Starlink outpaces terrestrial ISPs in 22 African markets

Elon Musk

Elon Musk’s Starlink has cemented its position as Africa’s fastest Internet provider, outperforming terrestrial ISPs in 22 out of 23 markets according to new data from Ookla’s Speedtest Intelligence. This milestone underscores Starlink’s transformative role in bridging Africa’s connectivity gap and reshaping the continent’s digital future.

Starlink’s median download speeds exceeded 50Mbps in 16 countries during Q1 2026, with Eswatini, Botswana, and Senegal surpassing 100Mbps. In Eswatini, Starlink was measured at nine times faster than local providers. Only Madagascar’s fiber investments gave terrestrial ISPs the edge.

“Starlink’s throughput has improved dramatically over the past two years, reflecting ongoing investments in inter-satellite laser links and regional ground infrastructure,” said Ookla in its report.

Upload speeds doubled in Central and East Africa and nearly tripled in Southern Africa, with Starlink leading in 13 markets.

Latency continues to favour fiber, though localised gateways in Johannesburg, Nairobi, and Lagos have reduced delays by over 80 per cent. Kenya now records the lowest continental latency at 39 ms, while countries without gateways, such as DR Congo (127 ms) and Liberia (222 ms), still face challenges.

Starlink’s role remains complementary to mobile operators due to high upfront kit costs ($200–$700) and limited indoor coverage. Partnerships include: Airtel Africa distributing Starlink broadband and Direct-to-Device services in 14 markets. Vodafone leveraging Amazon’s LEO constellation for rural backhaul.Orange signing a multi-year agreement with Eutelsat OneWeb, and MTN South Africa trialing D2D calls with Lynk Global.

These collaborations enable operators to extend coverage into underserved areas without costly terrestrial expansion, positioning Starlink as a critical enabler of rural connectivity.

Starlink plans are cheaper than local ISPs in Ghana and Zimbabwe, while fiber remains more cost-effective in Nigeria, Kenya, and Rwanda. Governments and institutions are stepping in to subsidize access: Zimbabwe funded thousands of kits for schools.The Central African Republic received donations for rural health centers.

The report noted that demand has been so strong that Starlink temporarily paused sign-ups in major cities due to capacity limits. Upcoming V3 satellites, launching late 2026, are expected to deliver a tenfold increase in downlink capacity, ensuring scalability for Africa’s growing digital needs.
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tarlink now operates in 27 African countries, with half a million users projected by the end of 2025. Regulatory hurdles remain in South Africa, where ownership requirements have delayed entry. Proposed amendments to the Electronic Communications Act could open the market by 2027. In contrast, Uganda’s 2026 license approval marked Starlink’s latest expansion milestone, setting stricter accountability standards for satellite operators.

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