you have a clear sky view. That is genuinely impressive for a device the size of a hardcover book. Where the Standard dish wins decisively: in-home coverage and peak throughput. Real-world testing shows the Standard consistently delivers 40 to 60% faster median download speeds than the Mini in the same location. The Standard’s separate Wi-Fi 6 router covers a much larger indoor area β€” approximately 3,000 square feet β€” versus the Mini’s built-in router which drops signal quality noticeably through walls and across larger spaces. The Mini also lacks a built-in Ethernet port, requiring a $25 adapter if you want a wired connection. Latency is comparable between the two: 30 to 50 milliseconds for both, which is adequate for video calls, streaming, and most online gaming. Bottom line: the Mini is not a downgrade from Standard for its intended purpose. It is a different tool β€” exceptional for travel, limited for whole-house coverage.
  • 5
    What does 100 GB of data per month actually cover on the Roam plan? 100 GB covers approximately: 40 hours of HD video streaming Β· 100+ hours of music Β· 500+ hours of web browsing Β· 20–25 hours of video calls Β· Once you hit 100 GB, speeds slow β€” no extra charge, no bill surprise
    One hundred gigabytes per month sounds like a lot β€” and for most people on the move, it genuinely is. The data activities that eat through it fastest are video streaming and video calls over cellular. Streaming Netflix in HD burns approximately 3 GB per hour. Streaming in 4K uses roughly 7 GB per hour. A one-hour Zoom call uses about 1.5 to 2 GB. Regular web browsing, email, map navigation, and music streaming collectively use less than 1 GB per hour. In practice, a solo traveler spending weekends at campsites β€” doing email, browsing, watching one or two shows in the evening β€” rarely hits 100 GB in a month if they are also connected to home or hotel Wi-Fi part of the time. A couple streaming a few hours each evening and working remotely from the road several days a week will start feeling the cap. When you reach 100 GB, Starlink slows your connection during network congestion periods rather than charging you more or cutting service β€” the technical term is “deprioritization.” Basic browsing and email still work at reduced speeds; high-definition streaming becomes uncomfortable. The 300 GB plan at $120/month or Unlimited at $165/month are the right upgrades for anyone who knows they will exceed 100 GB regularly.
  • 6
    Can I use the Starlink Mini as my only home internet? Technically yes β€” but it is not the right tool for that job Β· Limited indoor Wi-Fi range Β· No Ethernet without adapter Β· Speeds lower than Standard during peak hours Β· No snow-melt heater (Standard has one) Β· For whole-home fixed use, the Standard Residential plan is a far better fit
    People do use the Mini as a primary home internet connection β€” particularly in small apartments, tiny homes, and cabins β€” and it works. A single user streaming, browsing, and video calling in a compact space can be served adequately by the Mini’s 50 to 150 Mbps speeds. The practical problems start when the house gets bigger or the number of users increases. The Mini’s built-in Wi-Fi antenna does not throw signal as far as the Standard’s dedicated router β€” in testing, signal degrades noticeably through two walls and becomes unreliable across a medium-sized house. Multiple simultaneous users streaming different content in different rooms will strain the Mini’s throughput in ways the Standard handles comfortably. There is also a meaningful winter consideration: the Standard dish includes a built-in heating element that automatically melts snow and ice accumulation. The Mini has no heater β€” in northern climates, a heavy snowfall covering the Mini will interrupt your service until cleared manually. If you are setting up permanent home internet in a rural area, the Standard Residential plan at $55 to $120/month with the Standard dish is the appropriate product. The Mini excels at what it was designed for β€” portable, on-the-go connectivity.
  • 7
    How do I set up the Starlink Mini β€” is it complicated? Setup takes 3–5 minutes Β· Open kickstand, find a clear sky view using the Starlink app’s sky scanner, plug into USB-C power (65W minimum), wait for satellite lock Β· No drilling, no tools, no professional required Β· Works on a picnic table, boat deck, rooftop, or RV roof
    The Starlink Mini’s setup is remarkably simple β€” simpler, in fact, than the Standard home dish because there is no router cable to run or wall mount to install. The process: unfold the integrated kickstand, open the Starlink app on your phone and use the built-in sky scanner to confirm you have a clear, unobstructed view of the northern sky, place the Mini in the optimal spot, plug into any USB-C power source rated at 65 watts or higher, and wait two to four minutes for it to acquire satellite lock. The app shows a live signal quality indicator during this process. A standard portable power station rated at 100 watts or more provides enough power to run the Mini off-grid for six to twelve hours on a full charge, depending on the power station’s capacity. For a slightly better experience, a short USB-C cable extender lets you position the dish away from obstructions while keeping the power bank inside your vehicle or tent. The Mini can also be used while moving at speeds under 100 miles per hour β€” useful for in-vehicle use during road trips. No professional installation, no drilling, and no tools are needed for any of these configurations.
  • 8
    What is the Starlink Residential Lite plan, and how is it different from the Mini plans? Residential Lite is a home internet plan ($55–$80/month) used with the Standard dish at a fixed address β€” not compatible with the Mini Β· It is not a travel plan Β· Mini users need Roam plans Β· Residential Lite is the most affordable fixed-home Starlink tier in areas where it is available
    Residential Lite is a plan for fixed home internet β€” it is designed for the Standard dish installed at a specific address, and it does not support the Mini or mobile use. Residential Lite delivers speeds up to 100 Mbps, carries the lowest network priority of all residential tiers (meaning it is the first to slow down during peak hours), and is priced at approximately $55 to $80/month depending on your location. It was briefly discontinued in late 2025 and relaunched in early 2026 in select areas, so its availability at any given address is not guaranteed. It serves light home internet users β€” one or two people doing email, occasional streaming, and browsing β€” who do not need the higher speeds and network priority of the standard Residential plan. The common confusion: people search “Residential Lite” alongside the Mini because both are the lower-cost tiers. They are entirely separate products for entirely separate use cases. If you want portable travel internet, you need the Mini hardware and a Roam plan. If you want affordable home internet at a fixed address, you need the Standard dish and a Residential plan β€” including Residential Lite if it is available at your address.
πŸ“Š Starlink Mini vs. Standard Dish β€” Side by Side

