Android is creating a central “Satellite connectivity” hub to scan your phone for any app capable of functioning over space-based networks, and adding a new Quick Settings tile to keep track of whether your handset is within reach or not. The feature, tucked away in the newest Android Canary build, suggests a not-so-distant future where satellite is no longer merely a back-up for emergency situations—it’s baked into your phone and can be used any time that cellular coverage isn’t available.
What’s New in Android’s Satellite Connectivity Hub
Two parts make up the new experience. First, there is a tile in Quick Settings (“Satellite: On/Available/Not available”) so you can simply see if service is even attainable—with three states. Second, there’s a dedicated Settings page listing “satellite apps,” giving you one place to find and launch software that can both send and receive data when you’re off-grid.

On initial testing, the page already surfaces a few “core” integrations including Emergency SOS, Google Messages, Maps, and system settings. Code strings suggest broader support is also in the works—which would mean this list will grow on its own over time as additional apps announce satellite compatibility.
How It Works and Why Your Plan Details Matter
Expect to still see the tile there if your device is a new flagship. And Android is not just looking at hardware: it’s checking to see whether Non-Terrestrial Networks (NTN) are enabled for roaming on your carrier plan. For those whose plan doesn’t include satellite, the OS will indicate that the feature is not available, but it lets you open the hub and follow along with a demo.
That distinction matters because Android treats NB-NTN (narrowband) and LTE-based NTN differently. NB-NTN is low-rate, well suited for SOS calls, text messaging, and location pings. LTE-based NTN provides sufficient bandwidth for richer experiences, such as voice calls and higher-quality messaging, and perhaps even light social interactions around media.
Apps Pinpointed for Satellite Support on Android
The app list at the OS level changes based on connection type. If LTE-based NTN is available, Android’s code suggests the hub could surface more than just basic apps:
- Google Messages for texts
- WhatsApp for calls and chat
- Google Maps for offline routing with live location sharing
- Personal Safety for emergency sharing
It also hints at third-party options like Snapchat and X, presumably allowing audio calls or lightweight messaging when you’re out of reach. Weather services like AccuWeather and Google Weather are also potential matches; weather updates are low-bandwidth, time-sensitive information in remote locales. The presence of those strings in system UI is an indication that developers are setting up explicit satellite modes instead of simply letting customers’ offline caches suffice.
From SOS to Just Everyday Connectivity
Android added platform hooks for satellite last cycle aimed at emergency messaging. The ecosystem is now growing into utility. Google has indicated that popular communication apps will integrate with the stack, going even further than SOS to real conversations and sharing of location where terrestrial networks fall short.

That’s in line with the overall NTN market. Release 17 of the 3GPP standardized satellite-to-device connectivity for both NB-IoT and LTE waveforms, while Release 18 brings performance improvements. Direct-to-cell trials are happening fast now as satellite carriers and operators race to cover the globe: AST SpaceMobile has shown connecting voice and video calls directly to unmodified commercial smartphones, with double-digit Mbps downlink in open-sky tests — and SpaceX’s Direct to Cell started early texting service trials with a large U.S. carrier. These benchmarks also serve to anchor Android’s new hub in the present, not the future.
Why a System Hub for Satellite Features Is Important
You gain two things from having a consistent entry point. It makes satellite features discoverable—most users shouldn’t have to guess which app is used in the backcountry—and it reduces friction for developers by giving them a native place to declare capabilities. For carriers, the tile’s plan-aware status is a hint toward transparent packaging and roaming agreements that—historically—have been the barrier to satellite services on mainstream phones.
For users, the practical value is straightforward: when you lose bars, Android will let you know what is still working, and how. That can be a big step beyond a pop-up buried inside an individual app.
Availability and What to Expect Next from Android
For now, the tile and new Settings page are hidden by a developer flag in the Android Canary channel, and some of the links are dummy text.
The design, the language, and the consumer-focused app list all seem to clearly indicate a product headed for market once carriers, partners, and APIs are in place.
Look for the hub to develop alongside carrier NTN rollouts and 3GPP-compatible satellite networks. As additional areas turn on LTE-based NTN, and once developers firm up their satellite modes, that app list should expand yet more, and the tile will shift from “Not available” to “Available” more regularly—turning satellite from a safety net into just another part of Android’s connection routine.
