Wizz Air Takes Wi-Fi Beyond Airplane Mode

Wizz Air will add Starlink satellite internet across its fleet from 2027, bringing high-speed onboard connectivity to its low-cost network. The Hungarian carrier says the agreement will cover all aircraft, making it the first European ultra-low-cost airline to adopt Starlink at fleet scale. Financial terms were not disclosed, and the airline has not said whether access will be free or paid.
The move puts Wizz Air ahead of several larger budget rivals that remain cautious about onboard satellite internet. Ryanair has rejected Starlink for now, pointing to installation costs, added fuel burn and short average flight times. EasyJet has held talks with the provider but has said the economics do not yet work. Eurowings is also preparing a Starlink rollout through Lufthansa Group.
Starlink has been moving quickly into aviation, with deals already signed by American Airlines, Southwest, United, Alaska Airlines, Singapore Airlines and Emirates. In Europe, airBaltic launched the service in February 2025, followed by Air France, SAS and British Airways. Wizz Air’s announcement comes shortly before the airline reports results for the financial year that ended on 31 March 2026.
What to check before booking
The rollout is not immediate, so 2027 flights may not all have Wi-Fi from day one. Travellers should check:
- whether their aircraft offers Starlink
- whether the service is free or paid
- if streaming, calls or messaging are limited
- whether power sockets are available onboard
This matters most on longer Wizz Air routes across Europe, the Middle East and Central Asia.
Better onboard internet could make Wizz Air more useful for travellers who work remotely, manage family plans mid-journey or need live updates during connections. It will not change the basics of low-cost flying, such as baggage rules or seat fees. But if the price is reasonable, reliable Wi-Fi could turn dead flight time into something far less annoying.



