The two kits connect to the same Starlink satellite constellation but serve fundamentally different purposes. Understanding the differences prevents the most common buyer’s mistake: getting the Mini expecting whole-home coverage, or avoiding the Mini for travel when it would serve perfectly.

Feature πŸŽ’ Mini 🏠 Standard
Hardware Cost $199–$249 $349
Weight 2.4 lbs ~9 lbs (full kit)
Size 11.5 Γ— 10 inches 23.5 Γ— 14.2 inches
Power Source USB-C (65W min) β€” any power bank Proprietary cable + outlet
Download Speeds 50–150 Mbps typical 100–400 Mbps typical
Wi-Fi Standard Wi-Fi 5 (built in) Wi-Fi 6 (separate router)
Indoor Coverage Smaller area, degrades through walls ~3,000 sq ft, consistent
Ethernet Port Adapter required ($25 extra) Built in (1 Gigabit)
Snow Melt Heater No Yes β€” automatic
Entry Monthly Cost $50/mo (Roam 100 GB) $55/mo (Residential Lite)
Plan Type Roam (portable) Residential (fixed address)
Setup Time 3–5 minutes anywhere 30–45 min (tools needed for mounting)
Use While Moving Yes, up to 100 mph Not designed for this
πŸ’‘ The Two-Dish Strategy Most People Miss

Starlink’s Residential MAX plan currently bundles the Mini rental with home Residential service for a single combined bill β€” making it the cheapest way to have both. A household paying $120/month for MAX gets high-speed home internet on the Standard dish and a portable Mini for travel at no extra hardware cost, with Roam plans at 50% off. That is the equivalent of getting a full travel satellite internet setup for an additional $25/month on top of what you are already paying for home internet. For families who travel seasonally, own a cabin or lake house, or want backup connectivity for emergencies, this bundle represents exceptional value.

