Elon Musk’s Starlink, powered by his space exploration company SpaceX, recently suffered an outage that lasted for about 2.5 hours, affecting over 61,000 users across the globe. This incident comes months after SpaceX’s Starship spacecraft failed mid-flight during its eighth test flight and exploded into a rain of debris.
The July 24, 2025 Starlink outage marks the largest in Starlink’s operational history and, as such, raises important questions about the resiliency of satellite broadband networks that have rapidly become important to people and companies, especially companies in the critical infrastructure sector.
The outage was reported to have begun around 19:00 GMT (3PM EDT) as users from different parts of the world started documenting their connectivity problems on Downdetector, a platform that tracks and reports real-time outages and problems with websites, apps, and online services.
At the height of the service disruption, Downdetector had registered more than 60,000 outage reports globally, which reflects two things: one, the scale of Starlink’s user base, and two, the network’s integration into commercial services as well as government services.
Shortly after the flood of public complaints on social media, Starlink took to X (fka Twitter) to acknowledge the outage. “Starlink is currently in a network outage and we are actively implementing a solution. We appreciate your patience, we’ll share an update once this issue is resolved,” the post reads.
Two hours later, the X post made by Starlink was quoted by Micheal Nicolls, a VP of Starlink Engineering at Space X, who shed more light on the matter. He confirmed that there was indeed a disruption and that it stemmed from a critical failure in the company’s internal software systems.
“The outage was due to failure of key internal software services that operate the core network,” Nicolls posted. “We apologize for the temporary disruption in our service; we are deeply committed to providing a highly reliable network, and will fully root cause this issue and ensure it does not occur again.”
And about four hours after the initial post was made, Starlink posted another, telling its users that its services were restored. “The network issue has been resolved, and Starlink service has been restored,” Starlink said.
Also acknowledging the seriousness of this disruption, Elon Musk, the owner of all three services (X, Starlink, and SpaceX), assured Starlink users that the team will make sure this outage doesn’t repeat itself. “SpaceX will remedy root cause to ensure it doesn’t happen again,” Musk promised in an X post.
Starlink boasts of providing ISP services to over 6 million users with a presence in about 130 countries in the world. It also helps businesses like cruise lines and many commercial airlines connect millions of passengers to the company’s high-speed and low-latency internet. For many people, there’s no alternative to using Starlink. As such, this outage highlights one of the disadvantages of heavily relying on a globally-deployed and satellite-based internet system for day-to-day business activities and basic infrastructure for critical industries.
And with Starlink looking to expand into critical sectors like emergency response and maritime operations, every outage goes beyond personal frustration being expressed on X or any other social media platform. It translates into building next-generation infrastructure that can fully cater to keeping the world online and is strong enough to handle mission-critical incidents, even during a downtime.