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We try out Qatar Airways’ new Starlink wifi – a genuine game-changer

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Last year, I wrote that 2025 would be the year of unlimited, fast and free inflight wifi. Qatar Airways is at the forefront of this charge, at least when it comes to long haul services, thanks to its progress installing Starlink wifi.

Starlink is a network of over 7,000 satellites in Low Earth Orbit (LEO) that supplies satellite internet services around the world. Whilst it initially launched as a terrestial home internet system, it is now available for aircraft installation.

Satellite wifi for aircraft is nothing new – the first such system went live in the year 2000 – but Starlink and other Low Earth Orbit systems (like OneWeb and Amazon’s planned Project Kuiper) offer higher speeds, more bandwidth and lower latency. In short, it is faster and more reliable.

Using Starlink wifi on Qatar Airways

Qatar Airways is one of the first airlines to install Starlink connectivity, although United Airlines and Air France have also announced plans to do so.

So, does it live up to the hype? Rob and I travelled to Doha last week for meetings with Qatar Airways (flights were provided) and we deliberately chose Boeing 777-300 day flights in both directions so we could give it 12 hours of testing.

What is it like using Qatar Airways’ new Starlink wifi?

I am not exaggerating when I call the new Starlink service a genuine gamechanger. For the first time, it makes browsing the internet as easy at 35,000 feet as it is on the ground.

For premium passengers, it is perhaps the biggest gamechanger since flat beds in business class. For economy passengers, it is the biggest change since individual IFE screens were introduced.

Once you have flown a long haul aircraft with Starlink, you will not (if given a choice) book anything else.

Did I mention it’s free too? Starlink insists that airlines cannot charge for it. It is SO good that airlines are voluntarily ripping out their expensive existing systems, and giving up the revenue they generate, to give customers free Starlink wifi. Well, forward thinking airlines anyway ….

Connecting is a doddle, with no annoying pop-ups or interstitial pages. You do not need to sign in with your Privilege Club account or enter a password. All you do is connect to the ‘Oryx Comms’ network and you are instantly online. It is incredibly frictionless.

It’s also ‘gate to gate’. You can connect the second you board and you can keep going until the aircraft parks up. Literally not a second is wasted.

Once online you can browse as if you were at home, and I genuinely mean that.

Actually, I don’t mean that. Unless you are spending a fortune for your home wifi, Starlink is better.

Qatar Airways advertises it as being ‘up to 500 megabits per second’. I managed to get 200 mbps exactly on our outbound flight:

Qatar Airways Starlink wifi

200 mpbs is faster than our WeWork office which in theory is specifically wired to serve tech-driven companies. It was fast enough to deal with anything I threw at it, including a YouTube stream and other high-bandwidth applications.

Both Rob and I spent the entire flight working on our laptops as if we were in the office. We even skipped our second meals because we were getting so much done!

For the first time ever, there was no noticeable difference in connectivity between being at home in London versus flying at 35,000 feet and we could accomplish anything we needed.

Bar a couple of glasses of champagne as we worked we were genuinely as productive as we would have been in the office – perhaps more so, given the lack of other distractions.

Even more convenient was the fact that connecting required no convoluted process. You just connected to the network and that was that – no faffing with seat numbers, surnames or logins.

The service is so good that it is all the more unfortunate that some countries do not allow satellite internet in their territories. Unfortunately, this is out of Qatar Airways’ control – it is dependent on each country’s regulator to permit or deny the service, and some countries (such as India) are particularly aggressive in blocking satellite internet.

Fortunately, we were able to stay connected for the entire duration of our London – Doha – London flights.

There was no disruption from other passengers using the service either to stream content without headphones or making phone or video calls, although the Boeing 777 is a fairly noisy aircraft. In fact, everyone was remarkably well behaved!

Qatar AIrways Starlink wifi

Which aircraft currently have Starlink wifi?

I can only describe the rollout as ‘record pace’ given the first installation was complete in late October 2024. I doubt any other airline will be able to match the speed of Qatar Airways’ roll-out.

The good news is that the Boeing 777-300ER fleet is now virtually complete with the 777-200LR and A350s next.

When both fleets are complete the vast majority of Qatar’s long haul services will feature fast and unlimited free wifi. So far, Qatar Airways has committed to installing Starlink on its Boeing 777, 787 and A350 fleets. Here is the progress so far:

  • Boeing 777-300ER: 45 aircraft complete
  • Boeing 777-200LR: 1 aircraft currently in testing
  • A350-900: 1 aircraft currently in testing (the first A350 globally to have Starlink)

The full Boeing 777 fleet is due to be complete by Q2 or Q3 this year, whilst the A350 fleet will be completed by Q2 2026. The Boeing 787-8 fleet should be done by the end of 2026 followed by the Boeing 787-9 fleet.

