ABSTRACT Disturbances in the ionosphere can severely affect synthetic aperture radar (SAR) acquisition and also the accuracy of differential SAR interferometry (D-InSAR) techniques. Focusing on the mid-latitudes, we report for the first time the effect of small-scale ionospheric irregularities on the interferograms generated by the C-band Sentinel-1 satellite. The interferograms obtained during the geomagnetic storm on 4 November 2021 showed finger-like stripes of phase artefacts, while the interferograms obtained on non-storm days did not show such anomalies. Such phase artefacts introduce an error greater than ± 3π in the interferogram. By further checking the gridded total electron content (TEC) from the ground-based global navigation satellite system (GNSS) network, as well as the in-situ electron density measured by ESA’s Swarm satellite, the finger-like stripes in the interferograms are found to be correlated with ionospheric bulge structures generated during the geomagnetic storm. Since both the interferogram stripes and the ionospheric bulges exhibit a comparable east-west extension, it is believed that the interferograms can also be used to reflect the small-scale structures of ionospheric bulge fringes. For example, in this case, the latitudinal width of each finger-like stripe reaches about 8 km. Our result implies that the C-band interferogram has the potential to probe the two-dimensional ionospheric structures with unprecedented resolution, which cannot be achievable by the gridded GNSS-TEC.