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Home » Airlines » Aer Lingus » Aer Lingus Adds Starlink, Delta Stands Alone
Aer Lingus

Aer Lingus Adds Starlink, Delta Stands Alone

Kyle Stewart Posted onApril 5, 2026April 5, 2026 16 Comments

Starlink lands on Aer Lingus, expanding its airline takeover while Delta bets elsewhere. Will that gamble pay off as competition finally emerges?

First A321XLR to Aer Lingus courtesy of Airbus
First A321XLR to Aer Lingus courtesy of Airbus

Starlink’s Grip On Airline WiFi Tightens

Aer Lingus just joined the growing list of airlines rolling out Starlink, and at this point the list of airlines without it is becoming few. Starlink is not just improving inflight WiFi. It is redefining expectations. Gate-to-gate connectivity, minimal latency, and speeds that beat home broadband (it’s faster than my wired Xfinity connection at home.) are no longer theoretical. They are operational, and spreading fast.

What started with early adopters like JSX and Hawaiian has now expanded across long-haul flag carriers. The key difference is consistency. Legacy providers always struggled with dropped coverage, especially over oceans. Starlink’s low Earth orbit network solves that problem in a way GEO satellites simply cannot.

And now, Aer Lingus becomes the latest proof point that this is not a niche upgrade. It is becoming the default even for smaller flag carriers.

Delta’s Bet On Amazon’s Leo Looks Increasingly Risky

That leaves Delta Air Lines as the most notable holdout until this week when the world’s second largest carrier – and most profitable globally – selected Starlink competitor, Amazon Leo (a play on Low Earth Orbit.) Delta has aligned itself with a competing ecosystem tied to  and related partners, rather than going all-in on Starlink. On paper, that diversification makes sense. In reality, it looks like a timing problem.

Blue Origin’s satellite ambitions, along with Amazon’s Project Kuiper, are still ramping. Amazon Project Kuiper has launched satellites, but nowhere near the scale or maturity of Starlink’s 10,000 satellite strong network. That gap matters. Other airlines are not buying future potential, they are switching on service today while Delta will wait until 2028. They are buying and delivering passenger satisfaction today.

Delta has done an excellent job marketing free WiFi, but performance lags dramatically behind what Starlink-equipped aircraft are delivering. If that gap widens, customer perception could shift quickly, especially on long-haul routes where connectivity matters most. In a case of United leaping ahead of Delta in other areas of innovation, this too could be an area where Delta may have discovered key customer incentive only to watch competitors take the pole position.

Is Amazon A Real Challenger Or Just A Price Check?

Amazon’s Leo is the most credible long-term challenger, but it intends to operate as a long-term disruptor. The advantage Amazon brings is not just technology. It is pricing pressure. Even before full deployment, Project Kuiper introduces leverage into airline negotiations. Starlink is no longer the only game in town, even if it is the only scaled one. If airlines can be patient, they may find better prices around the corner. Commitments like Delta’s buoy Leo’s growth efforts and give other airlines who may be open to waiting a bit longer, a chance not only at better pricing but perhaps better terms, speeds, and service as the product expands.

That alone could keep Starlink pricing in check, especially as airlines begin to standardize fleet-wide installations. No airline wants to be locked into a single provider forever. But make no mistake, Amazon is playing catch-up. Until its constellation reaches meaningful density, it cannot match Starlink’s global reliability. Delta is betting that happens in the future.

What Happens To Panasonic And Legacy Providers?

Panasonic Avionics and other legacy providers face a brutal reality. Their GEO-based systems were built for a different era. High latency, patchy ocean coverage, and inconsistent speeds were tolerated because there was no better alternative. Imagine if Starlink, or Leo for that matter, were operational when MH370 went missing.

Panasonic can attempt incremental upgrades, hybrid networks, or partnerships, but the core limitation remains. Higher orbit equals higher latency, more expensive launches, different technology, and higher costs. To stay relevant, providers like Panasonic likely need to pivot toward integration rather than competition. That could mean becoming service managers, bundling connectivity with entertainment, or even partnering with Starlink or Leo rather than trying to outbuild them. For an operator like Leo, Panasonic could provide incremental coverage or a fall back system. It could show a broader map of general coverage though the higher speed nework would remain what it is building today.

