Does Starlink Have Data Caps? Budget Seniors, March 25, 2026March 25, 2026 📶✅ Starlink.com Fair Use Policy • SatelliteInternet.com • CableTV.com Verified The plain-English answer — what “unlimited” really means on Starlink, the difference between deprioritization and a real cap, and which plans include hard data limits. No misleading marketing. Just the facts. © BudgetSeniors.com — Independent. Unsponsored. Always in Your Corner. 💡 10 Key Things to Know About Starlink Data Limits The short answer is: Starlink home plans do not have traditional hard data caps — meaning your service will never be cut off or charged overage fees for using too much internet. But “unlimited” on Starlink is not always the same as truly unlimited speed at all times. Depending on your plan, your data may be deprioritized during congested evening hours, which can slow speeds temporarily. The Roam 100GB plan is the one plan that does have a data limit before speed drops. Here is the full, honest breakdown that most articles fail to explain clearly. 1 Does Starlink have hard data caps that cut off your internet? No. Starlink does not cut off your internet service or charge overage fees when you use a lot of data. All Residential home plans include unlimited data with no hard cutoff. Unlike old satellite internet providers like HughesNet and Viasat, which enforce strict monthly data buckets that throttle your connection to nearly unusable speeds (1–3 Mbps) once you hit your cap, Starlink home plans do not work that way. You will never lose your internet connection or receive a surprise overage bill from Starlink for watching too many movies or using too much data. The Starlink Fair Use Policy (official document at starlink.com) confirms that network management only applies when demand for network resources actually exceeds supply — not as a rigid monthly cutoff. 2 What does “deprioritization” mean and how is it different from a data cap? A data cap cuts your speed regardless of network conditions. Deprioritization only slows you down when the satellite above your area is congested — if it is quiet, you get full speed no matter how much data you have used. This is the most important distinction in all of Starlink’s data policy. A traditional data cap (like HughesNet) is a hard wall: use 15 GB and get throttled to 1 Mbps for the rest of the month, no matter what time it is. Deprioritization is conditional: if you are the only person using the satellite cell in your area at 3:00 AM, you will get full speeds even if you have streamed hundreds of gigabytes that month. Speeds only slow down when the satellite overhead is serving many users simultaneously — typically 5–11 PM in your local time zone. In rural areas with few nearby Starlink subscribers, deprioritization is rarely noticeable at any time of day. 3 Which Starlink plan has the best unlimited data for home use? The Residential MAX plan at $120/month has the highest network priority with no speed cap. It delivers the best and most consistent speeds, especially during peak evening hours, of any Residential plan. The Residential MAX plan, introduced in January 2026, gives subscribers the highest residential network priority. When the satellite above your home serves both MAX subscribers and cheaper-plan subscribers simultaneously, MAX subscribers get bandwidth first. This means MAX users experience the least slowdown during congested evening hours. MAX also has no download speed cap (unlike the 100 Mbps and 200 Mbps plans), so in uncongested areas users regularly see 150–250 Mbps and peaks above 400 Mbps. For seniors relying on Starlink for telehealth video calls, video chatting with family, or streaming TV in the evenings, MAX provides the most consistent experience. 4 Is the Residential 200 Mbps plan truly unlimited? Yes — no hard data cap, no cutoff. But your maximum download speed is capped at 200 Mbps and your data is deprioritized behind MAX subscribers during busy evenings. The Residential 200 Mbps plan ($80/month, select areas) offers unlimited data with two practical limitations vs. MAX: first, your download speed is hard-capped at 200 Mbps even when the network is completely empty; second, during peak congestion hours (typically 5–11 PM), MAX subscribers get priority bandwidth before you. In rural areas where few people have Starlink, this distinction is usually invisible in practice — speeds consistently reach 150–200 Mbps. In suburban areas with many Starlink subscribers, evening speeds may drop to 50–100 Mbps. You are never disconnected and you never owe extra money. 