Skip to main content

SpaceX Starlink internet heads to first cruise ships

Passengers on Royal Caribbean cruise ships will soon be using internet powered by SpaceX’s Starlink satellites.

Royal Caribbean said Starlink will bring “faster and more reliable internet” to its fleet of ships, which also include those operated by Celebrity Cruises and Silversea Cruises.

Recommended Videos

The cruise operator is the first in the industry to partner with SpaceX for its high-speed, low-latency broadband service.

Following a successful trial of Starlink internet aboard the Royal Caribbean’s Freedom of the Seas ship, the operator says it will start rolling out the service now, and aims to complete the process by the end of March next year.

Starlink internet dishes on a Royal Caribbean cruise ship.
Starlink internet dishes on a Royal Caribbean cruise ship. Royal Caribbean

“Our purpose as a company is to deliver the best vacation experiences to our guests responsibly, and this new offering, which is the biggest public deployment of Starlink’s high-speed internet in the travel industry so far, demonstrates our commitment to that purpose,” Jason Liberty, president and chief executive officer of the Royal Caribbean Group, said in a release shared on Tuesday.

Liberty added that SpaceX’s Starlink service will “improve and enable more high-bandwidth activities like video streaming as well as activities like video calls.”

Jonathan Hofeller, SpaceX vice president of Starlink sales, said the service would allow cruise passengers to “stay connected with a great internet experience.”

And offering the kind of informal take that you’d expect from the boss of SpaceX, Elon Musk tweeted that Royal Caribbean ships were about to get a “kickass internet connection.”

Royal Caribbean’s announcement comes nearly two months after SpaceX launched Starlink Maritime, which expands its service from land-based properties to ships sailing the high seas.

SpaceX is also putting its Starlink internet service in the skies, with Hawaiian Airlines recently revealing it had signed an agreement with Musk’s company to launch the service for its airline passengers in 2023.

SpaceX is using a growing constellation of small satellites to beam Starlink broadband to Earth. To date it has deployed more than 3,000 satellites, which it’s using to serve more than 250,000 customers globally. It also wants to use Starlink to connect unserved or underserved communities around the world.

While it started with residential customers, these recent announcements are an indication of just how big SpaceX is planning to go with Starlink. Indeed, Musk has said previously that Starlink could generate up to $50 billion in annual revenue if it’s able to secure even just a few percent of the global telecommunications market in the coming years.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
How to watch SpaceX launch a U.S. spy satellite today
COSMO-SkyMed mission ready for launch.

SpaceX will shortly be launching a satellite for the U.S. National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) in a mission called NROL-85. The launch will use one of the company's Falcon 9 rockets to carry the NROL-85 spacecraft into orbit and will take place from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. The launch will be livestreamed, and we've got the details on how to watch along at home.

NROL-85 Mission

Read more
SpaceX will stop making new Crew Dragon capsules. Here’s why
SpaceX's Crew Dragon spacecraft.

Two years after SpaceX flew its first astronauts to the International Space Station (ISS) in the Crew Dragon capsule, the company has revealed it is ending production of the spacecraft.

Speaking to Reuters this week, Space X president Gwynne Shotwell said that there are currently no plans to add more Crew Dragons to its current fleet of four capsules. However, the company will carry on manufacturing components for the existing Crew Dragon spacecraft as they will continue to be used for future space missions.

Read more
SpaceX forced to wait longer for Super Heavy flight clearance
SpaceX's Starship spacecraft atop the Super Heavy booster.

Just a few days after SpaceX chief Elon Musk said he hoped to see the next-generation Starship rocket take its first orbital flight in May, an issue has cropped up that has the potential to delay the plan.

SpaceX is waiting for the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to grant it permission to launch the rocket from its site in Boca Chica, Texas.

Read more