Amazon has officially introduced Amazon LEO, its new low Earth orbit satellite internet system. The announcement includes three new antennas, early customer testing, and the start of a global rollout that positions Amazon as a major player in satellite-based connectivity.

For mobile users, RV travelers, remote workers, emergency teams, and anyone living or working off-grid, this marks a significant shift in what reliable internet can look like. And while Amazon begins early testing, TRIO has already started developing prototype mounting solutions so the community can be ready the moment Amazon LEO becomes available.


What Is Amazon LEO

Amazon LEO is built on a low Earth orbit network designed to deliver fast, stable internet with compact, lightweight terminals. Low Earth orbit satellites reduce latency and allow the system to support tasks like remote work, streaming, multi-device use, and industrial operations.

Amazon has confirmed that testing is already underway with business, enterprise, and government partners across various environments.


The Three Amazon LEO Antennas

Nano

Up to 100 Mbps
7 x 7 in
2.2 lbs

Nano is the smallest antenna in the lineup and is designed for maximum portability. It is intended for travelers, compact vehicles, and mobile users who need a light and simple terminal that still delivers enough speed for streaming and video calls.

Pro

Up to 400 Mbps
11 x 11 in
5.3 lbs

Pro is the mid-range option and the most versatile. It suits homes, small businesses, RV setups, and mobile installations that require dependable performance. This will likely be the go-to choice for many on-the-move users.

Ultra

Up to 1 Gbps
Up to 400 Mbps uploads
20 x 30 x 1.9 in
43 lbs

Ultra is Amazon’s highest-performance antenna and is built for demanding use cases. It is designed for industrial operations, government teams, large marine vessels, and any environment where high throughput and stable connectivity are mission critical.


Amazon Has Started Real-World Testing

Testing has already begun, focusing on:

• Harsh weather performance
• In-motion stability
• High bandwidth needs
• Remote field operations
• Multi-device workloads

This confirms that Amazon LEO hardware is past the concept stage and is now being actively refined in real operating conditions.


TRIO Has Started Prototyping Early Mounting Solutions

As soon as Amazon released the antenna sizes and hardware details, TRIO moved into the first stages of design work. Our experience building mounts for Starlink users lets us quickly understand form factors, structural needs, and compatibility challenges across vehicles, RVs, off-grid setups, and marine environments.

Our goal is to ensure TRIO users can integrate Amazon LEO into their setups with the same level of reliability and low-profile performance they expect from our existing mounts.


What Comes Next

TRIO will continue exploring prototypes, running tests, and publishing updates as Amazon releases more technical documentation. Once Amazon LEO becomes available to the public, our community will have dedicated mounting options ready to support the Nano, Pro, and Ultra antennas.



Stay Updated - Get Notified When TRIO Launches Amazon LEO Mounts

Amazon LEO isn’t available to the public yet, but we’re moving fast on early mounting prototypes. If you want to be first in line when TRIO releases dedicated mounts for the Nano, Pro, and Ultra antennas, you can sign up here:




We’ll notify you the moment Amazon LEO becomes available and when our mount lineup goes live.

Erion Murati