Because the A350 and 777-200LR installation programme has only just begun, you will need to book a Boeing 777-300ER service if you want to be 100% certain of Starlink.

Qatar Airways has yet to announce whether it will install Starlink on its eight A380 aircraft and I suspect it will depend on the long-term fate of these planes. Whilst they were due to be retired during covid, delays on the Boeing 777X program (of which Qatar Airways has almost 100 on order) meant they were pressed back into service.

How does Qatar Airways’ Starlink wifi work?

In addition to experiencing the new wifi service on board both our flights, we had a tour of the hangar at Hamad International Airport where Qatar Airways is installing the Starlink antenna. Sadly no photos were allowed so you’ll have to use your imagination!

There are other benefits to installing Starlink beyond customer satisfaction. The dual-antenna system weighs just 10kg, less than one sixth the weight of the previous wifi system which came in at a hefty 65kg.

Why is Starlink so much lighter? Part of it is because it uses two so-called ‘phased array’ antennas.

Most current inflight wifi systems use what are called ‘Electronically Steered Antennas’. These are large, heavy antennas that physically move within the small bump on the roof of the aircraft. As the aircraft flies it must maintain a line-of-sight connection with the satellite, and it does so with 180-degrees of movement thanks to its electric motors.

Phased array antennas work in an entirely different way. Crucially, they remove the need for heavy moving parts. A phased array antenna is made up of many mini-antennas which can be individually controlled to steer a beam of radio waves in the direction required.

For Starlink, this means refocusing on a new satellite every minute or two as one of 7,000 satellites orbit the earth at a speed of around 7.7km per second, or one orbit every 90 minutes.

I’m told that Starlink has made the installation of the new system incredibly simple, and far quicker than previous systems. The kit for each aircraft literally turns up in a crate, ready to go. Whilst the aircraft we visited were having longer engineering checks done at the same time, it can take as little as two days to install and fully test the system.

Starlink provides the full kit, from the antenna that is mounted on the top of the rear fuselage to the six cabin routers. Each system has double the capacity required: there are two antennas, two power supplies and six routers. If one antenna goes out of service, the other antenna (and routers) should be able to maintain a stable connection, albeit at a lower overall bandwidth.

Conclusion

Both Rob and I agreed that Qatar Airways’ new Starlink service was a leap forward in onboard wifi, and indeed in the overall aircraft experience.

Previous systems have been slow, expensive and difficult to use. Starlink is the opposite: it’s free, fast, gate to gate and simple to connect to.

The biggest takeaway is that we are leaving the era of differentiated wifi services onboard and on the ground. With Starlink, airlines will be able to offer the same (better, actually) wifi speeds you would expect at home, in the office or anywhere else on the planet.

It may even change booking patterns. Your boss may have considered a day flight a waste if you lost a day of work, but with Starlink you can be as productive as you are in the office (we proved that!).

The downside, of course, is that there is no longer an excuse for being offline, either from your employer or your family!

Unless other airlines catch-up – and, in time, they will have no choice – Qatar Airways now has a huge competitive advantage.

You can find out more about Qatar Airways’ Starlink service on its website here.

Comments (215)

  • BJ says:

    Flew Etihad EDI-AUH in economy around a decade ago and the Wifi worked perfectly fine then, I used it for the entire duration of the flight. IIRC it was provided by Vodafone or T-mobile.

    • Rhys says:

      But it didn’t work reliably and with high speeds. It’s 50/50 whether wifi is usable on flights prior to Starlink, in my experience.

      • BJ says:

        Happy to defer to you on that, apart from this one flight I’ve only ever connected to in-flight wifi for a few minutest at a time to check email.

        • Rob says:

          Inflight wi-fi is a joke, trust me. And that’s before the £20 each-way charge that BA and Virgin make.

          • BJ says:

            Worked well enough that time to take my mind off the fact I was flying Y. I think a fair chunk if it was spent on HfP too. I rarely bother with wifi onboard anyway, I do grudge the cost some airlines charge but it’s more because I like to switch off from it and read a newspaper or book or just sleep.

  • Paul Hickey says:

    Was on a qatar 777 last month. It connected to starlink automatically without me even trying (must have remembered me from the normal oryx). I got 150mbps all the way and made what’s app video calls home (for the novelty) and they were faultless.

    • Steve says:

      Can’t wait when people will be on loud video calls whole flight. Not saying you did it, but it’s inevitable.

    • John33 says:

      WHY would you make video calls when there are humans around you and they’re stuck with nowhere else to go to escape your noise?

