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Hughesnet satellite internet rating
How we calculated our rating
Avantaje
- Reliable, consistent broadband speeds in all service areas
- HughesNet Bonus Zone provides an extra 50GB of data a month during off hours
- No hard data caps
Contra
- Two-year contract, with early termination fees if you cancel
- Unlimited data is misleading — Hughesnet will impose severe speed reductions once you hit your data plan’s threshold
- High equipment costs
Hughesnet satellite internet review
In 2017, Hughes Network Systems became the first satellite internet service to offer 25 megabits per second in download speeds. Since then, the bar for satellite internet providers has been raised much higher — thanks to Elon Musk’s Starlink satellite internet service.
But satellite internet can get pretty expensive, especially if you live in a rural area with limited access to different internet connection types. Most rural Americans are limited to satellite or DSL internet connections. While satellite internet is faster than phone-line-based DSL, it can’t compete with the speeds you get with cable or fiber.
While Hughesnet’s speeds are no match for Starlink’s, the company launched Jupiter 3, a geostationary satellite roughly the size of a bus. Jupiter 3 effectively allows Hughesnet to offer speeds up to 100Mbps — much faster than its original offerings and cheaper than Starlink.
This upgrade comes when many rural Americans still lack adequate access to a decent internet provider. According to recent data from the Pew Research Center, 73% of rural Americans have high-speed internet at home, but access remains lower than in suburban (86%) and urban areas (77%). Access to decent speeds is vital for working from home, streaming your favorite shows and staying in touch with friends and family.
More importantly, the pandemic revealed the consequences of not having access to affordable home internet. While some rural cities are taking matters into their own hands, satellite internet service is often still the only option for getting online where internet infrastructure falls short.
Despite slower speeds than cable or fiber, established satellite providers like Hughesnet — offering nationwide coverage at a reasonable price — are more relevant than ever.
Hughesnet plans and pricing
Plan | Monthly price | Max speeds | Fees and service details | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Select Plan | $50 ($75 after 12 months) | 50Mbps download, 5Mbps upload | Unlimited data (100GB soft cap), $15 monthly equipment or $300 upfront and 2 year-contract | |
Elite Plan | $65 ($90 after 12 months) | 100Mbps download, 5Mbps upload | Unlimited data (200GB soft cap), $15 monthly equipment or $300 upfront and 2-year contract | |
Fusion Plan | $95 ($120 after 12 months) | 100Mbps download, 5Mbps upload | Unlimited data (200GB soft cap), $20 monthly equipment or $450 upfront and 2-year contract |
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Hughesnet offers three main internet plans, all featuring unlimited data and a $25 discount on your monthly bill in the first year. The starting plan features download speeds of 50Mbps and 5Mbps in upload for $50 a month; that price jumps to $75 after a year. Customers can expect a two-year contract when signing up for service, and if you decide to lease equipment with Hughesnet, it will cost you $15 or $20 monthly to rent or a hefty upfront charge between $300 and $450. Still, Hughesnet is more affordable than its rivals, Viasat şi Starlink, which offer service starting from anywhere between $100 and $150 per month. This doesn’t include Starlink’s equipment charge of $349 just to get started.
Hughesnet’s Fusion plan is especially remarkable for combining satellite internet with low-latency fixed wireless internet. It costs the most monthly ($95) and has the highest equipment fees ($20 monthly to rent or $450 to buy outright). Still, it offers the most reliable speeds and lowest latency, which could benefit online gamers. It should be noted that Hughesnet has a website disclaimer stating that “Hughesnet is not recommended as a full-time video streaming replacement for TV service or console-based gaming activities because they quickly consume your Priority Data.”
Most satellite internet will stymie heavy internet users, like jucători sau streamers, so keep your household’s speed usage in mind when signing up for a plan from Hughesnet. And regarding those data caps, it gets pretty tight for Hughesnet’s cheaper plans. While you won’t be charged fees for exceeding the data threshold, that doesn’t mean you’ll be fully in the clear. But more on that later.
