Wi‑Fi on the train to the Carpathians: Ukrzaliznytsia tests Starlink internet and gauges demand

The first long-distance train has been equipped with internet — what this will change for passengers and how the project can scale without additional investments from Ukrainian Railways (UZ).

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Briefly

Ukrzaliznytsia is expanding a pilot: Wi‑Fi has appeared on the flagship train "Hutsulshchyna" No.95/96 (Kyiv–Rakhiv). After tests on diplomatic runs and in Intercity trains, internet has now been connected on a long‑distance route using Starlink — without Ukrzaliznytsia's own investment, the company's press service said.

"Wi‑Fi has appeared on the flagship train 'Hutsulshchyna' No.95/96 on the Kyiv–Rakhiv route"

— Press service of Ukrzaliznytsia

How it works

Passengers receive 10 minutes of free access, after which they can buy a day tariff for 120 UAH (the first 5 GB — at unlimited speed). Payment is made online by card, Apple Pay or Google Pay. The connection is provided by Starlink, installed by a partner; the project is being implemented jointly with the Ministry for Communities and Territories Development.

Context and significance

This is not just comfort for tourists in the Carpathians. Internet access on long‑distance services means better communication for residents of remote areas, faster access to services and the ability to provide prompt information during emergencies. The project is also testing a commercial model: if demand is stable, Ukrzaliznytsia will scale the solution through a tender.

Evidence and prior experience

In 2023 UZ already signed a contract with the company "Vinkom Ukraine" to deploy Wi‑Fi on Intercity trains worth 78.89 million UAH — at that time 16 high‑speed trains were connected. The current test on a long‑distance route will show whether this service is viable under a passenger payment model and with partner‑provided Starlink equipment.

What’s next

If statistics from the "Hutsulshchyna" train confirm demand, Ukrzaliznytsia will announce a tender and scale the project to other routes. This is a chance to modernize transport infrastructure without a significant burden on the budget — provided procurements are transparent and service quality is monitored.

Right now the key questions are whether the new pricing model will convince passengers to pay for reliable access, and whether partners can guarantee connection quality on mountainous routes. Answers to these questions will determine whether Wi‑Fi on long‑distance services becomes the norm rather than a one‑off experiment.

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