πŸ” Which Starlink Mini Plan Fits Your Situation?
I want Starlink internet for weekend camping and occasional road trips β€” what do I actually need?
CAMPING Β· WEEKEND TRAVEL
The Starlink Mini with the $50/month Roam 100 GB plan is the right setup for occasional camping and road trips β€” and the Standby Mode feature makes it affordable to pause during the months you are not using it. For a weekend camping trip every few weeks with browsing, video calls, and a few hours of streaming in the evenings, 100 GB is typically more than enough in a single month. The Mini weighs 2.4 pounds and fits alongside a laptop in any backpack. It draws 40 to 75 watts of power β€” a 300-watt-hour portable power station runs it for approximately 4 to 7 hours off-grid. Setup at the campsite takes four minutes: unfold the kickstand, check the app’s sky scanner for obstructions, plug in. For months when you are not camping or traveling, Standby Mode at $5/month keeps your account active without paying the full $50 β€” and you can reactivate to full service instantly through the app the moment you need it again. The Standby approach makes seasonal travel use genuinely cost-effective: paying $5 for nine home months and $50 for three travel months costs $105/year total versus $600 for twelve months at full price.
πŸŽ’ 4-min setup: kickstand + USB-C power + clear sky πŸ’° Seasonal use: Standby Mode $5/mo when not traveling πŸ”‹ 300Wh power bank: 4–7 hrs off-grid runtime πŸ“Ά 100 GB: enough for a long weekend easily
I live full-time in an RV or spend extended periods off-grid β€” which plan handles that?
FULL-TIME RV Β· VAN LIFE
Full-time RV living and van life demand the Roam Unlimited plan at $165/month β€” the 100 GB cap runs out within the first week for anyone using internet as their primary connection. Running video calls for work, streaming in the evenings, using navigation apps, and staying connected via social media adds up to 5 to 15 GB per day for a typical remote worker. Roam Unlimited provides unlimited data with priority service during off-peak hours and deprioritization (slower speeds) during congestion periods on busy networks β€” not a hard cutoff. One important note: “unlimited” on the Roam plan means you will not run out of data, but your speeds may slow during peak hours (generally 6 to 11 PM) when the satellite network is congested. This reflects the lower network priority that Roam plans carry compared to Residential plans. For most full-timers, speeds remain usable throughout the day and slow to 20 to 40 Mbps in heavy congestion periods β€” still adequate for email, video calls, and standard-definition streaming. The Residential MAX + free Mini bundle path is worth evaluating: if you have a home base with internet needs, MAX at $120/month with a 50%-off Unlimited Roam add-on at $82.50/month may be cheaper than buying the Mini outright and paying $165/month full Roam price.
♾️ Unlimited Roam: $165/mo β€” non-negotiable for full-timers πŸ’‘ MAX bundle path: $82.50/mo Unlimited Roam if you also have home internet πŸŒ™ Peak hours (6–11 PM): speeds may slow but don’t cut off πŸ”Œ Roof-mount the Mini on your RV β€” works at speeds under 100 mph
I mainly use the internet for email and video calls β€” is the Starlink Mini overkill for me?
LIGHT USE Β· SENIORS Β· RETIREES
For email, video calls, and casual browsing while traveling, the Mini is not overkill β€” it is exactly the right level of capability, and no cheaper portable satellite option currently matches its combination of performance and simplicity. Video calls on FaceTime, Zoom, or Google Meet require roughly 3 to 5 Mbps per call β€” the Mini’s 50+ Mbps speeds provide more than ten times that with headroom to spare. Checking email and browsing news sites uses a fraction of 1 Mbps. The 100 GB Roam plan at $50/month comfortably handles this usage pattern for an entire month of travel. The Mini’s built-in Wi-Fi means no router to configure, no extra box to carry, and no technical setup beyond pointing the dish at the sky. The Starlink app assists with finding the best placement using your phone’s camera β€” no climbing on roofs or guessing required. For retirees and older travelers who want reliable internet at a remote cabin, on a cruise ship, or during an extended road trip without depending on spotty cellular service, the Mini resolves the single biggest travel frustration β€” being unreachable or unable to video call home β€” at a reasonable monthly cost.
πŸ“ž Video calls only need 5 Mbps β€” Mini delivers 50–150 Mbps πŸ“§ Email + browsing: uses under 1 GB per day total πŸ“± App guides placement β€” no technical knowledge required πŸ•οΈ Remote cabin without cell service: Mini replaces all of it
I already have Starlink at home β€” how do I add the Mini without paying full price?
EXISTING CUSTOMERS Β· UPGRADE PATH
If you have an existing Starlink Residential account, the cheapest path to the Mini is upgrading to the Residential MAX plan and claiming the free Mini rental that is currently included. MAX costs $120/month β€” if you are already on the standard Residential plan at $80 or $120/month, the upgrade cost may be minimal or nothing. MAX subscribers also get Roam plan pricing cut in half: the 100 GB Roam plan drops from $50 to $25/month, and Unlimited Roam drops from $165 to $82.50/month. Log into your Starlink account at starlink.com and check the plan upgrade section β€” the free Mini offer appears there if your account is eligible. Existing customers who do not qualify for the MAX bundle can still purchase the Mini hardware separately through the Starlink accessories store; as an existing subscriber, you can add it to your account as a second dish for an additional $30/month service fee rather than signing up for a separate full-price Roam plan. That path β€” existing account + Mini hardware purchase + $30/month add-on β€” is often cheaper than a standalone Roam account for someone who primarily wants the Mini for occasional travel.
πŸ†“ Upgrade to MAX: free Mini rental included πŸ’° MAX + Roam 100 GB add-on: $120 + $25 = $145/mo total for home + travel πŸ”„ Existing account: add Mini as second dish for $30/mo extra πŸ“± Check eligibility: log in at starlink.com β†’ Account β†’ Plans
Can the Starlink Mini be used as an emergency backup internet at home?
BACKUP INTERNET Β· EMERGENCY PREP
The Starlink Mini is one of the most practical emergency internet backup solutions available β€” it stores easily, sets up in under five minutes, runs on a power bank if your electricity is out, and reaches satellite coverage unaffected by ground-level disasters that knock out cable and cell towers. During hurricanes, major winter storms, wildfires, and other natural disasters, cable and fiber lines go down while satellite service continues. FEMA and state emergency management offices increasingly recognize satellite internet as a critical resilience tool for households in disaster-prone areas. The Mini’s USB-C power requirement means any laptop power bank rated 65 watts or higher can run it during a power outage β€” making it functional entirely off-grid. Keeping a Mini on Standby Mode at $5/month during months of regular home internet use means you have an emergency backup available instantly for just $60/year in standby fees. When disaster strikes and you need it, reactivate to full service through the app instantly. For households in hurricane zones, areas with frequent ice storms that down power lines, or remote properties reliant on a single ISP, this is the most underutilized feature of the Mini’s design.
⚑ Power outage: USB-C power bank runs Mini fully off-grid πŸŒ€ Satellite unaffected by ground-level infrastructure damage πŸ’€ Standby Mode: $5/mo keeps backup available year-round πŸ“± Reactivate instantly from app β€” no wait, no call needed
πŸ“ Find Starlink Hardware & Local Tech Help Near You

