The complete, no-surprises cost guide: equipment, monthly plans, mounting hardware, professional installation, hidden fees, and what seniors can actually do to reduce the bill.
Starlink crossed 10 million global subscribers in February 2026 — adding roughly 4.6 million new customers in 2025 alone, about 14,000 per day. For the estimated 20 million American households in rural areas without access to cable, fiber, or reliable 5G, it has become the first real broadband option available. But Starlink’s pricing is more complex than it first appears: there are three monthly plan tiers, upfront hardware costs, shipping charges, optional mounting hardware, professional installation fees, a little-known electricity cost, and in some areas an area-specific congestion surcharge. This guide puts every dollar on the table — and clears up several dangerous myths circulating about senior discounts and government subsidies that are not real. Here is everything you need to know before ordering.
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Does Starlink have an installation fee? Self-install is free with the kit — professional install costs $150–$329Starlink is designed for self-installation — the dish self-aligns automatically (no manual pointing required), and the setup process typically takes 30–60 minutes for a ground-level placement. SpaceX does not include a professional installation fee in the standard price, but it does offer a Starlink-authorized professional installation option for $199, and Best Buy’s Geek Squad charges approximately $329 for their Starlink installation service. Third-party local installers typically charge $150–$300 for a standard residential roof-mount installation (StarlinkRefer.com 2026). If you are comfortable on a ladder and have a single-story home with asphalt shingle roofing, a DIY roof mount installation typically takes 2–3 hours. For two-story homes, steep roofs (8:12 pitch or greater), tile roofs, or metal roofs, a professional installer is strongly recommended for both safety and weatherproofing. Source: BestiePaws Apr 2026; StarlinkRefer 2026; HighSpeedInternet Feb 2026.
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How fast is Starlink on the $120 plan? Residential MAX — up to 400 Mbps peak; typical real-world 100–250 Mbps; 20–45 ms latencyThe Residential MAX plan at $120/month provides the highest network priority among Starlink’s residential tiers, with speeds that can reach 400 Mbps at peak and typically land between 100–250 Mbps in real-world conditions based on independent testing in early 2026 (BudgetSeniors). Starlink’s median peak-hour latency is 25.7 ms as of June 2025 (per Starlink router data published by Economy Insights Jan 2026) — fast enough for video calls, telehealth appointments, streaming HD and 4K video, and online gaming. The $120 Residential MAX plan also includes the highest priority on the network, meaning during congestion, MAX plan customers experience fewer slowdowns than lower-tier plan users. It also includes a free Router Mini for whole-home mesh Wi-Fi coverage. Source: BudgetSeniors Apr 2026; Economy Insights Jan 2026; 5GStore Apr 2026.
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Is Starlink $50 a month — for real? Yes, but only in select low-congestion areas — not available everywhereStarlink restructured its residential plans in January 2026. The Residential 100 Mbps plan at $50/month is real — but it is only available in select low-congestion areas, specifically parts of Nebraska, Nevada, Indiana, and Maine as of early 2026 (BudgetSeniors Mar 2026). It is not nationally available. The Residential 200 Mbps plan at $80/month is available more broadly but with lower network priority during peak hours. The standard nationally-available residential plan for most U.S. addresses is the Residential MAX at $120/month. Additionally, Starlink is running a limited-time promotion (as of April 2026): $15 off all residential plans for the first 4 months for new customers, available through April 30 in select regions (SatelliteInternet.com). When you enter your address on starlink.com, you will see which plans are actually available at your location. Source: BudgetSeniors Mar 2026; SatelliteInternet.com Apr 2026; 5GStore Apr 2026.
