Starlink Mini may finally cut the cord with a battery-powered dish

Starlink Mini is already the version of SpaceX’s internet dish built for on-the-go connectivity. It has found its fans in travelers, campers, vanlifers, and others who live off the grid. But new firmware clues suggest SpaceX may be getting ready to make it even more portable by putting the battery inside the dish itself.

According to a PCMag report, university researcher Jinwei Zhao spotted new Starlink firmware strings that point toward a possible Starlink Mini model with an integrated battery. The key clue is a new DishBatteryStats reference, which appears designed to return battery-specific information rather than simply detect that the dish is plugged into some random external power bank.

Starlink

What was revealed in the firmware?

The GitHub proto file linked in the report shows a DishBatteryStats message, which is what one would expect from hardware that monitors its own battery. The same file also lists three power-source states, namely USBC, BATTERY, and USBC_AND_BATTERY, suggesting the unreleased hardware could run from USB-C, an internal battery, or both at the same time.

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Keep in mind that this isn’t a confirmation for a brand-new Starlink Mini from SpaceX. There’s also no mention of pricing, launch timing, battery capacity, or final design. But this lines up with what Starlink Mini users want, which is fewer cables and less dependence on a bulky external battery.

Why this is actually great

A Starlink dish on a moving vehicle. SpaceX

The current Starlink Mini can already be powered by portable batteries, which is a big part of its appeal. Currently, the portable dish can run from a USB-C power bank with the right setup. But the catch is that users need a compatible battery and the right cable, since the Mini requires 100W USB-C Power Delivery and does not work with 65W or lower USB-PD supplies.

The current kit also ships with an AC wall adapter and a long cable using 5521 barrel connectors. This is exactly why an integrated battery would be a genuinely useful upgrade. Third-party batteries already exist. However, a SpaceX-built version could work more cleanly with the Starlink app, battery stats, charging controls, and warranty support.

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