If you’ve been eyeing a futuristic-lookingStarlink internetsetup for your home or for your cottage, then now is as good a time as ever to jump on the satellite bandwagon. For a limited time, theSpaceX-operated company is giving away its $350 Standard Kit entirely free of charge, in exchange for signing up for one of its select residential 12-month plans.

Starlink’s residential plans start at $80 per month, and they offer up to 300Mbpsof internet speedin the US. The company pitches its $80 Residential Lite plan as ideal for less frequent usage or for smaller households, and it offers unlimited (albeit deprioritized) data access. By contrast, the standard Residential plan costs $120 per month, and provides unlimited data without any throttling or constraints.

What is Starlink, how does it work, and how much does it cost? photo 7

In the box, the Starlink Standard Kit comes with the main dish unit itself, along with a kickstand, a Gen 3 router, and a dedicated Starlink cable. Other accessories are sold separately – the company offers a pipe adapter mount, a wall mount, a pivot mount, and a router mount all on its official website.

We’ve seen Starlink offer this promotion in the past, but the rollout now includes additional regions such as Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, and parts of Europe. There’s currently no word on how long the offer will last for, but I imagine it’ll stick around for the next couple of months at a minimum. With warmer weather approaching and with many people opting to temporarily escape city life, Starlink’s value proposition is at its strongest during the summer.

Starlink tag

Want to get your internet from satellites in space? Perhaps you should try SpaceX’s Starlink service.

Starlink is a satellite-based form of high-speed internet connectivity that’s particularly useful in rural locations. The Standard Kit comes with the main dish unit, a kickstand, a Gen 3 router, and a Starlink cable.

Starlink has been making fairly significant inroads in recent years, and this is especially true when it comes to providing internet access in rural or remote locations. If you happen to be off the grid, and you aren’t being well served by traditional internet service providers, then it’s difficult to ignore the fleet ofover 6,750 Starlink satellitescurrently in orbit.

Recently, Starlinkpartnered with United Airlinesto offer in-flight satellite internet access to passengers, while alsocollaborating with T-Mobile and Appleto introduce satellite-based text messaging on iPhone. The future looks bright for Starlink, but nothing stands still in tech: other companies have gotten a whiff of what’s to come, and are beginning the process of deployingtheir own constellation of internet satellites.

Starlink promo image

On the Starlink website, you’ll find a dedicatedservice availability and internet speed map. Before signing up for any residential plan, I’d recommend taking a peak at the map to ensure status availability.

T-Mobile and SpaceX have partnered with Apple to bring Starlink to the iPhone with iOS 18.3.

The back of the ultramarine iPhone 16