Southwest Airlines and T-Mobile announced today that Rapid Rewards members will get free unlimited in-flight Wi-Fi starting Oct. 24. With more than 800 aircraft in its fleet, Southwest becomes the largest US airline to make Wi-Fi standard across every flight. Impressively, unlike most previous T-Mobile perks, this one isn’t gated behind a specific wireless plan — it’s available to anybody on the plane.

A truly customer-forward deal

There isn’t even really a catch

A spatula with the T-Mobile logo cut out of the face, on a pink background, between the two halves of the Android Police logo.

Here’s how it works: anyone with a free Southwest Rapid Rewards account can log on during their flight, no matter which carrier they use. That’s a big departure from T-Mobile’s earlier approach. For years, the magenta giant has pitched in-flight perks as a sweetener for its own subscribers, first with Gogo back in 2014, then through deals with ViaSat and Hughesnet. Those were limited to usually just free messaging or a set number of Wi-Fi sessions per month.

This new deal goes further. T-Mobile isn’t just dangling Wi-Fi as a bonus for its own base, it’s underwriting free service for an entire airline’s loyalty program. For Southwest, the partnership makes sense; the airline has been testing free fleetwide Wi-Fi, and customer satisfaction spiked during those trials. For T-Mobile, it’s a chance to extend branding to millions of non-customers without asking them to switch carriers.

It’s also hard not to notice the timing. T-Mobile has been pushing its T-Satellite initiative, a partnership with SpaceX’s Starlink that promises near-universal coverage. While neither company mentioned Starlink by name in today’s announcement, the scale of this rollout strongly suggests satellite support will be in the mix. Other carriers have flirted with Starlink for in-flight connectivity, but here T-Mobile is positioning itself as the go-between, handling the customer-facing work while still leaning on satellite infrastructure behind the scenes.

The move also highlights a subtle shift in strategy. Instead of hoarding perks for subscribers, T-Mobile is experimenting with giving away value through third parties — Southwest today, maybe other travel or entertainment partners tomorrow. It’s a way to keep the “un-carrier” story alive in a market where unlimited data and free Netflix promos no longer stand out.

Free Wi-Fi for every Rapid Rewards member isn’t going to make your middle seat feel any wider or magically invent another armrest. But if T-Mobile can make staying online at 35,000 feet as reliable as it claims, Southwest passengers will notice. And that may be enough to get both brands a few more loyal customers on the ground.