5 Does the Roam plan have a data cap? The Roam Unlimited plan ($165/month) has no data cap, though data is deprioritized behind Residential subscribers. The Roam 100GB plan has a 100 GB data limit, after which speeds drop to low-speed unlimited mode. Starlink’s Roam plans serve travelers, RV users, and boaters who want to use Starlink away from a fixed home address. The Roam Unlimited plan ($165/month) delivers unlimited data that is always deprioritized behind Residential users on the same satellite — no hard cap, but lower priority. The Roam 100GB plan ($50/month) is the one plan in Starlink’s consumer lineup that does impose a meaningful data threshold: once you use 100 GB in a billing period, the plan switches to unlimited low-speed data (capped at a slow speed). This plan is designed for occasional travelers and weekend campers, not everyday use. Additional data cannot be purchased for Roam 100GB plans as of 2026. 6 What is the Fair Use Policy and does it affect average households? Starlink’s Fair Use Policy reserves the right to deprioritize users who “consistently exceed what is allocated to a typical residential user” — interpreted as several terabytes per month. The average household uses 300–600 GB/month and is not affected. The official Starlink Fair Use Policy is located at starlink.com/legal and states that Starlink manages the network “when the demand for network resources actually exceeds supply.” Starlink also monitors for usage that “consistently exceeds what is allocated to a typical residential user.” Industry experts interpret this threshold as several terabytes per month — far beyond what normal households consume. The average American household uses approximately 500 GB per month according to FCC broadband data. Even heavy streamers watching 4K Netflix daily (about 7 GB per hour in 4K) would reach roughly 210 GB per month from streaming alone. Almost all typical households are far below any threshold that would attract Starlink’s attention under the Fair Use Policy. 7 When is Starlink most likely to slow down for home users? Between 5 PM and 11 PM local time is peak slowdown risk. This is when most households stream TV and use the internet simultaneously. Rural areas rarely notice this; suburban and high-density areas notice it more. Evening hours are when internet usage peaks globally — families finishing dinner, watching TV, streaming movies, and browsing social media simultaneously. This creates the most competition for bandwidth on any shared network, including Starlink satellites. In practice, the impact varies dramatically by location. In a rural area where Starlink serves 50 homes within a satellite coverage cell, few subscribers compete for bandwidth and evening speeds barely dip. In a suburban area where hundreds of Starlink subscribers share the same cell, evening speeds on lower-priority plans can drop noticeably. Rural Starlink users — exactly the customers Starlink is designed for — are the least affected by peak-hour deprioritization. 8 How does Starlink compare to HughesNet and Viasat on data limits? Starlink is dramatically better. HughesNet hard-caps at 15–100 GB/month and throttles to 1–3 Mbps after the cap. Viasat uses soft caps around 850 GB. Starlink home plans have no cutoff and no overage fees. Traditional geostationary satellite internet has always been defined by restrictive data limits because bandwidth is scarce on those satellites. HughesNet plans cap between 15 and 100 GB of high-speed data per month, then throttle your speed to 1–3 Mbps — barely enough to load a text-based webpage — for the rest of the month. This is a true hard cap. Viasat has an “unlimited” plan but includes a soft cap around 850 GB after which users are deprioritized behind all other users. Viasat’s overall network capacity is lower than Starlink’s, so deprioritization on Viasat means more dramatic slowdowns. Starlink’s unlimited, no-cutoff approach is one of its most significant advantages over legacy satellite internet providers. 9 Can I buy extra data if I am worried about hitting a limit on Starlink? On Residential home plans, you do not need to — there is no limit to buy past. Priority plans for businesses do have data buckets, but home Residential plans just deprioritize without cutting off or charging more. Starlink’s Priority plans (aimed at businesses and high-demand users) do have defined data buckets (50 GB, 500 GB, etc.) and will drop to 1 Mbps once exhausted unless additional data is purchased. However, for home Residential plans — the plans most people use for home internet — there is no data to buy extra of because there is no hard cap to exceed. The Starlink Fair Use Policy applies to extreme edge cases involving multiple terabytes, not to any normal household usage. You can track your monthly data usage in the Starlink app if you are curious, but most home users will never approach any level that would trigger even temporary deprioritization. 