PLBs and satellite communicators solve overlapping problems with meaningfully different tools. The decision is simpler than it appears once the key difference is understood.
The Core Difference
A PLB transmits a 406MHz distress signal one-way to government COSPAS-SARSAT infrastructure. It has no screen, no messaging capability, no tracking, and no subscription fee. A satellite communicator sends two-way text messages, tracks location continuously, and handles both emergency SOS and routine non-emergency communication — at a monthly subscription cost.
| Satellite Communicator | Personal Locator Beacon (PLB) |
|---|
| Two-way messaging | Yes | No |
| SOS to rescue services | Yes (via commercial center) | Yes (direct to government) |
| Routine tracking | Yes | No |
| Subscription required | Yes ($12-65/mo) | No — ever |
| Network | Iridium or Globalstar | COSPAS-SARSAT (international) |
| Device cost | $150-800 | $249-330 |
| Battery life | Days (rechargeable) | 5-7 year shelf life |
| Acknowledgment of SOS | Yes (two-way confirmation) | No (one-way only) |
Choose a Satellite Communicator If:
- Family or contacts want to track location during non-emergency trips
- Two-way messaging to check in or provide weather updates matters
- Acknowledgment from rescue services after SOS activation provides meaningful peace of mind
- The subscription cost is acceptable given the frequency of backcountry trips
Garmin inReach Mini 2 — 9.4/10$350 • Best overall satellite communicator
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Choose a PLB If:
- Emergency signaling is the only required capability
- No subscription fee is a hard requirement
- The device will sit in a pack unused for months or years between trips
- A device that works without any account management or active subscription is preferred
ACR ResQLink 400 PLB — 8.0/10$320 • No subscription • 5-year battery • Government network
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Ocean Signal rescueME PLB1 — 7.7/10$249 • Lightest PLB • 7-year shelf life
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Frequently Asked Questions
Can a PLB replace a satellite communicator?
For emergency signaling only: yes. A PLB transmits a distress signal to government rescue services with no subscription fee. It cannot send non-emergency messages, share routine location with family, or receive any acknowledgment. For hikers who only want emergency backup: a PLB is cheaper. For hikers who want to communicate with contacts during non-emergency trips: a satellite communicator is necessary.
Is a PLB or satellite communicator more reliable for SOS?
PLBs transmit directly to government COSPAS-SARSAT satellite infrastructure with no commercial intermediary. Satellite communicators route SOS through commercial monitoring centers (GEOS for Garmin, SPOT's monitoring for SPOT). Both are reliable; PLBs have a slight edge in independence from commercial infrastructure.
Can I carry both a PLB and a satellite communicator?
Yes, and some professional guides do. The satellite communicator handles routine communication and tracking; the PLB provides a no-subscription backup emergency signal that works even if the satellite communicator's subscription lapses or the device fails.
Does a PLB subscription cost anything?
No — purchase the device, register it free with NOAA, and the emergency coverage is active indefinitely until the battery expires (5-7 years). There is no monthly or annual fee.