If you rely on satellite internet to stay connected on the road, a new industry forecast may give you pause. According to PCMag.com, STMicroelectronics, which supplies chips to Starlink, reports that global satellite internet users could climb toward 100 million within the next couple of years. That would be a massive jump from where things stand today—and it could reshape the experience RVers have come to depend on.
At first glance, it sounds like a win. More users usually means more investment, better hardware, and broader coverage. But for RVers, there’s a flip side that’s easy to miss until you’ve lived it.
A forecast that leaps ahead of reality
Right now, the biggest player—SpaceX’s Starlink—has roughly 10 million users worldwide. Even optimistic internal targets suggest growth into the tens of millions, not 100 million, at least not in the near term. That makes this forecast less a statement of what’s happening and more a glimpse of where the industry hopes to go.
And if it gets anywhere close, RVers may feel the effects sooner than most.
More users could mean more pressure on the system
Satellite internet doesn’t behave like cable or fiber. It depends on a network of satellites moving overhead, each one sharing capacity across wide swaths of space. As more people sign on, especially in popular areas, that capacity gets stretched.
RVers have already seen hints of what that looks like in the real world. Connections can slow down in crowded regions. Service tiers may prioritize some users over others. Pricing doesn’t fluctuate in real time, but it can shift as demand rises—especially when starting or restarting service in busy areas.
Those aren’t bugs in the system. They’re signs of a system under pressure.
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Why RVers could lose their remote advantage
One of the biggest draws of Starlink has been its ability to work where nothing else does. For many RVers, that created a kind of advantage. Head out to a remote patch of desert or a quiet BLM site, and you could often count on a solid connection while the rest of the world struggled.
But that advantage may not last if satellite internet goes fully mainstream.
As more users come online—especially outside the traditional rural base—the competition for bandwidth grows. The definition of a “high-demand” area can expand. And the idea that you can simply drive away from congestion to get better service starts to erode.
Competition may help, but it is not here yet
To reach anything close to 100 million users, Starlink won’t be alone. Amazon is building out its own satellite network, Project Kuiper, and other players are moving into the space.
In theory, that competition should help. More satellites and more providers could mean better performance and more options for RVers. But those benefits depend on timing, and, for now, they remain more promise than reality.
Growth could bring changes RVers will notice
There’s no question satellite internet is expanding. The technology works, demand is strong, and the industry is investing heavily. But growth on this scale rarely comes without friction.
A surge in users brings growing pains. For RVers, those pains are likely to show up as slower speeds in familiar places, tighter rules around usage, and pricing models that continue to evolve.
None of that means satellite internet is about to stop working. Far from it.
It does mean that the experience many RVers enjoy today—reliable connectivity in wide-open places—may not look quite the same if the industry hits the kind of growth numbers now being discussed.
And that’s the part worth paying attention to, long before 100 million users becomes more than just a forecast.
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