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How much does it cost to buy and install Starlink — total first-year cost? Roughly $1,640–$2,100+ in year one depending on plan and installation choicesHere is the realistic all-in first-year cost breakdown for a typical residential installation at $120/month (Residential MAX): Standard Kit hardware: $349. Shipping: ~$50. Roof mount (if needed, Starlink brand): $35–$60. Professional installation (optional): $150–$329. Monthly service ($120 × 12): $1,440. Electricity cost ($8–$17/month × 12): $96–$204. Total estimated year one: approximately $2,120–$2,432 with pro install, or $1,640–$1,950 with self-install. Year two and beyond drops dramatically to approximately $1,536–$1,644 per year (service + electricity only, no hardware). At $80/month: year one with self-install is approximately $1,160–$1,460. StarnetPros (Mar 2026) estimated approximately $1,789 as the first-year conservative figure at the $80 plan. Comparison: extending fiber cable to a rural property can exceed $20,000 or more depending on distance. Source: StarnetPros Mar 2026; Economy Insights Jan 2026; BudgetSeniors Apr 2026; BestiePaws Apr 2026.
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How much is Starlink equipment — the Standard Kit price? Standard Kit is $349 at most U.S. locations — down 41% from original $599 priceThe Standard Kit (Gen 3 / V4 dish) — which includes the satellite dish, Wi-Fi Router Gen 3, power supply, 75-foot proprietary cable, and a temporary ground-level kickstand — costs $349 at most U.S. locations. This is a 41% reduction from the original $599 price (BudgetSeniors Mar 2026). Add approximately $50 for shipping and handling from starlink.com. In select low-congestion areas, the kit is available for as low as $89 through promotional pricing, and Starlink has offered $0 rental kits in some regions with a $35/month charge for the first 4 months. The kit is also available at Best Buy and Home Depot if you want to avoid shipping costs. What the kit does NOT include: a roof, wall, or chimney mount (sold separately at $25–$150); longer cables if needed ($30–$60); or professional installation. Source: BudgetSeniors Mar 2026; BestiePaws Apr 2026; HighSpeedInternet Feb 2026.
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What is the Starlink Gen 3 kit price and what’s in the box? $349 · Includes dish, Gen 3 router, 75-ft cable, power supply, kickstand tripodThe Standard Kit (marketed as “Gen 3” or “V4”) is the rectangular phased-array antenna dish that most residential customers purchase. The box includes: the dish (“Dishy McFlatface”), Wi-Fi Router Gen 3, power supply, 75-foot proprietary cable, and a ground-level kickstand tripod. The Gen 3 dish uses an electronically steered phased-array antenna with a 110° field of view and is IP67-rated (weatherproof). The included kickstand is temporary and designed for flat-surface placement to test the service — not for permanent rooftop installation. For a permanent home installation with a clear sky view, most homeowners need a separate roof mount, wall mount, or pole mount, available from the Starlink shop for $25–$60 or from third-party sellers for $20–$150. The Residential 100 Mbps plan comes with a Mini Router instead of the full Router Gen 3. Source: BudgetSeniors Mar 2026; BestiePaws Apr 2026; 5GStore Apr 2026; Starlink Gen 3 product specs.
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What is the Starlink Mini monthly cost? Roam 100 GB: $50/mo · Roam Unlimited: $165/mo · Mini dish hardware: $199–$249The Starlink Mini is a compact, backpack-sized portable dish designed for travel, camping, RVs, and backup internet. It launched at $499 and has dropped 67% in price to $249 retail — with a further $50 activation benefit bringing it to $199 for new Roam customers as of March 2026 (BudgetSeniors). The Mini requires a Roam plan: Roam 100 GB costs $50/month (includes 100 GB priority data, then throttled but not cut off); Roam Unlimited costs $165/month with no data cap. The Mini cannot be rented — it must be purchased outright. It weighs just over 2.5 pounds, draws only 20–40 watts, and delivers typical speeds of 60–170 Mbps. Note: Residential MAX subscribers get the Mini at 50% off on the Roam plan ($82.50/month) and receive a free Mini dish — a significant perk for seniors who travel seasonally or spend winters at a second address. Source: BudgetSeniors Mar 2026; SatelliteInternet.com Apr 2026; USMobile Mar 2026.
