KEY POINTS
  • The FCC awarded Elon Musk's SpaceX with $885.5 million worth of federal subsidies to support rural broadband customers through the company's Starlink satellite internet network.
  • SpaceX won about a tenth of the $9.2 billion in funds awarded to 180 companies in the FCC's "Phase I auction," with the subsidies designed to be an incentive for broadband providers to bring service to the "unserved" and hard-to-reach areas of the United States.
  • The subsidies will "be distributed over the next 10 years," the FCC said, in the form of "equal monthly payments," so long as each provider "meets all deployment milestones."
SpaceX deploys 60 Starlink satellites in orbit.

The Federal Communications Commission awarded Elon Musk's SpaceX with nearly $900 million worth of federal subsidies to support rural broadband customers through the company's Starlink satellite internet network, the agency announced on Monday.

SpaceX won $885.5 million in the FCC's $9.2 billion auction, or about a tenth of the funds awarded to 180 companies. Known as the "Phase I auction" of the FCC's $20.4 billion Rural Digital Opportunities Fund, the subsidies are designed to be an incentive for broadband providers to bring service to the "unserved" and hard-to-reach areas of the United States.