Frontier Airlines announced Tuesday it will introduce in-flight Wi-Fi using SpaceX's Starlink satellite internet service, with the first equipped aircraft set to roll out in early 2027.
Frontier is one of five airlines in the portfolio of private equity firm Indigo Partners that plan to adopt Starlink. The others are European carrier Wizz Air, Mexico's Volaris, Chile's JetSmart, and the Philippines' Cebu Pacific. Together, the five carriers expect to install Starlink on more than 1,000 aircraft, the company said.
"Starlink transforms the onboard experience, giving customers the flexibility to work, stream, browse, and stay connected throughout their journey," Frontier Chief Executive Officer Jimmy Dempsey said in a statement. Indigo Partners Managing Partner Bill Franke said the deal would bring "reliable, high-speed connectivity" to the five portfolio airlines.
Frontier did not disclose pricing terms for passengers or financial terms of the deal, according to CNBC. A Frontier spokeswoman would not confirm to CNBC whether passengers would have access to the service at no cost; airlines with existing Starlink agreements have generally made Wi-Fi available without charge to members of their loyalty programs.
Beyond passenger connectivity, Starlink will provide gate-to-gate connectivity for Frontier's pilots, flight attendants, maintenance teams, and ground operations, the company said.
Frontier had long been a notable holdout among U.S. airlines on in-flight Wi-Fi, according to the outlet, which reported that former CEO Barry Biffle had pointed to the added weight of the necessary hardware as a barrier to adoption. The Starlink announcement follows Frontier's planned introduction of first-class seating next year and recent changes to its loyalty program.
The agreement further cements Starlink's advantage over Amazon $AMZN's competing satellite internet offering as the two providers vie for airline partnerships. As American Airlines announced in May, it will install Starlink on more than 500 of its Airbus narrowbody aircraft starting in early 2027. United Airlines and Southwest Airlines have also committed to Starlink, while Delta Air Lines chose Amazon's service in March, according to Bloomberg. Starlink has signed deals with more than 40 carriers globally.
Not all budget carriers are following suit. Reuters reports that Ryanair and EasyJet have pushed back on the expense of equipping planes with connectivity, underscoring a wider industry question about whether the revenue upside of such amenities can offset their costs for carriers operating on thin margins.
