The surge highlights both strong demand and the limits of Starlink’s capacity in dense markets, giving Safaricom, Kenya’s leading fixed internet provider, more room to grow.The surge highlights both strong demand and the limits of Starlink’s capacity in dense markets, giving Safaricom, Kenya’s leading fixed internet provider, more room to grow.

Starlink’s Kenya rebound lifts subscriber peak after months of stalled sign-ups

2025/12/08 21:55

Starlink Kenya has reached 19,460 active users in September 2025, its highest count since launch and a jump that followed the reopening of urban sign-ups after a pause to manage congestion.

The surge highlights both strong demand and the limits of Starlink’s capacity in dense markets, giving Safaricom, Kenya’s leading fixed internet provider, more room to grow. 

Since entering the market in June 2023, Starlink has gained traction quickly, reaching a 0.5% market share within six months. Later, subscriptions rose from 16,786 in September 2024 to 19,146 in December, according to data by Kenya’s telecoms regulator, the Communications Authority (CA). 

However, heavy urban demand forced the company to halt new residential registrations in December 2024. The freeze remained in place until June 2025, stalling its growth. By March, active users had fallen to 17,066.

Starlink’s freeze showed its limits in Nairobi, Mombasa and other large towns. It could reach remote and peri-urban users without strain, but dense areas pushed the network near its capacity. 

The pause also opened the space for rivals to tighten their grip, with Safaricom and Airtel moving fast to roll out 5G routers priced from KES 3,000 ($23) to reach rural users–the same users Starlink wanted, groups that had gone without fibre for years and still make up the largest share of Kenya’s fixed-internet gaps.

Safaricom gained the most from this gap, as it also expanded its fibre reach and widened its hold on the fixed-internet market. It now has 815,037 connections, equal to a 35.6% share as of September 2025. Its range of local packages and broad last-mile reach helped it stay ahead while Starlink worked through its limits.

After the freeze ended in June, Starlink picked up pace again. Subscriptions rose to 17,425 that month and climbed to 19,470 by September. The growth shows steady demand for premium satellite links, especially in regions with limited fibre build-out.

Starlink’s progress now depends on faster capacity upgrades and better load management in major towns, where congestion triggered the earlier freeze. Its value remains strongest in areas without fibre, where satellite fills a clear access gap.

But the service is still far from matching the reach, pricing power and local distribution that define Kenya’s fixed-line leaders, and it will need steady investment before it can contest that position at scale. Its cheapest kit, the Starlink Mini, goes for KES 27,000 ($208). Safaricom and Airtel charge about KES 3,000 ($23) for their 5G routers.

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

USD mixed ahead of key FOMC decision – Scotiabank

USD mixed ahead of key FOMC decision – Scotiabank

The post USD mixed ahead of key FOMC decision – Scotiabank appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The US Dollar (USD) is narrowly mixed in quiet trade as investors await this week’s key event—Wednesday’s FOMC decision, Scotiabank’s Chief FX Strategists Shaun Osborne and Eric Theoret report. Markets weigh Fed cuts against sticky inflation “Stocks are churning in tight ranges while global bonds are softer as investors consider fading rate cut prospects outside of the US. European bond yields are up 4-5bps following hawkish comments from the ECB Governor Schnabel with Friday’s jump in Canadian bond yields adding to that momentum.” “The Fed is widely expected to cut rates this week, however, and give markets a little more insight into how a deeply divided policy-making body expects the key rate changes to unfold in the year ahead via updated dots and economic forecasts. More rate cuts are expected in 2026 but markets are having to balance expectations between sticky US inflation and the expected dovish shift in the Fed leadership next year.” “”The USD retains a sluggish undertone, meanwhile, and may need to find some hawkish nuggets in the Fed’s communications this week to avoid slipping further in what remains a weak period of the year for the USD overall from a seasonal point of view. The DXY is consolidating on the charts, with a tight trading range (potential bear flag pattern) developing between 98.8 (bear trigger) and 99.2 (short-term resistance).” Source: https://www.fxstreet.com/news/usd-mixed-ahead-of-key-fomc-decision-scotiabank-202512081336
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/12/09 00:14
Risk back on the table as crypto ETFs bounce back

Risk back on the table as crypto ETFs bounce back

The post Risk back on the table as crypto ETFs bounce back appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. This is a segment from the 0xResearch newsletter. To read full editions, subscribe. Today, we break down the BTC move over the past week, how ETFs have seen net inflows for the first time in nearly four weeks, and application and chain revenue. We also look into who President Trump’s next Federal Reserve Chair nominee might be. Indices BTC bounced off $85,000 lows, and is back up to $92,000. Over the past three weeks, BTC has increased 5%, with significant volatility throughout. In particular, BTC has been underperforming through the EU session, while outperforming in the US and APAC sessions. Over the past week, oracles, lending and Ethereum ecosystem tokens performed well, with each up just over 4%. Crypto equities performed the best, up 6.7%, primarily due to outperformance by HOOD.   The Nasdaq 100 (+1.70%) and S&P 500 (+0.78%) continue to grind up, while Gold underperforms slightly (-0.85%). In terms of worst-performing, gaming has outperformed significantly toward the downside, with -23% returns over the past week. LGCT was the worst performer, and declined in price by -75% over the past week.  Charts for The Week Odds have surged (up to 78% on Kalshi) that Kevin Hassett will be President Trump’s next Federal Reserve chair nominee, an announcement Trump recently confirmed is imminent. Hassett, a close White House ally, is favored because he aligns with the president’s demand for much lower interest rates to provide cheaper consumer loans and mortgages. Bitcoin ETF flows reversed sharply in November, posting significant net outflows after a steady run of inflows from May through October. The month saw roughly $3.46 billion in redemptions, completely erasing the $3.42 billion in new inflows seen last month and the worst outflows since February 2025 ($3.56 billion). The reversal highlights how quickly sentiment deteriorated despite months of strong accumulation.…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/12/09 00:04