Satellite internet in Sydney: Starlink and Amazon Leo
Sydney is the hardest 'almost certainly not' in the country: fixed-line NBN and 5G beat satellite on price, latency and reliability across virtually the whole metro — and congested Sydney cells are exactly where Starlink's demand surcharge bites at checkout. The genuine exceptions are the rural fringe: the Hawkesbury, the rural north-west, the Macarthur edges and the mountains fringe.
Where satellite DOES make sense around Sydney
Most of the metro shouldn't buy a dish — but these are the genuine exceptions, each with its evidence.
| Area | Why satellite is genuinely in play |
|---|---|
| Rural north-west & Hawkesbury (Annangrove, Agnes Banks, Arcadia) | These localities appear on NBN's own fixed-wireless network list — tower-served fringe where fixed line never arrived; some blocks fall outside even that. NBN Co fixed-wireless upgrade suburb list (nbnco.com.au) — July 2026 |
| Macarthur fringe (Appin and surrounds) | On NBN's fixed-wireless list — the metro edge where coverage is tower-dependent. NBN Co fixed-wireless upgrade suburb list (nbnco.com.au) — July 2026 |
Your local reality — before satellite
The broadband gap here: The metro area is comprehensively served; the genuine gaps sit on the fringes named below. Where fixed-line NBN is available in this state, it performs well — ACCC-measured at 99.4% of plan speed (ACCC Report 33, June 2026) in busy hours — so the gap is about reach, not speed: it concentrates in the remote areas fixed-line doesn't cover. (NBN coverage footprints + ACCC Report 33)
Context: population ~5,560,000. (ABS GCCSA ERP Jun 2025 (reported via .id), July 2026)
If fixed-line NBN is available it will almost always beat satellite on price and consistency. Many premises now eligible for free/subsidised FTTP upgrade.
Metro and major regional centres only; not a rural substitute.
What you can get in Sydney
Available Australia-wide today; the practical LEO option now.
Not yet orderable in AU; arriving via NBN partnership. See arrival estimate.
GEO satellite (~660ms latency, ACCC-measured); Starlink beats it on latency. Being replaced by Amazon Leo from 2026 — see migration guide.
| Plan | Monthly |
|---|---|
| Ultra25 (up to 25 Mbps) | A$59.95 first 6mo, then A$69.95 |
| Ultra50 (up to 50 Mbps) | A$74.95 first 6mo, then A$89.95 |
| Ultra100 (up to 100 Mbps) | A$99.95 first 6mo, then A$109.95 |
Starlink in detail
| Plan | Monthly | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Residential 100 Mbps | A$75 | up to 100 Mbps; entry tier |
| Residential 200 Mbps | A$110 | up to 200 Mbps |
| Residential Max | A$150 | up to 400+ Mbps; includes optional mesh node |
Where to buy
| Channel | Detail |
|---|---|
| Starlink direct | Standard pricing |
| Telstra bundle | $125/mo month-to-month, 50/10 Mbps (estimated, capped), UNLIMITED data + home phone with unlimited calls; Standard Starlink Kit $549 upfront; $200 modem non-return fee if cancelled within 24 months |
| Skymesh | local support; Agent referral partner |
When Amazon Leo reaches Sydney
Amazon Leo's first-generation shells are tuned for the mid-latitudes, and the network switches on in stages as satellites launch. Three things set the timing for any one place: how well its latitude fits the coverage band, where its country sits in Amazon's rollout order, and how far the constellation has actually been built. Here's how Sydney scores on each.
Why 2027: Sydney sits inside the 30°–56° band the first shells are tuned for, so it's among the earliest latitudes to reach usable satellite density. On the rollout side, Australia has an announced Amazon rollout path but sits behind the five launch countries. With roughly 398 of the 578 satellites needed for continuous Phase 1 coverage now in orbit, the constellation is still filling in — which is why even launch countries see availability arrive in stages rather than all at once. Put together — latitude fit plus rollout position plus how far the constellation has actually been built — that points to a realistic first-availability window of 2027 for Sydney.
Side by side
| Starlink | Amazon Leo | |
|---|---|---|
| Available here | Yes — order today | Not yet — est. 2027 |
| Entry monthly | A$75 | TBA — not announced |
| Hardware | $0 upfront + $15/mo Monthly Kit Fee (rental; return on cancel). Self-install kit ships for $19. Optional professional installation +$280 one-off. Outright purchase ~$549–599 at JB Hi-Fi/Harvey Norman. | Leo Pro expected under US$400 (announced) |
Government support worth checking
| Scheme | Status | What it covers |
|---|---|---|
| Free/subsidised FTTP upgrade | open | varies — Many previously FTTN/FTTC premises — Check BEFORE buying satellite — this is the honesty row. |
Satellite direct to your phone
Satellite-to-mobile texting is live overseas (One NZ via Starlink; T-Mobile US). AU carriers expected to follow — this is the layer that ends the dead zone. (One NZ / T-Mobile announcements, July 2026)
Confirm your exact address
This assessment is accurate at the area level; availability for a specific address is determined by the provider.
Enter your address at starlink.com for cell-level availability and your exact local pricing (including any demand surcharge).
No public address checker yet — consumer service hasn't launched here. We'll link Amazon's official checker the day it exists.
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Every plan, every price, every option — measured speeds, government support, and where to buy — compared on one page.
See the full New South Wales comparison →Sources & method
- Starlink availability and plans — starlink.com, restated as facts, checked July 2026.
- Amazon Leo launch countries, terminals and thresholds — Amazon announcements and FCC filings.
- Ground broadband and census context — official regulator and statistics sources as cited inline.
- Leo arrival window — OrbitalNodes model (latitude × rollout tier × constellation progress); labelled as an estimate wherever it appears.
OrbitalNodes is independent and not affiliated with SpaceX, Starlink, Amazon, or Amazon Leo. Availability, pricing and specifications change; always confirm with the provider before purchasing. Some outbound links may be affiliate links, at no cost to you — they never change what we report. How we make money.