10 How much data does a typical household actually use, and how does it compare to Starlink’s limits? The average U.S. household uses around 500 GB per month. Starlink Residential home plans have no meaningful cap for this usage level — you would need to use several terabytes to attract any attention under the Fair Use Policy. To put Starlink’s data policy in real-life context: streaming Netflix in HD uses about 3 GB per hour; 4K streaming uses 7 GB per hour. A household that streams 4 hours of TV per day (2,920 hours per year) uses approximately 8,760 GB of streaming data per year, or about 730 GB per month from streaming alone. Add web browsing, video calls, and other internet use and a heavy household might reach 1 TB per month — still well within the territory where Starlink imposes no limitations whatsoever on Residential plans. Previous Starlink systems had a 1 TB soft cap, but that was removed after SpaceX significantly expanded its satellite constellation. Current Residential plans are genuinely unlimited for almost all real-world household use. Sources: Starlink.com Fair Use Policy official document (network management when demand exceeds supply; consistent excess threshold; plan-specific deprioritization rules); SatelliteInternet.com Mar 2026 (no hard caps; no cutoff; fair use; HughesNet 1-3 Mbps throttle; deprioritization vs. throttling; 3AM rural example; several TB threshold); DishyCentral.com Jan 2026 (previous 1TB system removed; peak 5-11 PM; deprioritization conditional; rural rarely affected; off-peak full speed); BudgetSeniors.com Mar 2026 (three Residential plans $50/$80/$120; MAX highest priority; 200/100 Mbps speed caps; unlimited data all plans; Roam Unlimited $165 deprioritized; switch any time app); EarthSIMs.com Feb 2026 (Residential data unlimited no hard caps; rural 150-250 Mbps; suburban 50-100 Mbps peak; Roam behind Residential priority); CableTV.com Mar 2026 (Roam 100GB plan has data limit; MAX $120 highest priority; $80 200 Mbps deprioritized) 📋 Data Limits on Every Starlink Home Plan — At a Glance 💡 “Unlimited” Means Different Things on Different Plans All Starlink Residential home plans advertise unlimited data — but the word “unlimited” covers three distinct experiences. The Residential MAX plan has truly unlimited speed and no deprioritization. Cheaper Residential plans have unlimited data but cap your maximum speed and deprioritize during peak hours. The key rule: no Residential plan ever cuts you off or charges overages. Best Data Policy Residential MAX Truly Unlimited $120/mo • Most U.S. areas No hard data cap No speed cap (up to 400 Mbps) Highest network priority Best performance at peak hours No overage charges Includes free Router Mini Unlimited w/ Limits Residential 200 Mbps Unlimited* $80/mo • Select areas No hard data cap Speed capped at 200 Mbps Deprioritized behind MAX users Slowdowns possible 5–11 PM No overage charges Fine for most households Unlimited w/ Limits Residential 100 Mbps Unlimited* $50/mo • Select low-congestion areas No hard data cap Speed capped at 100 Mbps Deprioritized behind MAX users Slowdowns possible 5–11 PM No overage charges Good for light users * “Unlimited” means no cutoff, but download speed is capped at the plan’s stated maximum and data may be deprioritized during peak hours. Sources: BudgetSeniors.com Mar 2026 (plan features; MAX no speed cap; 200/100 Mbps speed caps; all unlimited data; no overage); SatelliteInternet.com Mar 2026 (plan tiers; MAX $120; 200 Mbps $80; 100 Mbps $50 select areas); CableTV.com Mar 2026 (MAX includes free Router Mini; highest priority; up to 400 Mbps) 🧭 Will Data Limits Affect You? Find Out in Seconds Answer two quick questions to get a plain-language assessment of how Starlink’s data policies will affect your specific household. 📋 Tell Us About How You Use the Internet How do you mainly use the internet? — Select your main use — Light: email, news, web browsing Medium: streaming TV, video calls Heavy: 4K streaming, gaming, working from home Very heavy: multiple people, always on Where do you live? — Select your area — Rural (few neighbors with Starlink) Suburban (some Starlink neighbors) RV / Camper / Boat (Roam plan) Based on: DishyCentral.com Jan 2026; SatelliteInternet.com Mar 2026; EarthSIMs.com Feb 2026; BudgetSeniors.com Mar 2026; FCC broadband data average household usage 📋 Starlink vs. Other Satellite Internet — Data Policy Comparison Provider Hard Data Cap? After Cap / Limit Overage Fees? Monthly Limit Starlink Residential MAX ✅ None N/A — truly unlimited ✅ Never Unlimited Starlink Residential 200 Mbps ✅ None Deprioritized during peak hours ✅ Never Unlimited* Starlink Residential 100 Mbps ✅ None Deprioritized during peak hours ✅ Never