Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

T-Mobile just killed your hopes for this MVNO dream team

read original get T-Mobile Prepaid SIM Card → more articles
Why This Matters

T-Mobile has dismissed the possibility of partnering with Starlink for a Mobile Virtual Network Operator (MVNO) service, citing a lack of market expansion potential. This decision highlights the company's strategic focus on growth channels that bring in new customer bases rather than existing ones. Despite Starlink's efforts to develop mobile services, T-Mobile's stance underscores the challenges of integrating satellite connectivity into mainstream mobile plans.

Key Takeaways

T-Mobile teamed up with Starlink for its T-Satellite service, which brings satellite connectivity to any modern smartphone. The company has since announced a new 5G business plan that uses Starlink for backup internet connectivity. But what about the prospect of a Starlink MVNO ?

T-Mobile CEO Srinivasan Gopalan poured cold water on the prospect of a Starlink MVNO during the carrier’s Q1 2026 earnings call:

On MVNOs, we’ve got a very clear philosophy or approach to MVNOs. MVNOs make sense for us when it’s a TAM [total addressable market – ed] expansion. A TAM expansion happens because it’s a new customer base that we couldn’t target earlier. It’s a new channel. I mean an example of this is what we did with cable focused on SMB [small and medium-sized businesses – ed]. It’s not obvious to me how an MVNO with SpaceX or any other LEO operator fulfills those conditions.

In other words, T-Mobile thinks a Starlink MVNO wouldn’t actually grow the market. This statement comes months after Starlink filed trademarks for Starlink Mobile. It also follows the company’s acquisition of terrestrial bandwidth from Boost Mobile’s parent company. So a Starlink mobile service of some kind isn’t out of the question, but T-Mobile might not play a part.