Starlink in Europe in 2025

Starlink’s low-Earth-orbit (LEO) satellite network has moved fast from a niche service for remote users to a mainstream broadband alternative in many parts of the world — and Europe is no exception. By 2025 Starlink is officially live across most of Europe, from big markets like the United Kingdom, Germany and France to smaller states and many Baltic and Nordic countries. Starlink’s product lineup (Residential, Residential Lite, Roam / Travel, Business and Priority tiers) is offered in country-specific versions and prices vary by market, local taxes and currency.

Below you’ll find:

  1. A practical, country-by-country list of European markets where Starlink was available in 2025.

  2. Typical Starlink residential pricing for a representative set of European countries (local pages cited).

  3. Short explanation of plan differences, taxes and tips for buyers.

Which European countries had Starlink in 2025? (comprehensive list)

Starlink’s public availability lists and independent trackers show Starlink rolled out across the majority of Europe by 2025. The following countries (and territories) in Europe had Starlink listed as an available market (dates of launch vary by country and are shown on availability trackers):

Albania, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Moldova, Monaco, Netherlands, North Macedonia, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Ukraine, United Kingdom — plus several smaller territories and Crown dependencies where Starlink operates. (Trackers and country lists updated through 2025 confirm broad European coverage.)

Note: Starlink’s “availability” is country-level but actual service activation depends on local licensing, stock of kits, and whether your address lies in a covered region — the Starlink availability map is the authoritative place to check an individual address.

Typical Starlink prices in Europe

Starlink publishes localized pages with the monthly price for its main consumer plans. Below are the commonly seen Residential / Residential Lite price points in major European markets (these are the prices shown on each country’s Starlink site in 2025 — equipment prices and promotional offers can change, so treat these as a market snapshot):

Important: prices below are for the standard consumer monthly service (Residential or where noted Residential Lite) and are shown in the local currency displayed on Starlink’s local site. Hardware (the Starlink kit) is typically a one-time kit price or financed option and may show as a separate charge on the country page.

  • United Kingdom£75 / month (Residential). Hardware/kit pricing and occasional promotions are listed on the UK site.

  • FranceResidential Lite shown from €29 / month (France also shows Residential & other plans on local site).

  • Netherlands€50 / month (Residential); Residential Lite also available (lower).

  • ItalyResidential Lite €29 / month; Residential approx €40 / month (local page shows both Lite and full Residential tiers).

  • Germanystarting at €29 / month for certain home plans (German pages show the local pricing bands and plan labels).

  • SpainResidential Lite €29 / month (Spanish localized page lists Lite and other plan info).

  • PolandW DOMU LITE 149 zł / month; W DOMU (Residential) 215 zł / month (local Polish site shows both tiers and kit pricing).

  • SwedenBostad Lite 390 kr / month; Bostad (Residential) 559 kr / month (Swedish site displays both Lite and Residential pricing).

  • Norwayfrom kr 399 / month for entry residential tiers (Norway site lists local monthly rates).

  • Switzerlandstarting around CHF 40 / month shown for some plans (Swiss site shows CHF denominated prices and kit deals).

  • United Kingdom / Roam examples — Roam and Mini kits have separate pricing (Roam tiers shown on the UK pages e.g., roam plans priced higher for mobility).

(These local pages are the authoritative source for the country prices shown above — see the country-specific Starlink service plans pages linked in the citations.)

What are the plan names?

  • Residential (full) — the standard home broadband plan. Typically unlimited data and higher priority on the network during peak times; price higher than Lite.

  • Residential Lite — a lower-cost home plan in many countries with “unlimited” data but deprioritized during congestion (speeds may be lower at peak). Available in several European markets as a budget option.

  • Roam / Travel — for users who move the kit between locations or want international roaming; often metered tiers (e.g., 50 GB) or higher monthly roaming packages. Good for RVs, boats, or frequent travelers.

  • Business / Priority / Maritime — higher-priced plans for heavy users, enterprise customers or maritime use; these include priority access, higher data allowances, or special hardware.

VAT, kit fees and regional caveats

  • Local taxes/VAT: Starlink lists local prices on country pages and those prices frequently exclude or include VAT depending on the page — check the local checkout for exact totals. Many European prices are shown pre-VAT or include VAT depending on how the local page is set up; expect the final billed amount to reflect local tax rules.

  • Hardware: the standard Starlink kit (dish + router + cables) is normally a one-time charge (or financed). Many European markets show a kit price or promotional discount during launch windows — so the total up-front cost varies significantly by country.

  • Stock & activation: even if a country is “available” on Starlink’s map, kit delivery times and activation slots can cause delays. Always check starlink.com for address-level availability before you buy.

Quick buying tips: “Starlink price Europe 2025”

  1. Check the localized Starlink page for your country — it’s the single most reliable source for the current monthly price, kit fees and promotions. Starlink keeps country pages updated with local currency and VAT treatment.

  2. Decide between Residential vs Lite — Lite is cheaper but deprioritized during peak hours; for households with heavy streaming/gaming, Residential may be worth the extra.

  3. Roam if you travel — if you’ll move the kit frequently across countries where Starlink is live, look at Roam packages but expect higher costs or per-GB charges in some tiers.

  4. Watch for promotions — new-market launches sometimes come with temporary service discounts or hardware rebates. The Starlink support/promotional terms page details promotional pricing rules.

    Europe in 2025 is largely Starlink-covered — but prices and kit availability are market-specific.