Where is Hughesnet satellite internet available?
Hughesnet’s coverage map spreads across the country, including Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico.
With wide availability across all 50 states, Hughesnet is a practical connection option for most rural residents. Compared with its competitor, Viasat, Hughesnet lags just slightly behind with its maximum download speed of 100Mbps and 200GB of priority data compared to Viasat’s 150Mbps maximum download speed and data cap of 850GB. Still, Hughesnet offers more competitive prices and more than one plan option. Let’s dig in and take a look at the details.
Additional info on Hughesnet: Fees, data caps and contracts
Hughesnet’s Select plan broadband label lists several additional fees and highlights its data cap and download and upload speeds.
Contracts
One of the most painfully obvious aspects of Hughesnet’s service is the two-year commitment customers must make once they sign the dotted line. Here’s where Hughesnet’s competitors, Starlink and Viasat, win: both ditched their contract requirements for signing up for their service. With Hughesnet, if you cancel your service before the end of your 24-month contract, you can be charged an early termination fee of up to $400 for the first 90 days of activating service. The amount decreases by $15 a month after that, which means you’d still need to pay a fee of $100 if you cancel during the last month of your contract.
Data caps
Hughesnet touts its “date nelimitate,” but that’s a bit of a misnomer. Yes, there are no hard data limits, so you won’t be cut off or charged more if you go over your monthly data allowance, which is a huge relief. The Select and the Elite plans offer 100GB of priority data, while the Fusion plan offers 200GB.
Once you hit that monthly priority data cap, you can expect slowdowns. Hughesnet will deprioritize your data plan for the remainder of the month and you won’t see the same speeds as before. As Hughesnet states, your standard data “may be slower than other traffic during high-traffic periods.” Keep that in mind as you consider which data plan to select.
You might be tempted to go with the cheapest plan, which Hughesnet recommends as perfect for smaller households. That plan comes with 100GB of data, which falls far under the monthly data usage that the average US household consumes. According to OpenVault’s most recent data, the average American household uses over 500GB of data monthly. You’ll need to consider how much data your household consumes to know if that’ll be satisfactory.
For example, Netflix estimates it takes approximately 3GB to stream an hour-long show in high definition and 7GB to stream an hour in 4K. If you watch an hour of 4K programming daily, you’ll hit your maximum of 100GB in less than 15 days. Although Hughesnet’s Fusion plan offers a soft data cap of 200GB, that amount also falls under the average US household data consumption benchmark. Before you secure a plan with Hughesnet, make sure you’re clear with your other household members about how much data you’ll need and how to budget your usage.
Additional fees
Hughesnet’s satellite internet service is relatively straightforward, but you’ll want to understand everything that’ll show up on your bill before signing up. Here’s a quick rundown.
Installation
Hughesnet charges a one-time fee of $200 for standard installation, although this fee is waived if you decide to lease your modem instead of buying it for $300 or $450. There is no self-installation option like you might find with other internet connection types. A standard installation includes a technician visit, Hughesnet satellite dish and Wi-Fi modem setup.
Equipment
With Hughesnet’s new plans, you will not be able to use your own modem. To lease the Hughesnet Wi-Fi Modem, which doubles as a Wi-Fi router, you will need to add $15 or $20 a month to your bill, depending on your chosen plan. If you’re choosing to rent equipment, Hughesnet will run a quick soft credit check. You can avoid this monthly charge altogether by buying the equipment for a one-time fee of $300 or $450. The $200 installation fee still applies if you decide to purchase your equipment.
That’s a very hefty price. If you decide to choose the Fusion plan, it will cost you upward of $650 just to buy out the equipment and to pay for the installation alone. In that case, you might be better off leasing your modem for the long term. If you don’t plan on keeping your Hughesnet connection much longer than two years, leasing your equipment may be the less expensive proposition.