Unlimited* Starlink Roam Unlimited ✅ None Always deprioritized vs. Residential ✅ Never Unlimited* Starlink Roam 100GB ⚠️ Soft cap at 100 GB Drops to unlimited low-speed mode ✅ No extra charges 100 GB high-speed HughesNet (basic plans) ❌ Hard cap (15–100 GB) Throttled to 1–3 Mbps rest of month No (just throttled) 15–100 GB Viasat “Unlimited” ⚠️ Soft cap ~850 GB Deprioritized behind ALL users No (just throttled) ~850 GB soft limit Typical Cable / Fiber Often 1–1.25 TB soft cap $10/50 GB overage or throttled Sometimes yes 1–1.25 TB soft Sources: SatelliteInternet.com Mar 2026 (HughesNet throttle 1-3 Mbps; Viasat soft cap; Starlink no cutoff); DishyCentral.com Jan 2026 (deprioritization vs. throttle definition); CableTV.com Mar 2026 (plan details); BudgetSeniors.com Mar 2026 (Roam 100GB switches to low-speed unlimited; no additional data purchase available) 📊 Starlink Data Policy — Key Numbers 💰 Overage Fees on Residential Plans $0 Starlink charges zero overage fees on all Residential home plans. You will never receive a surprise bill for using more data than expected. Service continues uninterrupted regardless of how much you use. 🏠 Avg. U.S. Household Monthly Data ~500 GB The average U.S. household uses approximately 500 GB of internet data per month (FCC broadband data). This is well below any level that would trigger Starlink’s Fair Use Policy, which targets extraordinary users consuming several terabytes. ⏰ Peak Slowdown Window 5–11 PM Evening hours are the most likely time for deprioritization on lower-tier Starlink plans. During these hours in congested areas, Residential MAX subscribers get bandwidth priority. Off-peak hours (late night, early morning) deliver full speeds to all plan tiers. ⚠️ One Plan With a Real Limit Roam 100 GB The Roam 100 GB plan ($50/month) is the only Starlink consumer plan with a meaningful data threshold. After 100 GB, it drops to unlimited low-speed mode. This plan is designed for occasional travelers, not everyday home internet use. 📺 4K Streaming Data Per Hour ~7 GB/hr Netflix 4K uses approximately 7 GB per hour. At 4 hours/day, that is 840 GB/month from streaming alone — still within Starlink Residential’s unlimited data territory. 📹 HD Streaming Data Per Hour ~3 GB/hr Standard HD streaming uses about 3 GB per hour. Most households streaming 3–4 hours/day in HD use 270–360 GB/month from streaming — well within typical household averages. 📞 Video Call Data Per Hour ~0.5–1.5 GB/hr Zoom, FaceTime, and telehealth calls use 0.5–1.5 GB per hour. Even daily 1-hour video calls add only 15–45 GB per month to your total usage — a very small portion of Starlink’s effectively unlimited home data. Sources: Starlink.com Fair Use Policy; SatelliteInternet.com Mar 2026; FCC Fixed Broadband Deployment Data (average U.S. household ~500 GB/month); Netflix/streaming bandwidth data (4K ~7 GB/hr; HD ~3 GB/hr); Zoom/FaceTime published bandwidth specs (0.5-1.5 GB/hr video calls); BudgetSeniors.com Mar 2026 ❓ Starlink Data Questions Answered Plainly 💡 I Watch a Lot of TV. Will Starlink Cut Me Off? No — and this is one of Starlink’s strongest advantages over legacy satellite internet. Streaming TV is one of the heaviest data activities most households engage in, and Starlink’s Residential plans are designed specifically for this. Netflix in 4K uses about 7 GB per hour. If your household watches 4 hours of TV per day, that is approximately 840 GB per month from TV alone. Add web browsing, video calls, and other activities, and a heavy TV-watching household might use 1–1.5 TB per month — still well within the territory where Starlink imposes no restrictions on Residential plans. On HughesNet, 840 GB of streaming would blast through a monthly data cap in the first week or two, leaving you stuck at 1 Mbps for the rest of the month. On Starlink, you watch as much as you want and never receive a bill for it. The only thing you might notice is slightly slower speeds on a cheaper plan during very busy evenings — and even then, typically not enough to interrupt normal viewing. 💡 I Have Multiple People in My Home. Does Starlink Handle That? Yes — Starlink is designed for full household use. The Residential MAX plan delivers up to 400 Mbps, which supports multiple simultaneous users easily: one person streaming 4K TV needs 25 Mbps; a Zoom call needs 5–10 Mbps; web browsing needs 5–10 Mbps. Even four people all doing these things at once uses only 100–150 Mbps — well within Starlink’s 400 Mbps ceiling. There are no per-device fees and no limits on how many devices you can connect. Starlink’s Wi-Fi router supports up to 128 devices simultaneously (more with mesh expansion). For larger homes, the Residential MAX plan includes a free Router Mini for extending Wi-Fi coverage to additional rooms. The only household scenario where Starlink might feel constrained is a very large family with many people streaming 4K simultaneously during peak evening hours on a lower-priority plan in a congested suburban area — in which case, upgrading to MAX is the direct solution. 