Commercial Space Stations: How the ISS Replacements Will Get Internet
TL;DR
With the ISS scheduled for deorbiting around 2030, NASA has funded three commercial space station programs: Axiom Station (targeting 2027), Vast Haven-1 (targeting Q1 2027), and Blue Origin's Orbital Reef (late 2020s). Each will need high-bandwidth internet for paying customers, research, and operations.
Key Takeaway
The ISS will be deorbited around 2030, and NASA has funded three commercial replacements: Axiom Station, Vast Haven-1, and Blue Origin Orbital Reef. Unlike the ISS, these stations will serve paying customers who expect reliable broadband. Starlink integration is the leading connectivity candidate, with potential for multi-gigabit internet in orbit for the first time.
The End of the ISS Era
The International Space Station has been continuously occupied since November 2, 2000 - over 25 years of unbroken human presence in low Earth orbit. But the station is aging. NASA has committed to operating the ISS through 2030, after which the agency plans a controlled deorbit using a specially built deorbit vehicle (contracted to SpaceX).
Rather than build another government-owned station, NASA is pursuing a fundamentally different approach: commercial space stations built and operated by private companies, with NASA as one of several customers. In 2021 and 2022, NASA awarded a combined $415.6 million through its Commercial Low Earth Orbit Destinations (CLD) program to fund development of three station concepts.
This transition creates an entirely new set of requirements for space station internet. The ISS serves a crew of professional astronauts on government salaries who accept VNC remote desktops and pre-downloaded Netflix. Commercial stations will host paying private citizens, corporate researchers, and space tourists who expect connectivity closer to what they have on Earth.
The Three Funded Stations
Axiom Station
| Detail | Specification |
|---|---|
| Company | Axiom Space (Houston, TX) |
| Target launch | First module targeting 2027 |
| Initial approach | Attach modules to ISS, then separate before ISS deorbits |
| Crew capacity | Initially 4, expanding with additional modules |
| NASA CLD award | $130 million (Phase 1) |
| Launch vehicle | SpaceX Falcon Heavy |
Axiom Space is taking the most incremental approach. The company plans to attach its first module (Axiom Station Module 1, or AxStation-1) to the ISSโs forward port, using the existing station as a foundation while building out its commercial segment. Additional modules will follow. Before the ISS deorbits, Axiomโs modules will detach and become a free-flying independent station.
Axiom has already flown four private astronaut missions to the ISS (Ax-1 through Ax-4), giving it more operational experience with commercial crews than any competitor. The companyโs station design includes a dedicated crew module with individual sleeping quarters, a large Earth-observation cupola, and research facilities.
Vast Haven-1
| Detail | Specification |
|---|---|
| Company | Vast (Long Beach, CA) |
| Target launch | Q1 2027 |
| Design | Single-module station using a wide-body launch vehicle |
| Crew capacity | Up to 4 crew |
| NASA CLD award | Unfunded Space Act Agreement (self-funded) |
| Launch vehicle | SpaceX Falcon 9 |
Vast, founded by cryptocurrency entrepreneur Jed McCaleb, is pursuing an ambitious timeline with Haven-1 - a single-module station designed for rapid deployment. Haven-1 is designed to launch on a single SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and begin operations immediately.
What makes Vast notable for connectivity is its close relationship with SpaceX. Haven-1 will launch on a Falcon 9, and Vast has contracted SpaceXโs Dragon spacecraft for crew transportation. This SpaceX-centric architecture positions Haven-1 as a natural candidate for Starlink integration - direct connection to SpaceXโs broadband satellite constellation.
Vast has also announced plans for a larger Vast Station to follow Haven-1, which would be a multi-module facility with artificial gravity generated by rotation.
Blue Origin Orbital Reef
| Detail | Specification |
|---|---|
| Company | Blue Origin (Kent, WA) with Sierra Space |
| Target launch | Late 2020s |
| Design | Multi-module โmixed-use business parkโ in space |
| Crew capacity | Up to 10 |
| NASA CLD award | $130 million (Phase 1) |
| Launch vehicle | Blue Origin New Glenn |
Blue Originโs Orbital Reef, developed in partnership with Sierra Space, is the most ambitious in scale. The concept envisions a โmixed-use business park in spaceโ with separate modules for habitation, research, tourism, and manufacturing. The partnership brings together Blue Originโs launch capability (New Glenn rocket) and Sierra Spaceโs Dream Chaser spaceplane for crew and cargo transport.
