Overview of Recent Adjustments
Starlink has implemented price increases for multiple satellite internet plans available to customers in the United States. These changes apply to both primary residential services and supplementary options designed for flexible usage. The adjustments follow earlier reports from technology publications detailing the scope of the updates.
Residential Plan Modifications
The entry-level 100Mbps residential plan has moved from fifty dollars to fifty-five dollars per month. Customers selecting the 200Mbps tier now pay eighty-five dollars instead of the previous eighty dollars. The higher-capacity Residential Max option increased from one hundred twenty dollars to one hundred thirty dollars monthly. These shifts represent a consistent upward adjustment across different speed tiers offered under the residential category.
Standby Mode and Roam Service Updates
Standby Mode, which permits users to temporarily pause full-speed service while retaining access to limited data, now carries a ten-dollar monthly charge rather than five dollars. Roam plans have also seen increases, with the one-hundred-gigabyte option rising from fifty dollars to fifty-five dollars. The unlimited roam variant experienced a comparable upward revision, though exact figures for that tier were referenced in external coverage.
Context and Customer Considerations
The pricing revisions occur amid ongoing expansion of satellite internet infrastructure and evolving operational costs. Subscribers evaluating their current plans may wish to review usage patterns and compare available tiers to determine the most suitable option following these changes. No official statements regarding future adjustments have been incorporated into this summary of the reported updates.






