Telecom
Key Facts
—The decision. Brazil’s telecom regulator Anatel approved rules on July 2, 2026, allocating radio bands for satellites to connect directly to ordinary phones.
—The winner. Starlink, Elon Musk’s satellite arm, is the only operator with the technology ready to roll out at scale.
—The catch. Satellite firms must partner with licensed mobile carriers and cannot sell the service alone.
—The timeline. A technical team has up to 90 days to draft the rules; commercial launch is not expected before 2027.
—The scale. Brazil is already Starlink’s second-largest market for fixed satellite broadband, with more than a million subscribers.
Brazil has taken a decisive step toward ending the dreaded “no service” screen on remote highways and in the countryside. Its telecom regulator has cleared the rules for direct-to-cell technology, opening a path for Starlink to beam phone signal straight from orbit to an ordinary handset.
The board of Anatel, the national telecommunications agency, approved the measure on July 2 as part of an update to the country’s radio-frequency plan, the agency confirmed. It sets aside bands that let low-orbit satellites act like cell towers in the sky.
This is not a switch being flipped for consumers just yet. What changed is the legal groundwork, the missing piece that companies needed before they could ask to launch such a service in Brazil.
What direct-to-cell actually means
The technology, known in the industry as direct-to-device, turns satellites into what amount to mobile towers in space. A compatible smartphone connects straight to the satellite, with no external dish, chip or app required.
The signal has to travel hundreds of kilometres, so the early phase will focus on the basics. Think text messages, location sharing and emergency calls rather than full streaming, at least to begin with.
For a country the size of Brazil, that is still a big deal. Vast rural areas, long federal highways, the Amazon basin and isolated riverside towns sit far beyond the reach of conventional towers.
Why Starlink leads, and who else is circling
Elon Musk’s company is the clear front-runner because it already has the satellites and a running service abroad. In the United States it offers the feature through a tie-up with the carrier T-Mobile.
The rules were written to be open, not tailored to one firm. Any satellite operator can use the model, as long as it teams up with a Brazilian carrier that already holds the relevant spectrum licence, such as Vivo, Claro or TIM.
Rivals are testing competing systems from AST SpaceMobile and Lynk, while a Chinese constellation is advancing through a state-linked memorandum. The bands were assigned on a secondary basis, meaning the traditional mobile networks keep priority and the satellite signal only fills the gaps.
The specific frequencies opened up are ones already used by mobile phones, including the 700, 850 and 900 megahertz ranges. Because millions of active connections rely on those bands, the regulator built in safeguards so the satellite layer cannot degrade the networks people use every day.
Brazil has not come to this cold. Anatel monitored field tests in the northern state of Maranhão in 2025, run by the carrier Claro with the satellite firm Lynk, giving regulators a first look at how the technology behaves.
The agency’s president framed the moment as a chance to lead. He noted that Brazil is already the biggest market for low-orbit fixed broadband and argued the country has both the geography and the pent-up demand to extend that connectivity to phones.
Beyond everyday use, officials point to emergencies. A message sent from a spot with no tower could speed up rescues, civil-defence operations and public-safety responses when terrestrial networks are down or were never built.
Frequently Asked Questions
When will direct-to-cell actually launch in Brazil?
Not immediately. Anatel’s technical team has up to ninety days to write the detailed specifications, after which carriers and satellite firms still need commercial deals, equipment certification and final clearance, with Starlink signalling a commercial start around 2027.
Will it cost extra for users?
The early expectation is that the service will arrive without an extra charge, folded temporarily into existing carrier plans so users can test it. That is unlikely to last, and richer features such as voice and data at scale will probably move into paid or premium tiers over time.
Why does this matter for foreigners in Brazil?
Anyone driving long distances, working in agriculture or mining, or travelling to remote beaches and trails has felt the coverage gaps first-hand. A phone that can reach a satellite when there is no tower in sight is a genuine safety and connectivity upgrade for residents and visitors alike.
View original source — Rio Times ↗


