T-Mobile's Starlink Satellite Service Officially Launches With iPhone Support - MacRumorsOpen MenuShow RoundupsShow Forums menuVisit ForumsOpen Sidebar
Skip to Content

T-Mobile's Starlink Satellite Service Officially Launches With iPhone Support

The "T-Satellite" Starlink satellite service that T-Mobile has been testing for the last several months is now out of beta, T-Mobile CEO Mike Sievert announced today.

T Mobile Starlink
Satellite-based connectivity is available for T-Mobile subscribers, but it is also an option for Verizon and AT&T users. T-Mobile's offering uses over 650 Starlink satellites to allow users to send text messages when they are out of range of a cellular or Wi-Fi connection.

T-Mobile says that its satellite services work with more than 600 smartphones, including iPhones. If you have an iPhone 14 or later, you can use T-Satellite, though these devices already have Apple's built-in satellite functionality that works with Globalstar satellites. You will need iOS 18.3 or later to sign up.

The T-Mobile satellite service is limited to texting with iMessage and SMS, and data is not supported. Apple's built-in satellite service supports sending and receiving messages, sharing location via Find My, connecting with emergency services, getting satellite-based weather updates, and arranging roadside assistance via satellite. Apple does not yet charge for any of its Satellite functionality.

T-Satellite is free for Beyond 5G and Go5G customers, while T-Mobile users with other plans can get the service added to their plans for $10 per month using the Manage Add-Ons option in their accounts. AT&T and Verizon customers can get T-Satellite for $10 per month by contacting T-Mobile customer support. The $10/month pricing is a limited-time promotion, and T-Mobile intends to raise the price to $15 per month in the future.

iPhone users who sign up for T-Mobile's satellite service and connect to a Starlink satellite will see a small "SAT" icon in the status bar

Popular Stories

imac video apple feature

Apple Released Yet Another New Product Today

Friday March 20, 2026 2:39 pm PDT by
Apple has unveiled a whopping nine new products so far this March, including an iPhone 17e, iPad Air models with the M4 chip, MacBook Air models with the M5 chip, MacBook Pro models with M5 Pro and M5 Max chips, the all-new MacBook Neo, an updated Studio Display, a higher-end Studio Display XDR, AirPods Max 2, and now the Nike Powerbeats Pro 2. iPhone 17e features the same overall design as...
iPhone 18 Pro Deep Red Feature

iPhone 18 Pro Launching Later This Year With These 12 New Features

Wednesday March 18, 2026 7:39 am PDT by
While the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max are not expected to launch for another six months or so, there are already plenty of rumors about the devices. It was initially reported that the iPhone 18 Pro models would have fully under-screen Face ID, with only a front camera visible in the top-left corner of the screen. However, the latest rumors indicate that only one Face ID component...
ios 26 4 pastel

iOS 26.4: Top 10 New Features Coming to Your iPhone

Friday March 20, 2026 2:44 pm PDT by
iOS 26.4 isn't the major update with new Siri features that we hoped for, but there are some useful quality of life improvements, and a little bit of fun with an AI playlist generator and new emoji characters. Playlist Playground - Apple Music has a Playlist Playground option that lets you generate playlists from text-based descriptions. You can include moods, feelings, activities, or...

Top Rated Comments

9 months ago
It's a hard pass for me. Elon won't be getting any of my money.
Score: 18 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Robert.Walter Avatar
9 months ago
I will never use this service.

Looking forward to similar from any competitor.
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
djinn Avatar
9 months ago
Ewww.. Tmobile and Musk making me use Green Bubbles. I'll lose friends over this!
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
q64ceo Avatar
9 months ago
Without data, I just don't see a purpose for me.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Plutonius Avatar
9 months ago
Sounds like a much better deal for the phone companies rather than building lots of cell towers.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
swm Avatar
9 months ago

Sounds like a much better deal for the phone companies rather than building lots of cell towers.
nope. this is far worse than you think. the average cell tower is about 2-3 miles from you. this one bolted to something that will fall back to the atmosphere in 5 years will be about 200-300km from you. the service here is not starlink with mmWave - this is plain old cell service.
that means the signal level will be far fainter, so the achieveable bitrate will be minuscule compared to the terrestrial service.
there's nothing special about this, it's the very same cell service, the same frequency bands, same bandwidth, same everything. but it has to cover a far larger area: remember the entire starlink constellation will consist of 40k satellites (if they ever manage to have that much in orbit) that supposedly cover the entire world. tiny countries in europe have about 6-10k cell towers each, so the best thing you can expect from is texting. even voice calls are challenging. this is not mobile broadband.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Related Apple News: Iphone | World News | Health | Mac | Ipad