💡 I Do Video Calls with My Doctor (Telehealth). Will Starlink Slow Me Down During Calls? Telehealth video calls require approximately 2–10 Mbps and low latency (under 150ms). Starlink delivers 100–200 Mbps with 20–50ms latency — comfortably exceeding telehealth requirements. Even during peak evening deprioritization on a lower-tier plan, speeds rarely drop below 40–60 Mbps in rural areas, and latency stays within acceptable ranges. For maximum reliability on important medical video calls, the Residential MAX plan is the safest choice, since its highest-priority data is served before lower-tier plan subscribers during congestion. Scheduling important telehealth calls during off-peak hours (late morning to early afternoon) also virtually eliminates any risk of peak-hour slowdowns. Video calls also use relatively little data (0.5–1.5 GB per hour), so they will never trigger any data-related policy even with daily calls. 💡 I Had HughesNet or Viasat Before. How Different Is Starlink? The difference is dramatic — and data limits are a major part of that difference. If you have used HughesNet, you know the feeling of watching your monthly data counter tick down, rationing your internet use, avoiding video calls and streaming to preserve your data, and then spending the last two weeks of the month stuck at 1–3 Mbps after the cap. That experience is completely absent from Starlink Residential. You do not count gigabytes. You do not ration video calls. You do not dread hitting a wall. The shift from HughesNet to Starlink is regularly described by customers as one of the biggest quality-of-life improvements they have made for their household. Beyond data limits, the speed difference is enormous: HughesNet typically delivers 25–50 Mbps with 600+ millisecond latency; Starlink delivers 100–200 Mbps with 20–50ms latency. The latency improvement alone transforms video calls from choppy and frustrating to smooth and clear. 💡 Should I Get the MAX Plan or Is the Cheaper Residential Plan Good Enough? For most rural households, the cheaper plans work fine. For suburban households or heavy users, MAX is worth the extra cost. Here is how to decide: Choose a cheaper plan ($50–$80/month) if: you live in a rural area with few nearby Starlink subscribers; you primarily use the internet during daytime hours; or you are a light to moderate user (email, browsing, occasional streaming). Choose Residential MAX ($120/month) if: you live in a suburban area with many Starlink users nearby; you or your household streams 4K TV extensively in the evenings; you have important evening video calls (telehealth, family calls) that need reliable speeds; or you want the included Router Mini for better whole-home Wi-Fi. The price difference between the cheapest and MAX plan is $40–$70/month. In rural areas, that extra cost often buys you very little improvement. In congested suburban areas, it can make a noticeable difference in evening performance. 💡 I Travel in an RV. Does the Roam Plan Have Data Caps I Should Know About? Yes — this matters more for RV users than for home users. The Roam 100GB plan ($50/month) does have a meaningful threshold: once you use 100 GB in a billing period, it switches to unlimited low-speed data. For a weekend camper who only uses Starlink a few times a month, 100 GB is often enough. For a full-time RVer who streams TV daily, works from the road, or makes regular video calls, 100 GB will run out quickly — Netflix in 4K for one evening can use 14 GB. Full-time RVers almost universally use the Roam Unlimited plan ($165/month), which has no data cap and delivers genuinely unlimited data (though deprioritized behind Residential users during peak hours). As of 2026, Starlink no longer allows additional data purchases for Roam plans — once you hit 100 GB on the 100GB plan, you wait for the next billing cycle or you switch to Roam Unlimited. Plan the right plan from the start based on how much you will realistically use. Sources: SatelliteInternet.com Mar 2026 (HughesNet throttle 1-3 Mbps; Viasat soft cap; fair use policy; 3 AM rural example; deprioritization conditional); DishyCentral.com Jan 2026 (peak 5-11 PM; rural rarely affected; off-peak full speed; former 1TB system removed); BudgetSeniors.com Mar 2026 (Roam 100GB low-speed mode after cap; no additional data purchase Roam; switch plans any time app); EarthSIMs.com Feb 2026 (rural 150-250 Mbps; suburban 50-100 Mbps peak; Roam always deprioritized; RV seasonal use); Netflix/Zoom bandwidth specs (4K ~7 GB/hr; HD ~3 GB/hr; Zoom 0.5-1.5 GB/hr); FCC broadband data; Starlink router spec 128 devices max 📍 Find Starlink Resources & Internet Alternatives Near You Use these buttons to locate Starlink retailers, rural internet providers, and broadband assistance programs near you. 