Starlink Mini hardware is sold online at starlink.com and through select retailers. Use the buttons below to find stores that carry Starlink equipment, locate tech setup help near you, or find internet service providers in your area for comparison.

Searching near you…
πŸ”‘ Quick Reference β€” Starlink Mini Key Links & Contacts
πŸ›°οΈ Order Mini & check pricing: starlink.com πŸ“‹ All plans: starlink.com/service-plans πŸ“± Starlink app: App Store / Google Play (search “Starlink”) πŸ’¬ Starlink support: support.starlink.com πŸ”Œ Coverage checker: starlink.com/map ⏸️ Standby Mode: Starlink app β†’ Account β†’ Manage Plan πŸͺ Retail: Best Buy Β· Home Depot Β· Costco (select stores) πŸ”„ 30-day return: full hardware refund if not satisfied πŸ›οΈ FCC broadband subsidies: broadbandusa.ntia.gov πŸ“ž FCC consumer help: 1-888-225-5322
βœ… 5-Step Checklist Before Ordering Starlink Mini
  • Step 1: Enter your home or travel address at starlink.com to confirm Starlink is available and to see your actual hardware price. Promotional pricing like $199 activation benefit or $40/month plans are address-specific β€” you will only see them if they apply to your location.
  • Step 2: If you already have a Starlink Residential account (or are considering one), check whether upgrading to MAX gives you the free Mini rental. That path β€” MAX plan + 50%-off Roam β€” is usually cheaper than buying the Mini separately and subscribing to a standalone Roam account.
  • Step 3: Choose the right Roam plan for your actual travel habits. Weekend trips: 100 GB at $50/month. Frequent travel: 300 GB at $120/month. Full-time RV or van life: Unlimited at $165/month. Overbuying costs money; underbuy and you hit the cap mid-trip.
  • Step 4: Get a power source sorted before the hardware arrives. The Mini requires a USB-C power supply rated at 65 watts minimum. A standard laptop charger may work; a portable power station is the best option for off-grid use. Confirm the wattage of what you own before your first trip.
  • Step 5: Use Starlink’s 30-day return policy. Order, set it up at your intended location or during a real camping trip, and test it. If the speeds or coverage disappoint at your specific use case, return the hardware for a full refund with no cancellation fee.

Starlink Mini pricing, plan availability, promotional offers, and hardware costs are set by SpaceX and change frequently without notice. Prices shown reflect current commonly reported U.S. rates and may not reflect your specific address’s pricing, active promotions, or congestion surcharges. Always verify your exact price by entering your service address at starlink.com before ordering. This page has no affiliation with SpaceX, Starlink, or any retailer.

Recommended Reads

  1. Starlink for Car
  2. How Much Does Starlink Equipment Cost?
  3. Starlink at Costco β€” Complete Buying Guide
  4. Starlink Canada Plans for Seniors β€” Prices, Discounts & Everything Explained
  5. Starlink Cost Per Month for Seniors β€” Every Plan, Real Savings, & Honest Answers
  6. Starlink Canada β€” Plans, Prices & Complete Guide
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