  • Neon_MDA says:

    Honestly this was incredible. I was able to do 4 video calls LHR-DOH day flight which meant a productive full half-day in the sky. Bit showy-offy for sure but also incredible not to miss several meetings. The frustration was then the terrible A380 product onward to SYD. And therein is QR’s problem. Fleet lottery/variability.

    • Danny says:

      Video calls on a plane will become more of an annoyance than seat recliners during meal time

      • Susan says:

        Completely agree. I don’t want to take a flight and spend the whole time listening to someone talking ! It’s bad enough in the train or anywhere else tbh

      • Novice says:

        Next they should add sound proofing around seats. I don’t want to hear a lot of people on their calls.

      • Man of Kent says:

        Indeed, I can see a rise in air rage incidents. How many of these calls will be absolutely necessary or just done so fellow passengers know how important the person is and they can drop into the conversation that they are on a plane. People making business calls in the lounge do this already so doing it on a plane is only a matter of time.

      • Brian says:

        Yep, this is definitely a reason to avoid those flights with this ‘service’, unless they bring in quiet areas, like the quiet carriage on trains.

    • kevin86 says:

      “ incredible”

    • Paul says:

      Depends which cabin you are in. F was fabulous albeit WiFi was dreadful but I didn’t care!

      I see that they now don’t allow any F Avios booking on the A380 to from LHR

  • DaveP says:

    Sounds great for surfing and text chat, but the prospect of people making loud phone calls and video/FaceTime calls (as experienced in lounges, etc) in the cabins is less appealing. 🙂

    • Phillip says:

      And even more disappointing is the Qatar on board announcement that now says when using your phones keep the volume low or use headphones. My view is silent or headphones! Suggesting that people can keep them on low will only lead to carnage! It’s bad enough now with people watching/listening to things without headphones!

      • John says:

        Well sometimes the engine noise is louder than low volume on speaker.

        • Rob says:

          On a 777 the engine noise covers up virtually everything. In Qsuite we never heard anything from anyone else. Obviously economy won’t be the same.

  • Swiss Jim says:

    Makes me so pleased I’m retired. Loved my many long haul flights – a rare escape from the pressures of work. I pity those travelling on business now. Of course, as a now solely leisure traveller, it’s perfect.

  • Jan M says:

    Perhaps worth including that Starlink is wholly owned by SpaceX, which is majority owned by a certain Elon Musk.

    • Nick says:

      ……and your point is? Like him or loathe him, he is a brilliant innovator as evidenced by Starlink, Tesla and Space X

      • Barrel for Scraping says:

        Because he’s shown that he’ll just storm into an organisation and rip things up (in this case in the name of government efficiency) but who’s to stop him cutting Starlink from airlines attached to countries the US are trying to pressure/sanction?

      • L Allen says:

        But he isn’t actually an innovator. Other people do the hard work.

    • Novice says:

      Wish it wasn’t a private company. Can’t buy in. 😭

    • Boon says:

      +1 great product, but (at least for me) not the type of owner that I share similar values to. Makes it very conflicting, as it genuinely is a gamechanging feature for choosing Qatar vs other airlines for long haul flights.

      I see looking through the comments he has avid supporters. Fair play. Everyone’s got their own set of values, and Musk’s values and actions are polarising. Some love him, some hate him.

  • Talay says:

    The only benefit I can see is the potential to stream Netflix from a device to a screen if you want content that is not available.

    However, the thought of working on a plane is abhorrent to me. I want relaxation, the lounge a few drinks, food and some sleep.

    But I recognise the huge leap forward.

  • Dominic says:

    I feel incredibly old saying this (and I’m not!), but I genuinely don’t want high-speed wifi available on all my flights. It’s the one time to have a genuine excuse to disconnect – I don’t want my employer making my flight time a “we can still do the evening call” time.

    I know it’s an inevitable path, but honestly can’t say that I am excited by it whatsoever.

    • Steve says:

      Can’t wait having person next to me a company meeting through zoom.

      • Numpty says:

        Yup, and that’s bound to happen. The amount of people who will be face timing etc. ‘i’m on the plane’ could get annoying!

        • Boon says:

          Just lean in to the call and introduce yourself 🙂

          And say thatyou really love those 30 slides… and you’re working for a competitor 😆

          That will get that Zoom call shut down quick!

          • JDB says:

            @Boon – yes that’s the answer! I can’t believe how much people are unaware of how loudly they are speaking and/or how indiscreet people are. Sometimes one learns very interesting confidential information but most of the time it demonstrates just how many superfluous calls (and probably people) take place simply to exchange some platitudes.

    • SteveJ says:

      I see it differently, this now means I will fly on company time / working hours as I won’t miss a beat, rather than catching a red eye so that I’m not offline in business hours.

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