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What is the price of Starlink internet — unlimited data? All residential plans include unlimited data (no hard cap) — $50, $80, or $120/mo depending on availabilityAll three Starlink residential plans include unlimited data with no hard data cap. Starlink reserves the right to deprioritize speeds during network congestion, but this is a soft measure — not a hard cutoff. The Fair Use threshold (where deprioritization could theoretically occur) is 1 TB/month for most plans — a level that typical residential users rarely approach. Comparison: HughesNet’s plans cut off at 50–200 GB/month priority data before throttling. The three residential plans as of January 2026 are: Residential 100 Mbps ($50/mo, select areas only); Residential 200 Mbps ($80/mo, lower network priority peak hours); Residential MAX ($120/mo, highest priority, speeds to 400 Mbps, free Router Mini, 50% Roam discount + free Mini for travel). There is no contract for any residential plan — you can cancel or change plans at any time. Source: BudgetSeniors Mar 2026; 5GStore Apr 2026; USMobile Mar 2026.
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Is there a senior discount or government subsidy for Starlink? No federal senior discount exists — three myths circulating online are false and potentially scamsAs of April 2026: there is no Starlink senior discount, no AARP deal, and no age-based pricing tier. The FCC’s Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) ended on June 1, 2024 — and Starlink never participated in it anyway. The only surviving federal broadband subsidy — the FCC Lifeline program at $9.25/month — does not apply to Starlink. There is no federal replacement for ACP as of April 2026. However, several states have launched their own broadband subsidy programs that can apply to any internet provider, including Starlink. California, New York, and Texas are confirmed to offer programs for low-income residents and seniors on fixed incomes — check your state’s broadband office. The Residential 200 Mbps plan at $80/month is the most practical cost-reduction path for seniors who don’t need maximum speeds. Warning: three specific myths targeting seniors are circulating online as of April 2026 — all are false and some are active scams. See the Scam Alert section below. Source: BudgetSeniors Apr 2026; USMobile Mar 2026; FCC.gov; BudgetSeniors scam alert Apr 2026.
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What are the hidden costs of Starlink nobody warns you about? Four real costs not shown in advertising: shipping, roof mount, electricity, and area surcharges(1) Shipping: ~$50 from starlink.com on top of the equipment price. Avoidable by purchasing from Best Buy or Home Depot, which charge no separate shipping fee. (2) Roof mount (if needed): The included kickstand is temporary and ground-level. A permanent roof, wall, or chimney mount costs $25–$150 extra and is required for most homes to get a clear, unobstructed sky view. (3) Electricity: The Starlink dish draws 40–100 watts continuously — roughly $5–$17/month on your electric bill, depending on your local rate and winter heating cycles (the dish heats itself to melt snow). A standard cable modem costs $1.50–$2/month in electricity by comparison. (4) Area congestion surcharge: In high-demand areas, Starlink charges a one-time surcharge at checkout that can reach $500 or more (historically parts of the Southeast U.S.). It is not visible until you enter your specific address — and it can reappear if you change your address or plan. Always enter your address at starlink.com and check the full order total before purchasing. Source: USMobile Mar 2026; BudgetSeniors Apr 2026; StarnetPros Mar 2026; Economy Insights Jan 2026.