Orbital Reefโs larger crew capacity (up to 10) and commercial ambitions create the highest bandwidth demands of any planned station.
How Commercial Stations Will Get Internet
Commercial space stations face a different connectivity landscape than the ISS did when it was built. The most significant change: SpaceXโs Starlink constellation now provides broadband internet from low Earth orbit.
Starlink: The Leading Candidate
Starlink consists of over 10,000 operational satellites as of early 2026, providing broadband internet globally. The constellation operates in LEO at 340-550 km altitude - the same orbital band as space stations.
For SpaceX-launched stations (Axiom on Falcon Heavy, Vast on Falcon 9), Starlink integration is the most logical connectivity solution:
- No relay satellite needed: Instead of bouncing signals through geostationary relay satellites 35,800 km away, a station could link to Starlink satellites in neighboring orbits just hundreds of km away
- Lower latency: Starlinkโs LEO-to-ground latency is 20-40 ms, compared to 500-700 ms through TDRS. A station-to-Starlink-to-ground path could achieve similarly low latency
- Higher bandwidth: Starlinkโs inter-satellite laser links and ground stations provide multi-gigabit aggregate capacity
- Always available: With thousands of satellites, coverage gaps are minimal
SpaceX has already demonstrated Starlink connectivity on its Dragon spacecraft and has discussed providing Starlink service for orbital habitats. For Vast Haven-1, with its all-SpaceX architecture, Starlink seems almost certain as the primary internet link.
Amazon Leo: A Possibility for Orbital Reef
Blue Origin is owned by Jeff Bezos, who also owns Amazon. Amazon is building its own LEO broadband constellation called Amazon Leo, targeting over 7,700 satellites (FCC expanded authorization, January 2026). While Kuiper is behind Starlink in deployment (with initial satellites launched in 2024-2025), the common ownership creates an obvious synergy for Orbital Reef.
An Orbital Reef station connected to Amazon Leo would keep the entire value chain within the Bezos ecosystem: Blue Origin builds and launches the station, Amazon Leo provides internet, and Amazon Web Services could offer cloud computing for onboard research.
However, Kuiperโs deployment timeline may not align with Orbital Reefโs needs. If Amazon Leo is not sufficiently built out by the stationโs launch date, Blue Origin might use Starlink, NASAโs TDRS, or a hybrid approach initially.
NASA TDRS: The Backup
NASAโs TDRS system will remain operational into the 2030s and could serve as a communication backbone or backup for commercial stations. NASA astronauts aboard commercial stations (the agency plans to purchase crew time as a customer) may require TDRS connectivity for government data and secure communications regardless of what commercial internet system the station uses.
What Paying Customers Will Expect
The connectivity bar for commercial space stations is dramatically higher than what ISS astronauts accept. Here is why:
Space Tourists
Private citizens paying $50-100 million or more for a station visit will expect to:
- Share their experience on social media in real time (photos, video, live streams)
- Make video calls to family in HD or 4K
- Browse the internet with reasonable speed and latency
- Access entertainment streaming services
A VNC remote desktop connection with 700 ms latency is not going to satisfy a tourist who paid more than most houses cost. These customers will expect something closer to hotel Wi-Fi - imperfect but functional for social media, streaming, and communication.
Corporate Research
Companies conducting research on commercial stations will need to:
- Transfer large datasets (genomics, materials science, Earth observation)
- Run remote-controlled experiments with real-time monitoring
- Connect to cloud computing resources for data processing
- Hold video conferences with ground teams
Research bandwidth needs could easily reach hundreds of Mbps to multiple Gbps, particularly for Earth observation and manufacturing experiments that generate large volumes of imaging data.
Media and Entertainment
Commercial stations will host filmmakers, content creators, and journalists. High-profile visitors will want to:
- Livestream in 4K from orbit
- Upload large video files for editing on the ground
- Conduct live interviews with media outlets
These use cases demand reliable, high-bandwidth uplink capability that far exceeds current ISS personal crew allocations.
