FCC lets Amazon Leo miss deployment deadline with temporary spectrum penalty
spacenews.com Jun 9, 2026

FCC lets Amazon Leo miss deployment deadline with temporary spectrum penalty

AI-summarised brief · reviewed before publication

The Federal Communications Commission has granted Amazon a waiver to miss the July 30 deadline for deploying half of its planned 3,232 broadband satellites. Amazon has launched only 331 satellites, or 10% of its proposed Gen 1 constellation, due to a lack of available rockets. The waiver comes with a temporary loss of spectrum priority, giving rivals like SpaceX more leverage in orbit. Amazon still aims to meet the full constellation deployment deadline of July 30, 2029. The company has significant investments in its constellation and has made manufacturing progress on its satellites. The FCC's decision promotes a second large satellite broadband constellation to compete with SpaceX's Starlink.

💡 Why It Matters

  • · Amazon's temporary loss of spectrum priority gives SpaceX and other rivals more room to negotiate favorable operating conditions.
  • · The waiver sets a precedent for the FCC's handling of deployment deadlines and spectrum priority in the rapidly evolving satellite industry.