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US Mobile has announced a new hybrid plan that bundles uncapped Starlink home internet with its unlimited wireless cellular plans for under $50 a month.

The bundle combines terrestrial cellular connectivity with space-based broadband.

The Ultimate Hybrid Package

The offering is designed to replace separate home internet and mobile phone bills by pairing unlimited home internet powered by SpaceX's Starlink satellite constellation with a premium unlimited mobile data plan.

As a mobile virtual network operator, the company lets users choose among the three largest cellular networks in the United States: Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile. Customers can switch between these networks if their local coverage needs change. With Starlink added, users are positioned to have high-speed connectivity whether they are in a major city or completely off the grid.

Disrupting Industry

A standard residential Starlink subscription currently starts anywhere from $50 to $120 per month, depending on location and congestion, and that does not even include cellular service.

By offering uncapped satellite internet alongside an unlimited mobile plan for under $50 a month, US Mobile is drastically undercutting both traditional cable providers and legacy wireless carriers.

The Jetsons Era

US Mobile CEO Ahmed Khattak recently took to Reddit to outline the company's vision for the launch, describing a unified connectivity layer for customers.

"Every major terrestrial network on the ground, every major LEO constellation in the sky, stitched together into a single plan that follows you anywhere on earth," Khattak wrote. "Mobile, home, roaming, residential. Local numbering integrated as we expand our cellular footprint into new countries. Dozens of networks, one plan, one app, one company that actually answers when you call. The Jetsons era isn't coming. It's here. And we intend to be the ones who carry you through it."

Early access to the bundle opens this week in limited batches, and the approach could help bridge the connectivity gap for millions of users as fiber buildouts continue to lag in rural areas.