Austrian Airlines Sets Plan for Free High-Speed Wi-Fi
Austrian Airlines will offer free high-speed internet using new Starlink satellite systems installed across the Lufthansa Group fleet. The upgrade runs from 2026 to 2029, covering around 850 aircraft. It includes both current jets and future deliveries, allowing browsing, streaming and other online use during flights without paid packages for users registered through the group's digital or loyalty platforms.
Lufthansa Group states that Starlink provides industry-leading inflight connectivity and functions similarly to broadband at home. Austrian confirmed that both its Airbus A320 family and Boeing 787 Dreamliners are scheduled for installation. Connectivity will apply on short-, medium- and long-haul routes at no extra cost for status customers, Miles & More members and Travel ID users. Specific activation dates for individual aircraft will be detailed later in the year.
The group positions the investment as part of a wider push to standardise its premium offering across brands. Work begins in 2026 and continues through 2027 and 2028 before completion in 2029. Until then, mixed operations are expected as aircraft rotate through modification schedules, meaning availability may vary by route and tail number.
Access Requirements
- Status customer
- Travel ID registration
- Miles & More membership
These conditions unlock free broadband once Starlink is active on the aircraft scheduled for the day.
Vienna stands to benefit as a planning hub, with travellers able to arrange transfers, accommodation and onward rail connections during flight. Austrian’s network links the Austrian capital with Central Europe, seasonal Alpine destinations such as Salzburg, Innsbruck and Graz, and long-haul Dreamliner routes to Asia and North America. This creates smoother weekends, ski trips, business meetings and cultural journeys with digital tasks handled before landing.
Austrian’s move reflects a shift in European aviation as airlines adapt to daily digital habits where messaging, entertainment and work do not pause at take-off. Free broadband removes the paid barrier that previously limited inflight connectivity on many regional carriers. If the installation schedule holds, flying within or beyond Europe via Vienna may feel far more continuous and connected by the end of the decade.