Quick Take
- IN-SPACe has adjudged Reliance Jio’s plan for about 1,600 LEO satellites as technically sound.
- The constellation sits at 650 km altitude, with government support expected on ITU orbital slots.
- Capex is pegged at $10-15 Bn (Rs 96,430-1,44,645 Cr), Jio’s largest single infrastructure bet.
In This Article
The Jio LEO satellite plan has cleared a key regulatory step, with space regulator IN-SPACe (Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre) adjudging Reliance Jio’s proposal to deploy about 1,600 low earth orbit satellites at 650 km altitude as technically sound and up to global benchmarks, per a July 17, 2026 report.
The evaluation was carried out by the Indian National Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and the Wireless Planning and Coordination wing of the Department of Telecommunications (DoT). Government support is now in the offing to help the Mukesh Ambani-led firm secure orbital slots at the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) level, officials said. The satellite unit will sit under Jio Platforms.
StartupFeed Insight
The real signal here is not the satellite count, it is the defence angle. IN-SPACe has cleared a design where defence payloads may ride on some satellites, and over 20 ground stations will sit on Indian soil. That converts a broadband story into a strategic-sovereignty story, which is why the government is fast-tracking ITU support. Watch Bharti-backed Eutelsat OneWeb and the Home Ministry, both have a direct stake in who controls India’s orbital layer. StartupFeed expects Jio to file its first ITU submission before December 2026, ahead of the Jio Platforms IPO paperwork. By Avinash.
Jio LEO Satellite Plan: Key Numbers
The Jio LEO satellite plan targets India’s first non-geostationary constellation at scale. IN-SPACe has cleared the technical architecture, though spectrum allocation and further operational clearances are still pending. The table below sets out the confirmed parameters.
| Metric | Detail | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Satellites | Around 1,600 | About 32 visible over India at any given time |
| Altitude | 650 km | Low earth orbit, low-latency band |
| Capacity | 4.5-5 Tb/s | Throughput over India |
| Ground stations | Over 20 | To be set up within India |
| Estimated capex | $10-15 Bn (Rs 96,430-1,44,645 Cr) | Industry estimate for full build-out |
| Defence payloads | May be hosted on some satellites | For strategic needs |
The most striking detail is the defence provision. IN-SPACe has cleared a design where defence payloads may be hosted on some satellites for strategic needs, making this India’s first private constellation built with a security layer from the start.
About Reliance Jio
Reliance Jio Infocomm is the telecom and digital arm of Reliance Industries, founded in 2007 and led by Chairman Akash Ambani. Headquartered in Mumbai, Jio runs India’s largest mobile network with over 500 million subscribers. Its satellite ambitions sit under Jio Platforms, which also houses JioAirFiber and other digital assets. The group is backed by long-term investors including Google and Meta.
Why does the IN-SPACe clearance matter?
The IN-SPACe clearance matters because it moves the Jio LEO satellite plan from a boardroom idea to a project the Indian state is willing to back. Securing orbital slots through the ITU Radiocommunication Sector is a non-negotiable prerequisite, no constellation can legally operate without international frequency and orbit coordination.
“The kind of capacity planned by Jio is the highest so far for India,” said a person aware of the discussions.
The move also reflects a wider policy shift. Several countries are pushing to reduce dependence on overseas satellite operators, and India has flagged national security concerns around foreign providers. A home-grown constellation gives New Delhi direct control over a critical connectivity layer, which is why officials are extending ITU filing support to Jio and to any other Indian entrant.
How does Jio compare with Starlink?
Jio’s roughly 1,600 satellites are dwarfed in raw count by Elon Musk-owned Starlink, which operates over 10,000 satellites globally. Scale, however, is only part of the picture. The table below compares the main LEO players relevant to India.
| Operator | Satellites | India status |
|---|---|---|
| Reliance Jio | ~1,600 (planned) | IN-SPACe technical clearance secured |
| Starlink (SpaceX) | ~10,000 | Operational globally, India entry in progress |
| Eutelsat OneWeb | ~650 | Bharti-backed, IN-SPACe approval already won |
Jio’s edge is not orbital mass but its retail base of over 500 million subscribers and 20-plus domestic ground stations, which give it a distribution and sovereignty advantage no foreign rival can match inside India.
What’s Next
The next milestone is Jio’s first ITU filing for orbital slots, which the government has agreed to support. Spectrum allocation and further operational clearances must follow before any satellite launches. With the Jio Platforms IPO widely expected, the satellite story adds a long-duration growth narrative to the listing. Will Jio lock in its orbital slots before rivals crowd the same 650 km band?
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Written by Avinash. Have a tip? Write to us at editorial@startupfeed.in.
