Speed Analysis

🇮🇶 Starlink Speed in Iraq

Starlink speed in Iraq typically lands around 110 Mbps down, 13 Mbps up, and 54 ms ping in 2026. That puts the market below the current 150 Mbps global baseline, with the biggest swings usually showing up during the evening peak-demand window.

Pair this speed profile with our Starlink cost in Iraq page to see how performance and pricing line up in the same market.

Typical Download
110 Mbps
↓ 40 vs 150 Mbps global baseline
Typical Upload
13 Mbps
↓ 7 vs 20 Mbps global upload baseline
Typical Ping
54 ms
↓ 9 vs 45 ms global latency baseline

Expected speed distribution

PercentileDownloadUploadPing
25th percentile63-74 Mbps8-10 Mbps58-68 ms
50th percentile92-106 Mbps11-13 Mbps51-59 ms
75th percentile115-132 Mbps13-15 Mbps46-54 ms
90th percentile133-153 Mbps14-17 Mbps41-48 ms

Peak-hour slowdown

In Iraq, Starlink usually slows most between 7-11pm local time. A realistic planning range is 10-14%, with larger drops in denser urban cells and milder declines in rural areas where fewer households are sharing the same overhead capacity.

Starlink vs local ISP speed

ServiceDownloadUploadPingTakeaway
Starlink110 Mbps13 Mbps54 msBest when you need rural reach, portability, or better-than-cellular consistency.
Fiber broadband320 Mbps240 Mbps8 msUsually faster and lower latency where fiber is actually available.
5G home internet145 Mbps20 Mbps28 msCompetitive on peak download, but more variable under cell congestion.
Fixed wireless ISP75 Mbps11 Mbps35 msStarlink usually wins on consistency and rural coverage.

The top wired alternative in Iraq is usually Fiber broadband, but Starlink remains the better fit where terrestrial build-outs are incomplete or peak-hour stability matters more than absolute best-case latency.

FAQ

What is the typical Starlink speed in Iraq?

Typical residential Starlink speed in Iraq is about 110 Mbps download, 13 Mbps upload, and 54 ms ping. Individual results vary by cell load, obstructions, weather, and the time of day, but those figures are a reasonable planning average for 2026.

Why is Starlink slower in Iraq compared to the global average?

Iraq is slower than the global baseline mostly because demand is concentrated into denser cells, especially around larger cities. When more homes compete for the same overhead capacity in the 7-11pm window, median download speed drops first and latency tends to climb.

Does Starlink in Iraq beat local Fiber broadband?

Not on raw latency in well-served urban neighborhoods. Fiber broadband usually posts lower ping and often higher top-end download speeds, but Starlink still wins where fiber or cable coverage is missing, overloaded, or impractical to install.

When are Starlink speeds slowest in Iraq?

The slowest window is usually 7-11pm local time, when more households stream video and share the same Starlink capacity. In Iraq, that peak-hour slowdown commonly lands around 10-14%, with the biggest drops showing up first on download speed and jitter.

Run a Starlink speed test

Measure your own latency, download, and upload against the country benchmarks on this page.

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Compare Starlink to local ISPs

See how Starlink stacks up against fiber, cable, mobile, and fixed wireless in real household use.

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