Sateliot Launches First Satellite in LEO Constellation to Boost 5G IoT Coverage

Sateliot has launched the first satellite of a new LEO constellation to enhance 5G IoT coverage by merging satellite and terrestrial connectivity. The company aims for global coverage and massive IoT adoption with its innovative constellation.

Barcelona-based Sateliot has announced the launch of its GroundBreaker satellite, the first in a constellation of 250 low Earth orbit (LEO) satellites designed to bolster terrestrial 5G Internet of Things (IoT) applications. Launched via a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from California, the first 64 satellites of the constellation are scheduled to be in orbit within the next 18 months.


The project’s goal is to combine satellite and terrestrial cellular-based connectivity to improve IoT coverage. Sateliot’s LEO constellation will serve as space-based cell towers, enabling users to switch seamlessly between terrestrial and non-terrestrial 5G networks without additional hardware. The company has established roaming agreements with telecoms network operators, allowing users to keep their existing SIM cards and mobile operators.

Sateliot envisions the project as a catalyst for massive IoT adoption worldwide, although the impact will be gradual, with GroundBreaker being the first of many planned satellite launches. The company claims GroundBreaker can provide global coverage, but a larger constellation is required to create orbiting cell towers that deliver comprehensive 5G coverage on Earth.

GroundBreaker is a 22 lbs nano-satellite capable of covering an area three times the size of Texas at any given time. It can complete a full Earth orbit in 90 minutes and features an onboard module that allows direct NB-IoT connection for any 5G device supporting Rel 17 NTN, the 3GPP’s non-terrestrial network standard.

Currently, Sateliot targets the maritime, railway, aeronautics, and automobile industries, offering surveillance services to help save money on lost cargo. The company also highlights its ability to provide safe drinking water to 43 million Americans through water monitoring, referring to its recent deal with Gospace Labs.

The key to Sateliot’s success will be forging partnerships and convincing potential customers to integrate satellite connectivity into their IoT offerings. While this may be an easier sell in hard-to-cover areas, pricing will be crucial. Satellite-based connectivity has become more affordable, but the financials must still be attractive to customers.

Sateliot reports progress, with deals secured with global telecoms operators and other companies, and a sales pipeline exceeding €1.2 billion. The company aims to reach €1 billion in billing and €370 million in EBITDA by 2026. If successful, more Sateliot launches and significant customer announcements are expected in the coming months.


Recent Content

Deutsche Telekom, Orange, and the Linux Foundation outline their 2025 cloud-native telecom roadmap, highlighting Kubernetes-native workloads, AI integration, observability, and zero-trust security models. Learn how open-source tooling, GitOps automation, and cultural transformation are reshaping next-gen telco operations.
India’s telecom sector is forecasted to grow 12–14% in FY25, hitting ₹3 lakh crore in revenue, with AI adoption, Vodafone-led tariff hikes, and R&D investment driving momentum. AI is not just boosting efficiency—it’s reshaping the future of telecom jobs, infrastructure, and policy. Sunil Bharti Mittal called for stronger private R&D efforts and smarter policy frameworks to harness India’s demographic advantage and scale the next era of AI-powered telecom innovation.
The immersion cooling market was valued at US$ 287.7 Mn in 2023; It is estimated to advance at a CAGR of 17.9% from 2024 to 2034 and reach US$ 1.8 Bn by the end of 2034
Web3 is redefining the telecom industry by introducing decentralized infrastructure, blockchain-based billing, smart contracts, NFTs, and digital identity. This article explores how telcos can evolve from connectivity providers to key players in Web3 ecosystems—offering programmable services, token economies, and secure, user-centric digital experiences.
As the telecom industry celebrates World Telecom Day 2025, the theme is clear: connectivity is not just infrastructure—it is empowerment. It is what enables a student in a rural village to access world-class education, a farmer to monitor crops via smart sensors, or a doctor to conduct remote surgery with millisecond precision.
AT&T will acquire Lumen’s consumer fiber business in a $5.75B deal to expand its broadband coverage to 60 million U.S. locations by 2030. The transaction gives AT&T access to 4M enabled locations, 1M subscribers, and new metro markets like Seattle and Phoenix. Meanwhile, Lumen refocuses on enterprise innovation and AI-first networking.
Whitepaper
Dive deep into how Radisys Corporation is navigating the dynamic landscape of Open RAN and 5G technologies. With their innovative strategies, they are making monumental strides in advancing the deployment and implementation of scalable, flexible, and efficient solutions. Get insights into how they're leveraging small cells, private networks, and strategic...
Whitepaper
This whitepaper explores seven compelling use cases of AI-infused automated service assurance solutions, encompassing anomaly detection, automated root cause analysis, service quality enhancement, customer experience improvement, network capacity planning, network monetization, and self-healing networks. Each use case explains how AI, when embedded in a tailored assurance solution powered by extensive...
Radcom Logo

It seems we can't find what you're looking for.

Download Magazine

With Subscription

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Scroll to Top

Private Network Readiness Assessment

Run your readiness check now — for enterprises, operators, OEMs & SIs planning and delivering Private 5G solutions with confidence.