Sources: BudgetSeniors.com budgetseniors.com Mar–Apr 2026 (Standard Kit $349; $89/$0 promo; kit contents; Residential restructured Jan 2026; $50/$80/$120 plans; select areas 100Mbps NE NV IN ME; Standby Mode $5/mo; shipping $50; pro install $175+; power $5–$10/mo; ACP ended Jun 2024; no Lifeline for Starlink; no senior discount no AARP; state programs CA NY TX; scam alerts 3 myths false; Mini $249 retail $199 activation; 10M subscribers Feb 2026 4.6M in 2025); SatelliteInternet.com satelliteinternet.com Mar–Apr 2026 (Mini $199 activation benefit; 4-month promo $15 off through Apr 30; rental kits select areas; Residential Lite $49–$69; Roam 100GB $50; Roam Unlimited $165; Business Priority 135–310Mbps); USMobile.com usmobile.com Mar 2026 (plans $49–$120; High Performance Kit; standard kit dropped $599→$349; no AARP deal; state broadband programs); HighSpeedInternet.com highspeedinternet.com Jan–Feb 2026 ($349 kit shipping; $199 Starlink pro install option; Mini $499 retail; Best Buy/Home Depot available; 12-mo contract option some areas; real customer 187 Mbps from 22 Mbps); BestiePaws.com bestiepaws.com Apr 2026 (Standard $349 + $50 shipping; Volcano Roof ~$35; Chimney ~$60; Pivot Wall ~$30; Pipe/Pole ~$25; Ground ~$50; cable ext 50ft $30 100ft $60; pro install $199 authorized; Geek Squad ~$329; MAX includes free Router Mini); StarnetPros.com starnetpros.com Mar 2026 ($349 kit; ~$50 shipping; DIY 2–3hrs; pro $100–$300; mounts $35–$85 Starlink brand; third-party $20–$150; replacement cable $35; year 2 ~$1,050); 5GStore.com 5gstore.com Apr 11 2026 (six plans; Standard 4 X Installation Kit contents; 100Mbps plan uses Mini Router; Business Priority Local vs Global); Economy Insights economyinsights.com Jan 2026 (peak-hour latency 25.7ms Jun 2025; $80–$120 typical residential 2025; first-year ~$1,789; demand surcharge; cable modem $1.50–$2/mo power vs Starlink $8–$17/mo); StarlinkRefer.com 2026 (DIY 2–3hrs; pro $150–$300; steep roofs tile metal hire pro; speed test 50–250 Mbps); FCC.gov (ACP ended Jun 1 2024; Lifeline $9.25/mo Starlink not participating; broadband map 99% US coverage)
| Cost Item | Amount | Notes |
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| Standard Kit (Gen 3 dish) | $349 | Includes dish, Router Gen 3, 75-ft cable, power supply, kickstand. Available at starlink.com, Best Buy, Home Depot. |
| Promotional / Rental Kit | $0–$89 | Select low-congestion areas only. Rental: $0 hardware + $35/month for 4 months in qualifying regions. Must be returned if service cancelled. |
| Shipping & Handling | ~$50 | From starlink.com. Avoidable if purchased in-store at Best Buy or Home Depot. |
| Residential 100 Mbps plan | $50/month | Select low-congestion areas only (NE, NV, IN, ME and others). Includes Mini Router instead of Router Gen 3. |
| Residential 200 Mbps plan | $80/month | More broadly available. Lower network priority during peak hours. Unlimited data. |
| Residential MAX plan | $120/month | Highest priority. Up to 400 Mbps. Free Router Mini. 50% Roam discount + free Mini dish for travel. Most popular. |
| Standby Mode (new) | $5/month | Pause full-speed billing while keeping basic email/text connectivity. New for 2026. Useful for seasonal/vacation homes. |
| Roof / Wall / Chimney Mount | $25–$60 (Starlink) $20–$150 (3rd party) |
Volcano Roof ~$35; Chimney ~$60; Pivot Wall ~$30; Pipe Adapter ~$25; Ground Mount ~$50. NOT included in standard kit. |
| Professional Installation | $150–$329 | Starlink authorized: $199. Best Buy Geek Squad: ~$329. Third-party local installers: $150–$300. DIY is free if comfortable on roof. |
| Cable Extensions (optional) | $30–$60 | 50-ft extension ~$30; 100-ft extension ~$60. Needed if standard 75-ft cable doesn’t reach from roof to router location. |
| Electricity (ongoing) | $5–$17/month | Dish draws 40–100W continuously. Higher in winter (snow heating). Typically $96–$204/year. Not on Starlink bill. |
| Area Congestion Surcharge | Up to $500+ | One-time charge in high-demand areas. Not visible until you enter your address at checkout. Can reappear if address/plan changes. Check before ordering. |
| Replacement Cable (Gen 3) | ~$35 | Proprietary cable — must be purchased from Starlink. Protect from lawnmowers, rodents, and foot traffic during installation. |
