SpaceX quietly launches its 10,000th Starlink satellite, changing how the world connects
Published on Oct 30, 2025 at 8:42 AM (UTC+4)
by Molly Davidson
Last updated on Oct 30, 2025 at 3:54 PM (UTC+4)
Edited by
Kate Bain
SpaceX has just passed a huge milestone, with 10,000 Starlink satellites orbiting Earth.
These satellites beam internet to almost every corner of the globe.
Each new launch adds another thread to the network – a digital web now circling the planet.
And just like that, SpaceX redefined what global connection looks like.
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The 10,000th Starlink satellite
The Starlink program began back in 2019 with a single Falcon 9 carrying 60 satellites.
Six years later it’s evolved into a relentless rhythm of launches, with two missions on October 19 pushing the total past 10,000.
One from Cape Canaveral, another from Vandenberg.
Of those 10,000, around 8,600 are currently operational, forming a near-planetary web of coverage.

Starlink now powers homes, ships, aircraft, and entire communities that were once cut off from stable service.
Across 150 countries, more than five million customers are already online through the network, and roughly half of them joined in just the past year.
What comes next for the company?
SpaceX isn’t slowing down, it’s accelerating.
The company already has approval to reach 12,000 satellites, but its long-term plan calls for more than 30,000 in orbit.
That expansion could bring high-speed internet to places fiber will never reach, from isolated towns to mid-ocean flights.
It’s already reshaping aviation, too.


Major airlines like Qatar Airways and United now use Starlink to offer real broadband at 35,000 feet.
Turning in-flight Wi-Fi from a gimmick into something genuinely usable.
For SpaceX, that’s the point – Starlink isn’t just a project anymore, it’s infrastructure.
And if 10,000 satellites can already shift how the world connects, the next 20,000 could rewrite the internet altogether.
Quietly, consistently, launch by launch SpaceX has built the backbone of a global network in the sky.
And it’s only just getting started.
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Molly Davidson is a Junior Content Writer at Supercar Blondie. Based in Melbourne, she holds a double Bachelor’s degree in Arts/Law from Swinburne University and a Master’s of Writing and Publishing from RMIT. Molly has contributed to a range of magazines and journals, developing a strong interest in lifestyle and car news content. When she’s not writing, she’s spending quality time with her rescue English staffy, Boof.