SpaceX has committed roughly $17 billion to secure a vast swath of U.S. spectrum from EchoStar, a mix of cash and stock that vaults Starlink’s direct-to-cell ambitions from pilot to power play. It’s a bold strike in a market where control of the airwaves—not just satellites—determines who sets the rules.
Why spectrum is the choke point
The radio spectrum usable for phones and satellites is finite, tightly licensed, and fiercely defended. The Federal Communications Commission parcels it into bands and auctions long-term rights, and prime mid-band frequencies are already spoken for by carriers and legacy satellite firms. Owning rights, rather than renting them, is the difference between dictating your roadmap and waiting on someone else’s.

Until recently, satellite-to-phone services leaned on partnerships. In 2024, the FCC’s Supplemental Coverage from Space framework gave operators a legal path to extend terrestrial networks from orbit in collaboration with carriers. With the EchoStar deal, SpaceX moves beyond collaboration. It becomes the licensee, controlling a critical input others must negotiate to access.
From partner to proprietor
SpaceX began by teaming with wireless carriers to turn Starlink satellites into cell towers in the sky. Now it is buying spectrum assets so it can run those services on its own terms. That shift compresses negotiations, standardizes device support, and reduces dependence on carrier timelines. It also gives SpaceX leverage when striking roaming, wholesale, or handset agreements in the U.S.
The move mirrors a playbook SpaceX has used before: vertically integrate the bottlenecks. Reusable rockets cut launch costs. In-house satellite manufacturing sped deployment. Owning spectrum completes the stack for direct-to-cell, aligning engineering decisions with business control.
Engineering reality and 3GPP NTN
Direct-to-cell rides on standards work baked into 3GPP Release 17 and 18 for “non-terrestrial networks.” Starlink’s newer satellites carry large phased arrays to talk to ordinary smartphones, initially for messaging and emergency functions before scaling to voice and data. Mid-band spectrum matters because it balances range, penetration, and manageable antennas on both ends.
This is still hard physics. Power budgets are tight, Doppler shift is nontrivial, and interference must be choreographed so space signals don’t trample terrestrial cells. Owning the frequencies simplifies coordination and lets SpaceX architect the network—beam patterns, timing, and handoffs—around its constellation rather than around a patchwork of third-party licenses.
The economics and addressable market
Analysts view satellite-to-phone as a multi-billion-dollar opportunity spanning coverage extension, disaster resiliency, maritime and aviation connectivity, and low-bandwidth IoT. The GSMA estimates roughly 5% of the world’s population remains outside mobile broadband coverage, while a far larger “usage gap” lacks reliable service. Direct-to-cell sells peace of mind in cities and lifelines off-grid.
Unit economics hinge on two SpaceX advantages: manufacturing scale and cheap access to orbit. With a production line already shipping thousands of satellites and reuse driving down launch costs, incremental capacity is far cheaper for SpaceX than for would-be rivals. If even 100 million subscribers globally pay a $5–$10 monthly add-on for basic satellite coverage, that’s $6–$12 billion in high-margin annual revenue before enterprise, government, and IoT layers are counted.
The $17 billion price tag buys decades-long rights that can underpin recurring service revenue. It also strengthens SpaceX’s hand in bundling—combining fixed Starlink, mobility, and direct-to-cell into a single contract for logistics, energy, and public-safety customers.
Competitors and leverage
The field is crowding. Apple’s iPhone emergency messaging rides on a long-term partnership with Globalstar, and Apple has committed more than $1.5 billion to expand satellite features. AST SpaceMobile has demonstrated cellular calls from orbit with carrier partners, while Lynk has pursued text-first services. Amazon’s Kuiper isn’t focused on handsets yet but is a potent broadband rival.
SpaceX’s spectrum purchase changes the negotiating table. Carriers can wholesale coverage or roam onto Starlink without ceding control of their own bands. Handset makers gain a single, standardized space network to target across regions that adopt compatible bands. And if SpaceX seeks deeper integrations—whether with top Android OEMs or, more provocatively, with Apple—it now brings spectrum to the discussion, not just satellites.
Regulatory trench warfare
Spectrum is a legal as well as technical asset. SpaceX has spent years in FCC skirmishes over sharing rules, interference limits, and mid-band allocations, including high-profile battles over the 12 GHz band. The Commission has opened proceedings to modernize satellite sharing frameworks, with Starlink and terrestrial rivals filing thousands of pages of analysis.
Owning licensed spectrum streamlines approvals for direct-to-cell and reduces reliance on supplemental permissions. But it doesn’t end debates over coexistence with terrestrial networks or coordination under international ITU rules as SpaceX seeks cross-border expansion.
What success looks like
Near term, watch for FCC sign-off on the transfer, steady growth of message coverage into voice and basic data, and roaming deals that put satellite bars on major carrier status screens. Hardware support will widen as 3GPP NTN features move deeper into baseband chipsets.
If SpaceX converts spectrum control into ubiquitous device compatibility and predictable service quality, its $17 billion bet will look less like a gamble and more like table stakes for owning the satellite-to-phone era.