| High Performance Kit (optional) | $1,999 | Required for Business Priority plans. Optional upgrade for residential users with heavy obstructions. Includes larger dish, enterprise router, 82-ft cable. |
| Starlink Mini (travel dish) | $199–$249 | $249 retail; $199 with activation benefit for new Roam customers. Cannot rent. Requires Roam plan ($50–$165/mo). ~2.5 lbs; 60–170 Mbps. |
Sources: BudgetSeniors.com Mar–Apr 2026; BestiePaws Apr 2026; StarnetPros Mar 2026; USMobile Mar 2026; SatelliteInternet.com Apr 2026; 5GStore Apr 2026; HighSpeedInternet Feb 2026; Economy Insights Jan 2026
Sources: BudgetSeniors budgetseniors.com Mar 2026 ($349 kit; plans $50/$80/$120 Jan 2026; 99% coverage FCC; down 41% from $599); Ookla Q1 2025 via IEEE ComSoc (104.71 Mbps median); Economy Insights Jan 2026 (peak-hour 25.7ms Jun 2025; $8–$17/mo electricity); BestiePaws Apr 2026 (pro install $199 authorized; Geek Squad ~$329); StarlinkRefer 2026 (DIY 2–3hrs; third-party $150–$300); FCC National Broadband Map (99% US); USMobile Mar 2026 (power draw)
Sources: BudgetSeniors budgetseniors.com Mar–Apr 2026 (all plan details; kit contents; scam alerts); SatelliteInternet.com Apr 2026 (4-month promo $15 off; Mini activation benefit; Roam plans; rental kits); USMobile Mar 2026 (Residential Lite; no AARP; state programs); 5GStore Apr 2026 (plan structure; kit contents; 100Mbps uses Mini Router); StarnetPros Mar 2026 (year 2 ~$1,050; DIY vs pro; mount types; replacement cable $35); BestiePaws Apr 2026 (mounts; pro install prices; MAX free Router Mini); StarlinkRefer 2026 (DIY 2–3hrs; pro $150–$300; when to hire pro; obstruction app); FCC.gov (ACP ended Jun 2024; Lifeline $9.25 Starlink not participating); FTC reportfraud.ftc.gov
Starlink itself does not charge a mandatory installation fee — self-installation is the default and is included at no extra charge. The service is explicitly designed for DIY setup: the dish automatically self-aligns (no manual pointing needed), the Starlink app walks you through placement using an obstruction checker, and the entire ground-level setup takes about 30 minutes. Most homeowners who go with a permanent roof mount spend 2–3 hours on the first-time install. However, three real installation-related costs exist that are not always clearly advertised: (1) A separate roof or wall mount is required for most permanent home installations ($25–$150) — the included kickstand is temporary. (2) If you want or need professional installation, it costs $199 through Starlink’s authorized program, approximately $329 through Best Buy Geek Squad, or $150–$300 through local satellite installers. (3) A cable gland or pass-through ($8–$15) is recommended wherever the cable enters the house to prevent water intrusion. For seniors who are not comfortable on roofs — two-story homes, steep roofs, tile or metal roofing — a professional installer is the right call for both safety and weatherproofing. Source: BestiePaws Apr 2026; StarlinkRefer 2026; HighSpeedInternet Feb 2026; USMobile Mar 2026.
As of January 2026, Starlink restructured its residential plans into three tiers: Residential 100 Mbps at $50/month — real but only available in select low-congestion areas (check your address first at starlink.com). Residential 200 Mbps at $80/month — more broadly available, lower network priority during peak hours. Residential MAX at $120/month — highest priority, speeds up to 400 Mbps, free Router Mini, 50% off Roam plans + free Mini dish for travel. All three plans: no contract, cancel anytime, unlimited data with no hard cap. There is also a new Standby Mode at $5/month for seasonal users who want to pause full-speed service without canceling. For travel: Roam 100 GB is $50/month (100 GB then throttled); Roam Unlimited is $165/month. Limited promotion as of April 2026: $15 off all residential plans for the first 4 months for new customers in select regions through April 30 (SatelliteInternet.com). Always enter your specific address at starlink.com to see which plans are actually available — pricing and availability depend entirely on your location and local network demand. Source: BudgetSeniors Mar 2026; SatelliteInternet Apr 2026; 5GStore Apr 2026.
