AT&T to use Amazon Leo and Leo Ultra terminals to deliver gigabit fixed broadband to businesses

AT&T will use Amazon Leo's low‑Earth‑orbit network and Leo Ultra terminals to deliver gigabit‑speed fixed broadband to business customers, expanding AT&T’s coverage footprint. The commercial‑grade Leo Ultra antenna, launched in November, will supply connectivity services to AT&T under the AWS–AT&T collaboration.

Discovered 2026-02-04T06:16:32.948730-08:00 | 2026-02-04T06:16:32.948730-08:00

Briefing

What Hype is tracking

  • Commercial validation: AT&T will deploy Leo Ultra terminals to deliver gigabit‑class fixed broadband to businesses, demonstrating market demand for Amazon Leo’s enterprise hardware and services.

  • Strategic integration: the agreement ties Leo connectivity into carrier networks and AWS workflows, accelerating Amazon Leo’s enterprise go‑to‑market and positioning the constellation as an alternative backhaul/last‑mile option for telecom operators [source:afb1d1fa-799b-4212-992a-0670e2a3cad5].

  • Deployment risk and coverage limits: Amazon has sought an FCC extension amid launch shortages and its first‑gen footprint excludes some high‑latitude regions, which could constrain capacity, timing and geographic reach for carrier rollouts [source:d9831898-69ee-4388-b45e-e00db1277581].

Reported By

satelliteinternet.com Via Satellite The Verge
Sources Tracked
3
First Seen
2026-02-04T06:16:32.948730-08:00
Latest Update
2026-02-04T12:55:15.172704-08:00
Coverage
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