That two-year break-even rate on the modem purchase probably isn’t an accident, as all Hughesnet plans require a two-year contract. Cancel before the contract is up, and you’ll incur an early termination fee as high as $400 if you’re still within the first 90 days of service. In addition, you can incur a fee of $300 for any unreturned equipment before canceling the service.
Hughesnet vs. the competition: How did it compare?
With Starlink’s satellite internet takeover, Hughesnet lost a significant amount of customers, per a recent earnings report. The latest American Customer Satisfaction Index didn’t include separate scores for satellite providers like Hughesnet and Viasat. Still, those rankings factored into the ACSI’s overall aggregate score for internet providers — and that score showed a slight increase, a 3% change, compared with the previous year. It’s a slight change, but it’s hard to read too much into that for Hughesnet specifically.
Similarly, Hughesnet didn’t rank in the J.D. Power US Residential Internet Service Provider Satisfaction Study for 2024, but a glimpse at data from 2023 shows us where Hughesnet lies with customer satisfaction. Hughesnet scored in only one region in 2023, earning a 577 on a 1,000-point scale in the South region. That’s below the area average, down one point from its 2021 score, placing it last among 10 ISPs in the study. The final dagger? It was the lowest score of any ISP listed in the J.D. Power satisfaction study.
“We’ve been working diligently to support the needs of our customers,” Hughes Network Systems senior vice president Mark Wymer said when we asked about that ranking. “We’re constantly trying to improve, but I also think we’re providing a strong service and score very well with the FCC in terms of the service levels we’re providing.”
“What we really focus on is the underserved areas of the US and bringing those customers a high-speed experience,” Wymer said. “So for those who choose to live in those less densely populated areas, we want to be their primary choice.”
As for value, Hughesnet is slightly cheaper than its main rival, Viasat. With Viasat, customers only have the option to select one plan. Viasat’s all-in-one plan costs around $100 to $150 monthly for download speeds up to 150Mbps. Meanwhile, with Hughesnet, you’d pay $65 monthly for the first year for speeds of 100Mbps. When it comes to Starlink, Hughesnet is clearly the cheaper option. With Starlink, the cheapest plan comes down to $120, plus a $349 upfront equipment charge. In other words, you’ll see upwards of $400 on your first monthly bill from Starlink.
What’s the bottom line on Hughesnet?
If you live in a highly populated urban or suburban area, you’ll likely have other, faster internet connection choices, including 5G home internet service. Hughesnet’s prices, data caps and contracts won’t make sense for you. But if you live in a rural or less densely populated area without many options for getting online, Hughesnet might be the best and most reliable connection available. This is even more evident now that it offers faster speeds at different rates, making Hughesnet a viable pick under those specific circumstances.
Hughesnet FAQs
Is Hughesnet’s internet service fast?
Compared to other satellite internet providers, Starlink şi Viasat boast faster speeds than Hughesnet. Starlink is the fastest of the three, coming in with speeds that top out at 220Mbps and Viasat at 150Mbps.
When it comes to the Federal Communications Commission’s criteria for broadband internet of 100Mbps in download and 20Mbps in upload, Hughesnet meets that criterion at 100Mbps in download speed, but it falls short on upload speeds at 5Mbps. Not to mention, some areas may not be eligible for speeds of 100Mbps and can only access Hughesnet’s slower speed tiers. Still, Hughesnet is undoubtedly faster than the DSL plans that might also be available to most rural customers.
Can I game with Hughesnet’s plans?
How about watching my favorite movies in HD?
Yes. The Hughesnet service is set to automatically stream videos up to HD quality. You can also change this setting via the Hughesnet mobile app to help save data.
Will Hughesnet speeds get faster in the future?
Since the company’s Jupiter 3 satellite launch in 2023, Hughesnet has been committed to upgrading its speed offerings. Consumers have seen faster speeds, including plans that support download speeds from 50Mbps to 100Mbps.
“This [was] one of the largest satellites to be launched and basically doubles the size of our network,” Hughes Network Systems senior vice president Mark Wymer said. “The satellite industry continues to innovate and move forward, so it’s an exciting time.”