I pay ATT $65 a month...
I guess I am put off by the Starlink original equipment costs ($600), and $160 a month for internet, but you get much more data and speeds. Also, Musks's original statements that Starlink was originally envisioned as bringing internet to all the poor villages around the world at a price the poor could afford. That hasn't happened.
As a Starlink owner and fan I would still generally say "if you HAVE another option, it's probably better." Whether it's price, performance, reliability, or what-have-you.
Here in Colorado there are places where we camp where cell service isn't "bad," it's literally non-existent because there simply is not a cell phone tower at all. Our homestead in Ft Garland has one nearby, but it's 3G and if you can get data through it at all, you know the weather outside is good without looking out the window. And even many very popular places to camp like Lake Mac in Nebraska (aka "the Nebraska Riviera") have such poor service that cell just isn't an option. Starlink is for those situations.
Starlink is also well suited to full-timers because even the "Unlimited" the major cell carriers offer are not:
The carriers must make their ads more transparent.
www.theverge.com
This may change some day, but so far, there are no monthly data caps on Starlink. My admin console says I've used 358GB since January. There are cell phone plans that offer 50GB/mo but most at that level aren't cheaper than Starlink, and that would just cover my average needs - in January I used 63GB. When I was on cellular I used to carry two plans just to have something to switch to in an emergency. We're a family of 7 so baseline Youtube and Netflix usage already puts us well up the ladder, and I'm a software architect by trade and commonly move large files around for work, so my business usage usually sends us through any data caps cellular carriers have. They're fine for occasional use but not really set up for "full timers" if you compare them to home cable modems.
Never listen to anything Musk says, by the way. He's a figurehead, and very little of the innovations at SpaceX, Tesla, et. al. were originally his ideas. He did a good job bringing investment and interest to those companies and hiring good people, but in general, I feel you should judge based on their actions, not their statements. He also gets mis-quoted a lot, and I suspect that's the case with the "poor villages around the world" comment - Starlink had a massive capital outlay to launch its satellites and there's just no way "poor villages" were ever going to subsidize that. They HAD to launch to the US domestic market primarily because that's where the money was. If they hadn't they would be dead already. When it comes to Internet access, Starlink is an objectively viable option for a lot of people, although I'll openly agree that there are plenty of folks it's just not "for".
Folks on the fence for satellite and with other options should almost certainly wait. Today, many Web sites will tell you there are competitors to Starlink but none of them can offer the same coverage (they're "competing" but still cellular, so not apples to apples) or low latency (they're not LEO - Starlink was the first at that). Within the next few years, we WILL see competitors emerge though (Amazon is already working on launches for Kuiper). Competition will drive prices down and force Starlink to innovate even more - they've already got a lower-cost, semi-portable dish and the standard dish price is down to $499 now - almost 20% less than just a year ago. I expect in the next 18 months, if you can wait, there will be more, and cheaper, options out there.