Who Hasn’t Chosen Starlink Yet?

The list of airlines without Starlink is shrinking, but a few major players still stand out as potential adopters. American Airlines remains tied to existing providers but has shown willingness to test new solutions. For carriers like American, that will mean refitting their aircraft with the new satellite, updating payment modes, changing its own operational satellite communications (potentially too.) It would mean retraining staff which carries a high cost as well.

In Europe, groups like Lufthansa and Air France-KLM are experimenting with upgrades but have not fully committed. These airlines operate complex fleets, which slows decision-making, but also makes them prime candidates for a step-change solution. Once one of these major groups flips, expect a domino effect. But Delta’s commitment to Leo shows them that there is a future for competition in the connectivity space.

Conclusion

Starlink is no longer a disruptor. It is becoming the standard. For Starlink, Aer Lingus joining the network reinforces a clear trajectory where speed, reliability, and global coverage are no longer optional. What makes Aer Lingus particularly unique is that it is not a particularly premium carrier (though it offered free internet to its business class customers, something its European peers did not.) Delta’s decision to back an alternative ecosystem may eventually pay off if Amazon’s Project Kuiper/Leo reaches scale, but for now it looks like a bet on the future while competitors win in the present. The presence of Amazon in the connectivity space will likely prevent pricing from spiraling out of control, which benefits airlines and passengers alike. The real question is not whether Starlink will dominate, but how long the remaining holdouts can afford to wait before joining them or if Amazon is able to pose a legitimate threat in the long term.

What do you think? 

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About Author

Kyle Stewart

Kyle is a freelance travel writer with contributions to Time, the Washington Post, MSNBC, Yahoo!, Reuters, Huffington Post, Travel Codex, PenAndPassports, Live And Lets Fly and many other media outlets. He is also co-founder of Scottandthomas.com, a travel agency that delivers "Travel Personalized." He focuses on using miles and points to provide a premium experience for his wife, daughter, and son. Email: sherpa@thetripsherpa.comEmail: sherpa@thetripsherpa.com

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16 Comments

  1. Jim LeJeune Reply
    April 5, 2026 at 3:26 pm

    Delta, aka Georgia KlanAir, has always lagged electronically with the worst app and website by far of the big four U.S. airlines. United’s app 10 years ago was better than DLs now. It is not surprising they would pick Amazon. Amazon’s frequent outages match DL’s horrid IT infrastructure and all the problems they and their subs have had including multiple meltdowns, lost data, and canx rates higher than peer airlines. Par for the course sadly.

    • Bill J Reply
      April 5, 2026 at 11:21 pm

      Your nickname for Delta is bufoonish.

      • Jim LeJeune Reply
        April 6, 2026 at 4:03 pm

        Kid, when I want your opinion I will give it to you. Georgia Klan Air is not just my name (and an appropriate one seeing as they have more racial bias complaints than all other majors COMBINED) but one used by many. Sorry it triggers you. Maybe you can call Spectrum Boy for some self-therapy?

  2. Güntürk Üstün Reply
    April 5, 2026 at 4:48 pm

    Influential statement → “Starlink is no longer a disruptor. It is becoming the standard.”

  3. Güntürk Üstün Reply
    April 5, 2026 at 4:57 pm

    It is worth remembering that Starlink wifi, which is engineered and operated by SpaceX, utilises more than 10,000 satellites.

  4. Güntürk Üstün Reply
    April 5, 2026 at 5:08 pm

    Ryanair refused, Aer Lingus acquired it…

  5. Güntürk Üstün Reply
    April 5, 2026 at 5:18 pm

    The fastest Wi-Fi in the sky is now flying with EI… Coming soon to the entire fleet (except Aer Lingus Regional)! Perhaps DL management may want to reconsider its decision.

  6. 1990 Reply
    April 5, 2026 at 8:52 pm

    Now… that’s my kinda Lingus…

    (Sorry, Kyle. Yes, Matt, I’m can’t help myself.)