Connectivity Comparison: Current vs. Future
| Feature | ISS (Current) | Commercial Stations (Expected) |
|---|---|---|
| Primary link | TDRS (GEO relay) | Starlink/Kuiper (LEO direct) |
| Backbone bandwidth | 600 Mbps + 1.2 Gbps laser | Multi-Gbps (Starlink) |
| Per-user bandwidth | 3-25 Mbps | 50-500+ Mbps (estimated) |
| Latency | 500-700 ms | 20-60 ms (estimated) |
| Access method | VNC remote desktop | Direct internet (likely) |
| Streaming | Pre-downloaded | Live streaming feasible |
| Coverage | ~70-80% of orbit | ~95-99% (LEO constellation) |
| Cost model | Government funded | Included in customer package |
If these projections hold, commercial space stations could offer internet that is genuinely comparable to terrestrial broadband - a transformative change from the ISS experience.
Expected Station Bandwidth
Timeline and Challenges
| Milestone | Expected Date |
|---|---|
| Vast Haven-1 launch | Q1 2027 (targeted) |
| Axiom Module 1 attached to ISS | 2027 (targeted) |
| Blue Origin Orbital Reef first module | Late 2020s |
| ISS deorbit | ~2030 |
| Axiom Station free-flying | Before 2030 |
| Full commercial station operations | 2030-2032 |
Timeline
Axiom Space first module (PPTM) launch
Vast Haven-1 single-module station launch
Blue Origin Orbital Reef operational
ISS deorbit
Key risks to this timeline:
- Launch vehicle readiness (particularly Blue Originโs New Glenn for Orbital Reef)
- Station development delays (hardware, testing, certification)
- Starlink/Kuiper integration engineering (connecting a station to a LEO constellation has never been done operationally)
- Funding sustainability (commercial stations must eventually generate revenue to survive)
- Regulatory approvals for novel communication architectures
The gap between ISS deorbit and full commercial station operations is the most watched concern in the industry. NASA needs continuous access to low Earth orbit for research and astronaut training. If commercial stations are delayed, the U.S. could face a period without a crewed platform in LEO - something not seen since the gap between the Space Shuttleโs retirement in 2011 and commercial crew flights beginning in 2020.
FAQ
Will commercial space stations have better internet than the ISS?
Almost certainly yes. The combination of Starlink (or Kuiper) LEO broadband, modern networking hardware, and customer demand for connectivity means commercial stations will likely offer multi-gigabit backbone bandwidth with per-user speeds of 50-500+ Mbps and latency under 60 ms - a massive improvement over the ISSโs current setup.
How much will it cost to visit a commercial space station?
Current estimates range from $50-100 million for a multi-day stay, based on Axiomโs existing private astronaut mission pricing. As more stations come online and competition increases, prices may eventually decrease, but orbital tourism will remain extremely expensive for the foreseeable future. Connectivity costs will be bundled into the overall package.
Will space tourists be able to livestream from orbit?
Yes, this is expected to be a key selling point. With Starlink-class bandwidth and low latency, livestreaming to platforms like YouTube, Twitch, or Instagram Live should be technically feasible from commercial stations. The marketing value of customers sharing their experience in real time is enormous, so station operators have strong incentives to make this work.
What happens if the commercial stations are delayed and the ISS is deorbited?
This is a significant concern. NASA has flexibility to extend ISS operations slightly if needed, but the stationโs aging hardware makes indefinite extension risky and expensive. In a worst case, NASA could purchase crew time on Chinaโs Tiangong (politically unlikely) or rely on shorter-duration missions aboard SpaceX Dragon or Boeing Starliner capsules. The gap scenario is a major motivator for NASAโs investment in commercial stations.
Will NASA astronauts use commercial stations?
Yes. NASA plans to be a customer on commercial stations, purchasing crew time, research facilities, and services rather than owning and operating the station. This is similar to how NASA currently purchases crew launches from SpaceX and Boeing rather than operating its own launch vehicles. NASA astronauts will work alongside private researchers and tourists on the same stations.
Sources
- NASA - Commercial Destinations in Low Earth Orbit - accessed 2026-03-24
- Axiom Space - accessed 2026-03-24
- Vast - accessed 2026-03-24
- Blue Origin - Orbital Reef - accessed 2026-03-24
- NASA - ISS Transition Plan - accessed 2026-03-24
- SpaceNews - Commercial LEO Destinations - accessed 2026-03-24
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