Targeting the growing gap in data regarding on-the-go satellite internet usage, TRIO Flatmount released its 2026 Mobile Starlink Survey on February 17. The report, which compiled data from approximately 600 users, indicates a significant pivot in how mobile satellite terminals are utilized, moving away from purely recreational use toward essential income generation.

Shifting Demographics and Use Cases
The survey found that nearly half of respondents (47%) now depend on mobile connectivity for remote work or professional income. While leisure use remains a factor, the professionalization of mobile connectivity is the primary driver for recent hardware adoption.
The most common deployment environments for these mobile users include:
- Recreational Vehicles (RVs): 37%
- Marine Vessels: 15%
- Van Builds: 11%
- Passenger Vehicles: 10%
Geographic and Economic Factors
Geographically, the Western and Southern United States account for the majority of users (55%). However, a significant international presence is emerging, with 25% of respondents residing in Canada, Australia, Europe, or operating at sea.
One of the most striking findings in the 2026 data is the inelasticity of price regarding hardware and service. According to the report, 85% of respondents stated that price was not a primary factor in their purchasing decision. This suggests that reliability and the ability to maintain “office-like” connectivity in remote regions outweigh the cost of equipment and monthly subscriptions for the majority of the mobile workforce.
Rationale for Specialized Hardware
The surge in professional use has increased the demand for ruggedized, in-motion mounting solutions. Users cite the need for “park-and-play” or “drive-and-play” capabilities as essential to meeting work deadlines while traveling. This data aligns with the broader industry trend of Low Earth Orbit (LEO) constellations becoming the primary infrastructure for the global “digital nomad” economy.
Comparative Service Utilization: Land vs. Marine
Additional analysis reveals a stark contrast in service plan preferences between maritime and land-based users, driven primarily by geographic restrictions and data priority requirements.
The survey data indicates that while land-based users (RVs at 37%, Van builds at 11%) predominantly utilize the Roam Unlimited plan ($165/mo), maritime users (15%) are increasingly opting for Global Priority tiers despite significantly higher costs. This disparity is tied to Starlink’s “Ocean Mode” requirements, which mandate metered priority data for vessels operating beyond territorial waters.
Economic Disparity in Service Plans:
- Land-Based Mobile: $165/month for unlimited “Best Effort” data.
- Maritime/Coastal: Starts at $250/month for 50GB of “Global Priority” data.
- High-Demand Marine: Scales to $2,150/month for 2TB of priority data.
Rationale for High-Cost Adoption
The finding that 85% of users do not view price as a primary factor is particularly evident in the maritime sector. For the 47% of respondents who depend on Starlink for remote income, the “Global Priority” plan is viewed as a business necessity rather than a luxury. Marine users reported a higher willingness to pay for “Priority Data” to ensure sub-second latency for video conferencing and cloud-based applications, which are often throttled on the standard land-based Roam plans during peak congestion.
Outlook for 2026 Infrastructure
The survey coincides with Starlink’s 2026 service upgrades, which introduce the “Performance Kit” capable of 400+ Mbps. TRIO’s data suggests that as mobile connectivity evolves, the market is splitting into two distinct tiers: recreational “Roam” users and professional “Priority” users, with the latter group driving the demand for specialized flatmount hardware to support in-motion operations.