The Standard Kit — often called “Gen 3,” “V3,” or “V4” — is the rectangular phased-array dish that virtually all residential Starlink customers purchase. Current price: $349 at most U.S. locations, plus approximately $50 shipping from starlink.com. The same kit is available at Best Buy and Home Depot with no separate shipping fee. The box includes: the satellite dish (“Dishy”), Wi-Fi Router Gen 3, power supply, 75-foot proprietary cable, and a ground-level kickstand tripod. Three things NOT in the box: a permanent roof or wall mount (sold separately at $25–$60 from Starlink, $20–$150 from third parties); any cable longer than 75 feet; and professional installation. Key detail for seniors: the dish’s kickstand is meant for testing placement, not for a permanent installation. Most homes need a roof mount, wall mount, or pole mount to get a clear, obstruction-free view of the sky — and that mount costs $25–$150 extra. Use the Starlink app’s obstruction check tool (free download) from your intended mounting location before purchasing any hardware. Source: BudgetSeniors Mar 2026; BestiePaws Apr 2026; StarnetPros Mar 2026.
The Starlink Residential plan is a fixed-location home internet service requiring the dish to be registered at a specific address. All three residential plans (100 Mbps / 200 Mbps / MAX) work with the same Standard Kit hardware, require no contract, and include unlimited data. The most senior-friendly plan depends on your situation: the $80/month Residential 200 Mbps plan is the practical starting point for most senior households that want a balance of cost and performance for video calls, streaming, and general browsing. The $120/month MAX plan is the right choice if you make regular telehealth appointments (maximum priority means fewer disruptions during peak hours), travel seasonally (50% off Roam + free Mini), or have multiple family members using the connection simultaneously. There is no Starlink senior discount as of April 2026. However, the $80/month plan represents meaningful savings over the $120/month option — and for most seniors who use internet for video calls, streaming, and email, the 200 Mbps plan provides more than enough capacity. For very light users (email, occasional browsing only), check if the $50/month 100 Mbps plan is available at your address. Source: BudgetSeniors Apr 2026; USMobile Mar 2026; 5GStore Apr 2026.
Sources: BudgetSeniors budgetseniors.com Mar–Apr 2026; BestiePaws bestiepaws.com Apr 2026; SatelliteInternet satelliteinternet.com Apr 2026; USMobile usmobile.com Mar 2026; StarnetPros starnetpros.com Mar 2026; 5GStore 5gstore.com Apr 2026; HighSpeedInternet highspeedinternet.com Feb 2026; StarlinkRefer starlinkrefer.com 2026; FCC.gov (ACP Jun 2024; Lifeline not Starlink); Economy Insights economyinsights.com Jan 2026
- Step 1 — Enter your exact address at starlink.com first. This is the only way to know which plans are actually available at your location, what the equipment price is (promotions and congestion surcharges vary by address), and whether there is a waitlist. Don’t assume the $50/month plan is available or that the equipment costs exactly $349 until you see the full order summary for your specific address.
- Step 2 — Download the free Starlink app and run the obstruction check before ordering. The app uses your phone’s camera to create a sky-visibility map from any location. Walk to different spots on your property — roof, yard, driveway — and find the location with the clearest sky view. Poor placement is the #1 cause of underperforming Starlink installations. Running this check before you buy saves you the frustration of installing equipment in the wrong location.
- Step 3 — Decide on self-install vs. professional install before checkout. For a single-story home with asphalt shingle roofing and a clear view from the roof: self-installation is realistic (2–3 hours, basic tools, the app guides you). For a two-story home, steep roof, tile or metal roofing, or if you are not comfortable on a ladder: budget for professional installation at $150–$329 before calculating your total first-year cost.
- Step 4 — Buy the hardware in-store if possible to avoid the $50 shipping fee. Starlink equipment is available at Best Buy and Home Depot locations in the U.S. Purchasing in-store eliminates the approximately $50 shipping charge from starlink.com and lets you return the equipment easily if you decide within 30 days that Starlink isn’t right for you.
- Step 5 — If you travel seasonally, start with Residential MAX rather than a lower tier. The Residential MAX plan at $120/month includes 50% off Roam plans ($82.50/month) and a free Starlink Mini dish for travel — eliminating the $199–$249 Mini hardware cost and significantly reducing the monthly travel plan cost. If you spend winters at a second address, this perk alone offsets the difference between the $80 and $120 monthly plans within the first few months.
