Quick Summary: Starlink vs HughesNet vs Viasat

Metric Starlink HughesNet Viasat
Monthly Cost $50–$180 $64–$150 $75–$150
Hardware Cost $599 $0–$200 $0–$200
Download Speed 50–150 Mbps 15–25 Mbps 25–35 Mbps
Latency 25–35ms 600–700ms 500–600ms
Data Cap Unlimited 10–50 GB 50–150 GB
Contract None 2 years 2 years
Coverage 170+ countries North America USA + some international
Verdict Best overall Outdated Outdated
Winner: Starlink by a landslide. In every metric - speed, latency, data, contracts, and coverage - Starlink is superior. HughesNet and Viasat are becoming obsolete for consumers.

Speed & Latency Comparison: The Critical Difference

This is the most important metric. Latency (not speed) is what makes Starlink revolutionary.

Starlink (LEO Satellite)

  • Satellite Orbit: Low-Earth Orbit (LEO) - 350 miles above Earth
  • Latency: 25–35 milliseconds (signal travels 350 miles up, down)
  • Speed: 50–150 Mbps download, 10–20 Mbps upload
  • What you can do: Play competitive games, video call smoothly, stream 4K, remote work seamlessly

HughesNet (GEO Satellite)

  • Satellite Orbit: Geostationary Orbit (GEO) - 22,000 miles above Earth
  • Latency: 600–700 milliseconds (signal travels 22,000 miles up, down, plus processing delay)
  • Speed: 15–25 Mbps download, 2–5 Mbps upload
  • What you can do: Email, web browsing, light streaming. Gaming and video calls are difficult (noticeable lag)

Viasat (GEO Satellite)

  • Satellite Orbit: Geostationary (GEO) - 22,000 miles up
  • Latency: 500–600 milliseconds
  • Speed: 25–35 Mbps (better than HughesNet but still slow)
  • What you can do: Similar to HughesNet; gaming is difficult due to high latency

Why the massive difference? Starlink's satellites are 63x closer to Earth than GEO satellites. Light travels at 186,000 miles per second, so the distance difference creates a 575ms latency gap. This isn't about technology; it's physics.

Real-world impact: Starlink latency (25–35ms) is comparable to cable and fiber. HughesNet's 600ms latency makes Zoom calls awkward (people talk over each other) and gaming impossible.

Price Comparison: Year 1 Total Cost

Here's what you actually pay in Year 1:

Provider Hardware Monthly 12 Months Year 1 Total
Starlink Standard $599 $50 $600 $1,199
HughesNet 10GB $0 $64 $768 $768
HughesNet 50GB $0 $100 $1,200 $1,200
Viasat 50GB $0 $75 $900 $900
Viasat 150GB $0 $120 $1,440 $1,440

Key insight: Starlink's upfront $599 cost catches up to HughesNet by month 10. However, Starlink offers unlimited data (no overage fees), while HughesNet/Viasat have strict data caps.

Important: HughesNet often charges overage fees ($10–$25 per extra 50GB) after exceeding your cap. A heavy user could pay $1,500+ Year 1, making Starlink much cheaper.

Data Caps and Throttling

Starlink: Unlimited Data

  • No hard limits on any plan
  • Standard plan ($50/mo): Unlimited at full speed
  • Plus plan ($80/mo): Higher priority, unlimited
  • Pro plan ($180/mo): Highest priority, unlimited
  • You can stream 4K, play games, work remotely without worrying about data

HughesNet: Strict Data Caps

  • Plans capped at 10–50 GB/month
  • After hitting cap: deprioritized (very slow)
  • Overage charges: $10–$25 per extra 50 GB
  • Can't stream HD video without hitting cap quickly
  • One 4K movie = 20–50 GB (hits cap immediately)

Viasat: Moderate Data Caps

  • Plans capped at 50–150 GB/month
  • After hitting cap: deprioritized
  • No explicit overage charges, but deprioritization is severe
  • Heavy streaming users will hit 150 GB in 2–3 weeks

Winner: Starlink by far. Unlimited data is essential for modern internet use. Data caps make HughesNet/Viasat impractical for streaming or remote work.

Installation and Hardware

Starlink

  • Self-installation: 20–30 minutes
  • Dish: White, pizza box-sized satellite
  • Hardware cost: $599 upfront (you own it permanently)
  • No professional installation fee
  • Can move to new location and reinstall yourself

HughesNet

  • Professional installation required (usually free with contract)
  • Technician installs and aligns the dish
  • Hardware: Usually provided free or $99–$199
  • 2-year contract required (early termination fee: $400–$500)
  • Cannot easily move; requires technician reinstall at new location

Viasat

  • Professional installation required
  • Similar to HughesNet: technician-installed, 2-year contract
  • Slightly faster than HughesNet but otherwise similar
  • Early termination fees apply

Winner: Starlink. Self-installation is cheaper and faster. No contracts mean you're not locked in for 2 years.

Availability and Coverage

Starlink Coverage

  • 170+ countries globally
  • Expanding rapidly; coverage map updates monthly
  • Works on land, sea, and in remote locations
  • Maritime and airborne service available (premium plans)

HughesNet Coverage

  • USA + some international (limited)
  • Mature network but not expanding significantly
  • Available virtually everywhere in the continental US

Viasat Coverage

  • USA + limited international
  • Good coverage in the contiguous US
  • Smaller footprint than HughesNet

Winner: Starlink. Global coverage and rapid expansion make it future-proof. HughesNet/Viasat are North America-focused and stagnant.

Real-World Performance

Starlink User Reports (2026)

  • Typical speeds: 50–150 Mbps (more than sufficient for modern use)
  • Latency: 25–35ms (excellent for all applications)
  • Uptime: 99.5%+ (brief outages in heavy rain)
  • User satisfaction: Very high for rural users; criticism mainly from urban users comparing to fiber

HughesNet User Reports

  • Speeds: 15–25 Mbps (adequate for basic browsing)
  • Latency: 600–700ms (noticeable lag in all applications)
  • Data caps: Primary complaint; users hit limits quickly
  • User satisfaction: Low; users switch to Starlink when available

Viasat User Reports

  • Speeds: 25–35 Mbps (slightly better than HughesNet)
  • Latency: 500–600ms (still problematic)
  • Data caps: Better than HughesNet but still restrictive
  • User satisfaction: Moderate; better than HughesNet but still outdated

Who Should Choose Each Provider?

Choose Starlink If:

  • You have no cable/fiber available
  • You work remotely (latency matters)
  • You stream video or play games
  • You travel globally (Roam plan)
  • You want unlimited data
  • You don't want 2-year contracts

Choose HughesNet/Viasat If:

  • You absolutely cannot get Starlink (not available yet)
  • You only use email/light browsing
  • You need the lowest upfront cost ($0 hardware)
  • You have already signed a contract (stuck)
  • You live in an area with zero Starlink coverage (rare as of 2026)

The Verdict: Starlink Wins Decisively

Bottom line: Starlink is a generational improvement over HughesNet and Viasat. Higher speeds, dramatically lower latency, unlimited data, no contracts, and global coverage. If you have Starlink available, it's nearly impossible to justify choosing HughesNet or Viasat.
For current HughesNet/Viasat users: If you're on a 2-year contract, check your cancellation terms. Many users find that early termination fees are worth paying to switch to Starlink. The performance difference justifies the cost.