🛰️ Starlink Dealers & Authorized Retailers 📶 Local Internet Providers & Rural Broadband 🏛️ State Broadband Assistance Programs 🛍️ Electronics Stores — Tech & Setup Help 📚 Free Public Wi-Fi — Libraries & Senior Centers Finding resources near you… ✅ The Plain-Language Summary — Starlink Data Caps Explained Starlink Residential home plans do not have hard data caps. You will never be cut off from the internet or charged overage fees for using too much data. This applies to all three Residential plans (100 Mbps, 200 Mbps, and MAX). Starlink uses “deprioritization,” not throttling. On lower-priority plans, speeds may slow during the busiest evening hours (5–11 PM) when many users share the same satellite. This is conditional — if the network is quiet, you get full speeds even if you have used a lot of data. The Residential MAX plan ($120/month) has the best data policy. It provides the highest network priority and no speed cap, meaning the most consistent speeds especially during peak evening hours. Includes a free Router Mini for better whole-home Wi-Fi. The Roam 100GB plan is the one exception. This is the only Starlink consumer plan with a meaningful data threshold. After 100 GB, it switches to unlimited low-speed data. It is designed for occasional travelers, not full-time home internet use. For most rural households, Starlink’s data policy is genuinely unlimited. Rural areas have fewer Starlink subscribers competing for satellite bandwidth, which means deprioritization is rarely noticeable even on cheaper plans — making the $80 plan an excellent value for rural homes. This is dramatically better than HughesNet or Viasat. Legacy satellite providers throttle you to 1–3 Mbps after a hard monthly data cap. Starlink never cuts you off, never charges overages, and never reduces you to unusably slow speeds for the rest of the month. © BudgetSeniors.com — This guide is independently researched and written. We are not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by SpaceX, Starlink, or any internet service provider. All plan details, data policies, and pricing are sourced from official Starlink channels and verified technology publications as of March 2026. Starlink plans, policies, and pricing change frequently — always confirm current details at starlink.com or via the Starlink app before making any decisions. • Starlink Fair Use Policy: starlink.com/legal • Track your usage: Starlink app (iOS & Android) • Plan comparison: starlink.com/service-plans • Rural broadband subsidies: broadbandusa.ntia.gov Primary sources: Starlink.com Fair Use Policy official document US version (network management when demand exceeds supply; plan-specific deprioritization; track usage via app; Top-Up data for Priority plans only; stated speeds not guaranteed); SatelliteInternet.com Mar 2026 (no hard caps; no cutoff; fair use; HughesNet 1-3 Mbps throttle; Viasat soft cap ~850 GB; deprioritization vs. throttling; 3 AM full speed; several TB threshold Fair Use; residential truly unlimited for typical use); DishyCentral.com Jan 2026 (previous 1TB system removed after constellation expansion; peak 5-11 PM; rural rarely affected; off-peak full speed regardless of usage; deprioritization conditional not absolute); BudgetSeniors.com Starlink unlimited data Mar 2026 (three Residential plans $50/$80/$120; MAX no speed cap highest priority; 200/100 Mbps plans speed capped and deprioritized; Roam Unlimited $165 deprioritized behind Residential; Roam 100GB low-speed mode after limit; switch plans any time app; $40/mo difference MAX vs 200 Mbps; $480/yr saving); EarthSIMs.com Feb 2026 (Residential unlimited no hard caps; rural 150-250 Mbps; suburban 50-100 Mbps peak; Roam always deprioritized vs. Residential; no plan cuts connection after data limit); CableTV.com Mar 2026 (Roam 100GB specific priority limits; unlimited otherwise; MAX $120 highest priority; free Router Mini MAX plan); SatelliteInternet.com plans & pricing Mar 2026 (Roam 100GB $50 weekend trips; no additional data purchase Roam 2026; unlimited personal plans except Roam 100GB; Residential MAX most available; priority plans business data buckets 50GB-2TB); MobileInternetResourceCenter.com (plan evolution history; 1TB soft cap removed; unlimited restored residential; fair use threshold unpublished; Priority plans hard throttle 1 Mbps) Recommended Reads Starlink Unlimited Data Does Starlink Work Anywhere? 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