This guide is independently researched for informational purposes only. We are not affiliated with, compensated by, or endorsed by SpaceX, Starlink, Best Buy, Home Depot, or any other company mentioned. All equipment prices, plan details, and promotional offers are verified from published sources as of April 2026. Starlink pricing changes frequently — always verify the current price and plan availability by entering your address at starlink.com before purchasing. Starlink® is a trademark of Space Exploration Technologies Corp. This page does not constitute telecommunications, financial, or legal advice.
Primary sources: BudgetSeniors.com budgetseniors.com Mar–Apr 2026 (Standard Kit $349 down 41% from $599; promotional $89/$0; kit contents dish Router Gen 3 75-ft cable power supply kickstand; plans restructured Jan 2026: 100Mbps $50 select areas NE NV IN ME, 200Mbps $80, MAX $120; Standby Mode $5/mo 2026; shipping ~$50 starlink.com; pro install $175+; power $5–$10/mo; ACP ended Jun 1 2024 no Starlink participation; Lifeline $9.25/mo no Starlink; no senior discount no AARP; state programs CA NY TX; 3 scam alerts false as Apr 2026; Mini $249 retail $199 activation new Roam; 10M+ subscribers Feb 2026; 4.6M in 2025; 14K/day); SatelliteInternet.com satelliteinternet.com Mar–Apr 2026 (Mini $199 activation benefit new Roam customers; first 4-month promo $15 off all residential through Apr 30 select regions; Residential Lite $49/$69 some regions; Roam 100GB $50; Roam Unlimited $165; Priority Business 135–310Mbps; rental kits select residential areas); USMobile.com usmobile.com Mar 2026 (Residential Lite $49–$69/mo best for seniors light use; no AARP deal; no age-based pricing; standard kit dropped $599→$349; High Performance Kit $1,999; state broadband CA NY TX; power draw 75–100W = $8–$17/mo); HighSpeedInternet.com highspeedinternet.com Jan–Feb 2026 ($349 kit +shipping; $199 Starlink authorized pro install option; Mini $499 at retail; Best Buy Home Depot availability; 12-mo contract option some areas); BestiePaws.com bestiepaws.com Apr 2026 (Standard $349 + $50 shipping; NOT included: mounts $25–$150; longer cables $30–$60; pro install $175–$329; Volcano Roof ~$35; Chimney ~$60; Pivot Wall ~$30; Pipe/Pole ~$25; Ground ~$50; cable ext 50ft $30 100ft $60; authorized pro install $199; Geek Squad ~$329; MAX includes free Router Mini; Flat HP Kit wider FOV; obstruction scan recommendation); StarnetPros.com starnetpros.com Mar 2026 ($349 + $50 shipping; DIY 2–3hrs; pro $100–$300; Starlink mounts $35–$85; third-party $20–$150; replacement cable $35; year 2 ~$1,050); 5GStore.com 5gstore.com Apr 11 2026 (six plans; Standard 4 X Installation Kit; 100Mbps uses Mini Router vs Router Gen 3; MAX $120; Business Priority Local vs Global 135–310Mbps); Economy Insights economyinsights.com Jan 2026 (peak-hour latency 25.7ms Jun 2025 Starlink router data; $80–$120 typical residential 2025; first-year conservative ~$1,789; demand surcharge one-time high-demand areas; cable modem $1.50–$2/mo power vs Starlink $8–$17/mo); StarlinkRefer.com starlinkrefer.com 2026 (DIY 2–3hrs roof mount; pro $150–$300 standard residential; steep 8:12+ two-story tile metal hire pro; obstruction app; speed test 50–250 Mbps; sealant inspection after first rain); FCC.gov (ACP ended June 1 2024; Lifeline $9.25/mo Starlink NOT participating; FCC National Broadband Map 99% US including AK HI tribal lands remote areas); FTC reportfraud.ftc.gov 1-877-382-4357 (report internet scams)