- Kyivstar now allows SMS over Starlink’s satellites on ordinary 4G phones, with voice and data coming in 2026.
- The service increases resilience, keeping users online during power outages, front-line operations and in recently liberated areas.
What happened: Starlink enables satellite SMS for Kyivstar users
Ukraine’s largest mobile operator, Kyivstar, has become the first in Europe to launch SpaceX’s Starlink direct-to-cell satellite service. The initial rollout supports SMS messaging on standard 4G smartphones, a crucial step in keeping people connected in hard hit or disconnected zones. This launch comes under a partnership between Starlink, Kyivstar and its parent telecom group VEON.
The service is available at no extra charge to Kyivstar users and is especially valuable during prolonged blackouts, in areas recently liberated or where the ground network is being restored, and for humanitarian or rescue operations. To support this, Kyivstar has upgraded its infrastructure with batteries and generators that provide up to 10 hours of operation when grid power fails.
While the f irst phase supports SMS only, the plan is to extend the service in 2026 to enable voice calls and mobile data over Starlink. Kyivstar serves around 22.5 million mobile customers, making this a significant deployment of satellite-to-cell technology.
Also Read: UK government backs satellite innovation and AI start‑ups
Also Read: Orange launches Europe’s first satellite SMS service
Why it’s important
This rollout is a landmark for Europe and satellite telecom: it demonstrates that Starlink can act like a space-based cellular tower, allowing resilient communication even when terrestrial networks are unavailable. For Ukraine, where infrastructure is frequently damaged or powered down, this connectivity could be life-saving, especially in contested or recently de-occupied areas.
By enabling SMS via satellite, Kyivstar is bolstering its network resilience and helping bridge critical communication gaps. The move adds a valuable layer of redundancy — not just for civilians, but also for rescue teams and humanitarian operatives working under difficult conditions.
Looking ahead, the planned voice and data services could transform how mobile communications work in crisis zones — potentially making satellite-to-cell a standard fallback in regions where ground infrastructure is fragile or under threat.