  7. Tim Dunn Reply
    April 5, 2026 at 9:27 pm

    Delta has always zigged when others have zagged and it has worked very well for them.

    None of us know how well Amazon’s product will be but I don’t have any doubt that they can deliver something at least as good as Starlink.

    This is a contest between a couple of multi-billionaires; I don’t think Bezos will be shown up.

    and Amazon is a far more consumer focused company than Starlink

    • 1990 Reply
      April 6, 2026 at 8:57 am

      Which is how competition is supposed to work. Like, two or more parties actually fight to offer better services at lower prices and ‘win’ more market share within reason. It’s when these oligarchs capture the regulators or engage in monopolistic behavior that the train starts to go off the tracks.

  8. rebel Reply
    April 6, 2026 at 12:29 am

    Amazon Leo (formerly Project Kuiper), Amazon’s low Earth orbit satellite internet service client list includes Delta Air Lines being its largest customer for in-flight Wi-Fi, starting in 2028. Other partners include JetBlue Airways, L3Harris, DIRECTV Latin America, Sky Brasil, and Australia’s NBN Co. Amazon Leo has launched over 200 satellites and is developing a 3,232-satellite constellation. The project will cost over $10b.

    • Tim Dunn Reply
      April 6, 2026 at 8:25 am

      correct.

      Amazon generates over $10 billion/year in revenue so $10 billion is a drop in the bucket for them.

      Leo is supposed to be heavily integrated with Amazon Web Services so offers some structural advantages over access ot the internet compared to Starlink.
      Leo is not designed to be direct consumer facing but rather for large corporate and business users; getting Delta on just happens to add credibility but it is not likely you will be able to buy Amazon Leo service for your residence – at least in current plans.

      and remember that Viasat is also supplementing its high earth satellites with low earth satellites and has to or see its business model collapse.

      finally, remember that DL made the decision to acquire a refinery and is unique among world airlines to have one. It saved DL over $1 billion in fuel costs in 2022-23 and will likely do that again during this fuel crisis.
      Sometimes not doing what everyone else does can set you apart.

      • Tim Dunn Reply
        April 6, 2026 at 8:38 am

        oops… Amazon generates over $700 billion in revenue/year….

        • Güntürk Üstün Reply
          April 6, 2026 at 2:54 pm

          That’s right… Amazon’s total annual net revenue has shown consistent growth, exceeding $716 billion for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2025.

  9. Howard Miller Reply
    April 6, 2026 at 11:09 am

    1) Aer Lingus is part of the International Airlines Group, or IAG, which also owns British Airways, Iberia, LEVEL & Vueling.

    IAG & Starlink announced their agreement to off IAG Group owned airlines this past November.

    British Airways’ first Starlink equipped aircraft began operating last month.

    While the actual introduction of Starlink aboard BA & Aer Lingus may be news, the selection of SpaceX’ Starlink for its inflight WiFi is not.

    2) From the maybe it’s “more than an happy coincidence” file:

    Amazon’s corporate HQ is in Seattle.

    Meanwhile, Delta has a major hub/gateway at SEA that faces vigorous competition, including recently introduced international, long-haul flights to Asia & Europe by hometown rival, Alaska Airlines.

    Is it possible that Amazon & Delta found it “mutually beneficial” to become partners in launching Amazon’s Low Earth Orbit, or LEO, inflight WiFi?

    Just wondering.

    Note: Alaska Airlines, which is a member of oneworld (BA, Iberia, Aer Lingus, Level Vueling, AA, JAL, Qantas, among others), chose Starlink for its inflight WiFi this past August.

  10. Howard Miller Reply
    April 6, 2026 at 2:04 pm

    CORRECTION NOTE ⚠️:

    In the 2nd paragraph of my comment above, there was an editing error.

    Should be:

    “IAG & SpaceX’ Starlink announced an agreement to offer free inflight WiFi with the group’s portfolio of airlines this past November.”

    Apologies for any confusion the editing error may have caused.

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