HughesNet outages and service status in Roanoke, Virginia
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- HughesNet generated 0 outage signals in the last 24 hours around Roanoke, including 0 direct reports.
- The most common problems reported in this area mention Internet.
- Internet (100%)
The latest reports from users having issues in Roanoke come from postal codes 24019 .
HughesNet is headquartered in Germantown, Maryland and provides a high-speed satellite internet service which is the largest service of its kind with more than 1.3 million subscribers in the Americas.
Problems in the last 24 hours in Roanoke, Virginia
The chart below shows the number of HughesNet reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Roanoke, Virginia and surrounding areas. An outage is declared when the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line.
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Live Outage Map Near Roanoke, Virginia
The most recent HughesNet outage reports came from the following cities: Roanoke.
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
|---|---|---|
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Internet | 30 days ago |
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Internet | 9 months ago |
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Internet | 2 years ago |
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Total Blackout | 3 years ago |
Community Discussion
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HughesNet Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Bleu (@Sour_blu3) reportedI would rather have @GetSpectrum internet over @Hughesnet This **** is garbage to the max, who ******** uses HughesNet and has a positive experience? I’d rather contract aids/hiv and spread it then do another day trying to figure out or contact @Hughesnet
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Big Corey (@FROGSC25) reported@Hughesnet i should’ve done more research because this sucks
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🎱 Tomeet Riyous, IQ 282 🎱 (@realDrampire) reported@McG_1948 @Starlink I went with the slowest plan to start with till I can cancel some other stuff. Can't wait though.. we've been on limited data slow speed since 2009.. dialup to Hughesnet, back to dial up and then trashy Verizon
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Skylar Darkfox (@SkylarDarkfox) reported from City of Shoreacres, Texas@gothburz This idea sort of breaks down if someone is using any satellite internet service that relies on geostationary satellites (e.g., Hughesnet, Viasat, basically anything other than Starlink). The physical roundtrip for any of that is at least 44,000 miles.
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Andrew (@evergreensox) reported@Hughesnet Don’t believe their lies. The installer will damage your home and their internet DOES NOT WORK.
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Scroopy Noopers (@holflaffer) reported@SawyerMerritt @Starlink I live in a rural area, have Starlink, and occasionally get junk mail from Hughesnet, a competing satellite internet service. It’s not a question of if they’ll go bankrupt but when.
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freedomprintshop (@freedomofprint) reportedStarlink is still superior on both cost and reliability to Hughesnet and viasatt ( they are both years behind the power and cost ) Maybe revisit the hardware again I’ve never seen the plans that high when I got ours and it’s more for backup. If you are moving a lot of data I could see that but you should be fine with the $150 deal but internationally it may have an upcharge .
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Grok (@grok) reported@MasihEther @cb_doge Yes, as of 2026, Starlink is the fastest satellite internet service, offering downloads up to 200Mbps, uploads up to 20Mbps, and latency around 34ms. Competitors like Viasat (up to 150Mbps, 642ms latency) and HughesNet (up to 100Mbps, 636ms) lag behind in speed and latency.
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Grok (@grok) reported@ROlsen92862576 @DOGEai_tx @MarioNawfal The claim that DISH's Starlink bundle is actually Hughesnet is incorrect. DISH's official site and recent reports (e.g., PCMag, Notebookcheck) confirm it's genuine Starlink service, with speeds up to 400+ Mbps, unlimited data, free hardware/install for $80/mo bundled with TV. No evidence supports ties to the Infrastructure Act's $65B for this bundle or "Section 90112." Hughesnet (DISH-owned) has separate bundles, but referrals to Starlink are noted in 2025 news.
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Grok (@grok) reportedStarlink is generally more reliable than traditional satellite providers like Viasat or Hughesnet, with lower latency (25-60ms) and speeds up to 220Mbps. However, it falls short of fiber or cable options, which offer higher speeds, better consistency, and latencies under 20ms. Ideal for rural areas; recent outages highlight occasional issues.