FCC Clears the Skies: Smarter Satellite Sharing for Rural Internet Boost
Published Date: 5/13/2026
Rule
Summary
The FCC is updating how satellite companies share space in the sky to bring faster internet, especially to rural areas. They’re replacing old rules with smarter ones that let satellite operators work together and protect each other from interference. These changes kick in on July 13, 2026, helping American homes and businesses get better broadband without extra costs.
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Analyzed Economic Effects
5 provisions identified: 3 benefits, 0 costs, 2 mixed.
Big Boost to Satellite Broadband
The FCC replaces old limits so NGSO satellite systems can increase capacity and deliver faster space-based internet, especially to rural and remote areas. The Order says capacity increases of 100% to 700% are possible and that benefits may total well over $2 billion, with the rules effective July 13, 2026.
Potential Lower Broadband Prices
The Order says more intensive spectrum use can reduce the number of satellites needed and lower unit costs to serve an area, which in turn can reduce the price of broadband to consumers. One study cited estimates cost-per-unit reductions between 43% and 64% if NGSO capacity increases by 74% to 180%.
New Technical Protection Backstops
The Order replaces EPFD limits with performance-based GSO protection criteria and adopts numeric backstops: a 3% time-weighted average throughput degradation long-term limit, a 0.1% absolute increase in link unavailability short-term limit, a -10.5 dB I/N for 80% of the time for non-ACM links, and a minimum 3-degree avoidance angle of the GSO arc.
Required Good-Faith Operator Coordination
The Order extends the Commission's framework for good-faith coordination and allows NGSO and GSO operators to bargain for interference protections through voluntary private agreements, while requiring coordination as a central part of the sharing regime.
Smaller Businesses Largely Unaffected
The Commission states the changes are unlikely to directly affect businesses with fewer than 25 employees. The Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis finds the rule will not, if promulgated, have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
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