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Starlink leases office space in Mumbai’s Chandivali in the same building as Hrithik Roshan’s HRX

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ISN Team
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Elon Musk and Hrithik Roshan

Elon Musk’s satellite internet venture, Starlink Satellite Communications Private Limited, has leased a 1,294 sq. ft. office space in Mumbai’s Chandivali area for five years, according to property registration documents accessed by Propstack.

The lease, which was registered on October 14, 2025, covers the ground floor of the Boomerang building in Chandivali, owned by Nikunj Sheth. The total rental value is Rs 2.33 crore, with a monthly rent of Rs 3.52 lakh and an annual escalation of 5%.

Starlink has also deposited Rs 31.7 lakh as security and will pay a common area maintenance fee of Rs 15.79 lakh for the lease term. The documents note that a stamp duty of Rs 66,500 and a registration fee of Rs 1,000 were paid. The leased space includes one car-parking slot.

Notably, the Boomerang building also houses the offices of several high-profile tenants, including HRX Digitech LLP, a company owned by actor Hrithik Roshan and his father Rakesh Roshan, which purchased three office units worth Rs 31 crore in July 2025. The Roshans’ offices, located on the first floor, span a total of 13,546 sq. ft., as per media reports. 

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For Starlink, this marks its first reported office in Mumbai, signalling the company’s renewed focus on establishing a local presence as it readies for commercial satellite broadband operations in India.

According to earlier filings and regulatory disclosures, Starlink plans to set up nine gateway earth stations across major Indian cities including Mumbai, Noida, Chandigarh, Hyderabad, Kolkata, and Lucknow. The company has also applied for 600 Gbps capacity through its Gen 1 constellation, with spectrum provisionally assigned for security compliance demonstrations.

Part of SpaceX, Starlink operates a constellation of low-earth-orbit (LEO) satellites to deliver high-speed broadband globally. Its India plans focus on bridging digital connectivity gaps in remote and underserved areas, where conventional broadband access remains limited.

Mumbai