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Musk's Starlink Internet Is Now Available in Over 100 Countries

But the satellite internet service is sold out in several major cities across the United States.

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Headshot of Joe Supan
Joe Supan Senior Writer
Joe Supan is a senior writer for CNET covering home technology, broadband, and moving. Prior to joining CNET, Joe led MyMove's moving coverage and reported on broadband policy, the digital divide, and privacy issues for the broadband marketplace Allconnect. He has been featured as a guest columnist on Broadband Breakfast, and his work has been referenced by the Los Angeles Times, Forbes, National Geographic, Yahoo! Finance and more.
Joe Supan
Starlink antenna
John Kim/CNET

SpaceX's Starlink satellite internet service has now rolled out to over 100 countries, according to Starlink's availability map. The hardware can ship "immediately" to areas where the service is available.

A map shared by Elon Musk's space company shows that Starlink is available in much of the US, Europe, South America, Africa and Southeast Asia. Many of the remaining countries and areas show availability coming in 2025 pending regulatory approval and capacity constraints. Cities in the US, including Seattle, Portland, San Diego and Austin, are currently marked as "sold out."

Starlink

Cities like Seattle are currently listed as "at capacity" on the Starlink website.

Starlink

Starlink raised its prices last year, jumping to $120 per month, up from the original rate of $99. The one-time hardware fee for Starlink's satellite dish dropped to $349, from a one-time high of $599.

Locating local internet providers

The service, which has been available since fall 2020, offers the promise of higher speeds and lower latency than other satellite providers. After a few years of launches, the company has amassed a constellation of more than 7,000 low Earth orbit satellites.

Watch this: Starlink Satellites Are Bringing Internet to Millions. We'll Explain the Pros and Cons