SpaceX just hit European Starlink plans with the second price hike within a year, while doubling its Standby Mode to €10/month. For rural households locked out of standard fibre networks, these relentless increases are forcing a search for alternatives.
The timing is entirely financial. SpaceX is targeting a historic Nasdaq IPO for Starlink this summer. To justify an astronomical valuation, they need to inflate recurring revenue and expand profit margins right before the investor roadshow.
However, this short-term cash injection creates a massive vulnerability. Amazon’s low-Earth-orbit satellite network, Amazon Leo, launches its commercial service later this year. Amazon’s playbook relies on crushing Starlink on upfront hardware costs and undercutting monthly fees. By burning consumer loyalty now, Starlink is handing Amazon a massive, frustrated pool of ready-made customers.
Fortunately, European users don’t have to wait for Amazon to cut costs. If your property gets even a basic mobile signal outside, a Fixed Wireless Access (FWA) setup is the fastest, cheapest alternative.
European stone or brick walls easily block mobile signals inside, but the fix is simple: place an industrial 4G or 5G router indoors and connect it via low-loss cable to a directional outdoor antenna mounted on the roof, pointed straight at the nearest carrier mast.
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4G LTE Options: Even without 5G, a roof-mounted 4G setup comfortably pulls 30 to 70+ Mbps with a snappy 30–50 ms latency—matching Starlink’s real-world responsiveness. In Spain, you can buy a contract-free, unlimited Digi Mobil SIM for just €10/month, or use official home radio plans from Movistar, Vodafone, or Orange (€20–€30/month). In France, Free Mobile offers cheap, uncontracted unlimited SIMs, while Deutsche Telekom handles Germany with its Speedbox plans.
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5G Options: Where 5G is active, speeds jump to 150–300+ Mbps and latency drops to 20–30 ms, beating Starlink for half the price. Providers like Vodafone (Hogar 5G in Spain, GigaCube in Germany) ship these plug-and-play kits within days.
If you are in a total mobile dead zone, traditional satellite providers like BRDY (brdy.com) or skyDSL (skydsl.eu) offer immediate lifelines across Europe from €25 to €40/month. The trade-off is latency. Because they use geostationary satellites 36,000 km up, lag jumps to over 600 ms. This handles standard web browsing and video streaming perfectly fine, but it will cause noticeable half-second delays on video calls for home office.