Amazon Leo
LEO UpcomingAmazon's LEO broadband - launching 2026
Max Speed
1000 Mbps
Latency
20–40ms
From
Enterprise
Satellites
212/7,736
About Amazon Leo
"Bridge the digital divide by providing affordable, high-speed broadband to unserved and underserved communities around the world."
Amazon announced Project Kuiper in April 2019, filing with the FCC for a constellation of 3,236 low Earth orbit satellites. The project represents Amazon's largest infrastructure investment outside its core cloud and retail businesses, with over $10 billion committed - making it the most well-funded Starlink competitor.
After launching two prototype satellites (KuiperSat-1 and KuiperSat-2) in October 2023, Amazon began production satellite launches in 2024. By February 2026, 212 production satellites were in orbit. The FCC expanded Amazon's authorization to 7,736 satellites in January 2026, with a half-constellation deployment deadline of July 2026 requiring at least 1,618 satellites in orbit.
Three consumer terminal tiers are planned: Leo Nano (compact, affordable), Leo Pro (standard residential), and Leo Ultra (gigabit-capable). Amazon has hinted at potential Prime subscription bundling. Enterprise preview customers have been connected since November 2025, and consumer beta service is launching in Q1 2026.
Specifications
- Download Speed
- 100–1000 Mbps
- Upload Speed
- 10–40 Mbps
- Latency
- 20–40ms
- Data Cap
- Unlimited (plan-dependent)
- Orbit Type
- LEO
- Constellation
- 212 in orbit / 7,736 planned
- Parent Company
- Amazon
- Subscribers
- Consumer beta live in US, UK, France, Germany, Canada (Q1 2026)
For context: Netflix 4K needs ~25 Mbps, video calls need ~5 Mbps. Latency under 100ms is good for gaming; under 300ms works for video calls. GEO satellites (600ms+) have noticeable delay on interactive tasks.
Hardware & Installation
- Equipment Cost
- TBD
- Note
- Amazon targeting $400 consumer terminal; Leo Nano even cheaper
- Dish Type
- Phased-array (compact form factor)
- Installation Required
- Self-install
- Portable
- Yes
Pricing Plans
Amazon Leo does not offer public consumer pricing. Service is available through enterprise contracts or authorized partners. Amazon targeting $400 consumer terminal; Leo Nano even cheaper.
Timeline
-
Amazon files FCC application for 3,236 satellites
-
FCC approves Project Kuiper constellation
-
KuiperSat-1 and KuiperSat-2 prototype satellites launched
-
First production satellites launched
-
Enterprise preview service begins
-
FCC expands authorization to 7,736 satellites
-
Consumer beta service launching
-
FCC half-constellation deadline - 1,618 satellites required
Customer Sentiment
Amazon Leo (formerly Project Kuiper) has no consumer reviews yet as the service is not publicly available. Enterprise preview feedback has been limited and under NDA. Consumer beta in Q1 2026 will provide the first public performance data.
Sentiment verified 2026-03-24. Reviews change - check the platform for latest.
Availability
~212 satellites in orbit (Mar 2026). Consumer beta targeting Q1 2026 launch in US, UK, France, Germany, Canada. Target: ~700 by mid-2026, 26 countries by end-2026. FCC expanded authorization to 4,500 additional satellites (Feb 2026). FCC half-constellation deadline: 1,616 by July 2026 - Amazon requested 24-month extension (Jan 30, 2026).
Pros & Cons
Advantages
- + Amazon's $10B+ investment ensures long-term commitment
- + Three terminal tiers up to 1 Gbps (Leo Ultra)
- + Potential Prime subscription bundle
- + FCC expanded authorization to 7,736 satellites (Jan 2026)
- + Enterprise preview already running
Limitations
- - No confirmed consumer pricing yet
- - Only ~212 of 7,736 satellites in orbit so far; FCC deadline extension pending
- - Years behind Starlink in operational experience
Frequently Asked Questions
How fast is Amazon Leo satellite internet?
How much does Amazon Leo cost per month?
What latency does Amazon Leo have?
Is Amazon Leo available in my country?
Does Amazon Leo require professional installation?
Sources & Methodology
All data on this page is sourced from official company announcements, regulatory filings, and independent speed-test databases. Speeds shown are advertised ranges - actual performance varies by location, time of day, and network congestion. We do not fabricate specifications: where data is unavailable, we show "TBD."
- [1] Amazon Leo official page - accessed 2026-03-24
- [2] FCC Space Bureau - Kuiper authorization and expansion filings - accessed 2026-03-24
- [3] Amazon investor relations - Kuiper capital expenditure disclosures - accessed 2026-03-24