
SpaceX may face new delays in bringing Starlink to India after officials reportedly paused parts of the rollout over concerns about whether the satellite internet service would follow local rules. The issue follows reports that Starlink was accessible in Iran without legal permission to operate there.
Starlink received a license to begin commercial service in India in 2025 after years of discussions with officials in New Delhi. Reuters reported last year that the approval cleared a major hurdle, though Starlink still needed spectrum, ground infrastructure, testing, and security compliance before launch.
India Reviews Starlink Access Concerns
Bloomberg reported that Indian officials paused the rollout after Starlink access was allowed in Iran without local authorization. The concern is that India may not be able to control access to the network once the service becomes available.
SpaceX VP of Starlink operations Lauren Dreyer rejected the report’s framing in a social media post. She said Starlink remains in “active and productive discussions” with India’s government and described reports based on anonymous sources as misleading.
Bloomberg did not report that talks between Starlink and India had stopped. The issue appears to focus on whether India’s security and data requirements can be enforced in practice.
Starlink Growth Matters To SpaceX
The delay could matter for SpaceX ahead of its IPO because Starlink is a major part of the company’s growth story. SpaceX financial disclosures showed that Starlink’s customer growth is slowing, according to the source article.
Starlink’s business depends on entering more countries and adding subscribers across its global satellite network. The service has fixed infrastructure costs, so returns depend partly on how many markets approve access and how many customers subscribe.
India has required local data storage and network security measures. SpaceX has worked to meet those requirements, but officials are reportedly reviewing whether the company would follow Indian law after the Iran access issue.
Network Control Has Drawn Scrutiny Before
Starlink’s control over access has been questioned in other markets. Ukrainian forces complained in 2022 after service limits affected battlefield use during Russia’s invasion.
Talks in Taiwan have also stalled, according to the source article, due to Musk’s past comments about Taiwan and Starlink’s reported reluctance to work with local partners. Starlink’s availability map shows that access continues to vary by country and market approval.
According to TechCrunch, the India issue highlights how Starlink’s expansion depends not only on satellite coverage, but also on government approval, local partnerships, and security rules in each market.
Featured image credits: Wikimedia Commons
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