For most of its existence, SpaceX kept its financial results private.
That changed in April 2026, when the company confidentially filed a Form S-1 with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, pulling back the curtain on SpaceX revenue for the first time in company history.
What the filing revealed was a business that had fundamentally reinvented itself — from a rocket launch contractor into a subscription-driven technology platform with ambitions extending far beyond Earth orbit.
For investors trying to understand how SpaceX makes money ahead of one of the most anticipated public offerings in history, the answer is more layered than most expect.
Key Takeaways
SpaceX generates revenue across three segments: government contracts (NASA and the Pentagon), commercial launch services anchored by the reusable Falcon 9, and Starlink's fast-growing satellite internet subscriptions.
Independent space research firm Payload Space estimated SpaceX generated $13.1 billion in revenue in 2024, up 51% from $8.7 billion in 2023, driven almost entirely by Starlink's subscriber base doubling to 4.6 million.
SpaceX's own Form S-1 prospectus disclosed that Starlink generated $11.4 billion in 2025 — representing 61% of total company revenue — and $4.4 billion in operating profit, making it the company's dominant financial engine.
SpaceX reported $6.6 billion in adjusted EBITDA in 2025 but also a $4.9 billion GAAP net loss, reflecting heavy Starship capital expenditure and the xAI acquisition completed in early 2026.
Starlink surpassed 10 million active customers across 160 countries and territories as of February 2026, according to an official SpaceX announcement — quadrupling its 2023 subscriber base in two years.
SpaceX filed Amendment No. 1 to its Form S-1 with the SEC on June 1, 2026, targeting a Nasdaq listing under ticker SPCX at a reported valuation of approximately $1.75 trillion.
SpaceX's revenue model is built on three distinct pillars, each developed at a different stage of the company's history and each playing a different role in its financial story today.
Understanding how these three pillars interact — and which is growing fastest — is essential for anyone approaching SpaceX as an investment.
Long before Starlink launched its first satellite, government contracts were the revenue source that kept SpaceX alive.
Today, that relationship has grown substantially.
The Department of Defense and U.S. Space Force have become equally significant customers.
In April 2025, the U.S. Space Force awarded SpaceX a National Security Space Launch Phase 3 Lane 2 contract with a ceiling value of more than $5.9 billion, covering 28 of the program's anticipated 54 missions spanning fiscal year 2025 through 2029, according to Space Systems Command's official contract announcement.
That figure accounts for roughly 22% of SpaceX's total 2025 revenue, making it the second-largest segment behind Starlink.
It is worth being precise here: these are contractual payments for services that SpaceX competes to win and is obligated to deliver.
They are not grants, not unconditional subsidies, and not political handouts — a distinction that matters significantly for anyone evaluating the quality of SpaceX's revenue base.
Alongside government work, SpaceX earns substantial revenue from commercial satellite launches for private and international customers.
The Falcon 9 is priced at approximately $67 to $74 million per launch for commercial customers, based on pricing data tracked by industry analysts and reflected in Wikipedia's publicly maintained rocket specifications.
That price tag looks unremarkable until you understand the cost structure behind it.
A fully reusable Falcon 9 booster — some of which have now flown more than 20 times — allows SpaceX to spread manufacturing costs across dozens of missions rather than writing off a new rocket on every flight.
In 2025, SpaceX completed 165 Falcon 9 launches, though only 43 of those flew for outside customers — with the vast majority of missions used internally to deploy Starlink satellites, per Sacra's analysis of SpaceX's S-1 disclosures.
The commercial launch segment, while profitable, has grown more slowly than Starlink.
The real strategic value of the Falcon 9 launch business is less about the revenue it generates directly and more about what it enables: a vertically integrated flywheel where launch capabilities subsidize Starlink constellation deployment, which in turn funds further R&D.
Of the three pillars, Starlink has become the one that defines SpaceX's financial identity.
Starlink delivers high-speed satellite internet to consumers, businesses, aviation operators, and maritime users through a constellation of more than 6,000 satellites in low Earth orbit — the largest satellite network in history by count.
The subscription model spans multiple tiers.
Residential plans start at approximately $80 to $120 per month depending on service level, while business and priority plans command significantly higher rates.
Aviation customers pay from $200 per month for light aircraft to $1,000 or more for commercial jets, while Maritime tiers are tiered by data priority: as of mid-2026, plans start at approximately $275 per month for 50 GB of priority data and can reach $1,265 per month for 1 terabyte, based on Starlink's published maritime pricing structure — though pricing varies by region and is subject to change.
The subscriber growth has been exceptional.
The economics of Starlink favor scale: once the satellite constellation is in orbit, the marginal cost of adding each additional subscriber is low, which creates expanding margins as the user base grows.
Because SpaceX operated as a private company from 2002 until its 2026 IPO filing, its financial results had never been officially published.
That made SpaceX revenue estimates the exclusive domain of specialized research firms, until the S-1 changed everything.
That growth was not gradual — it was driven almost entirely by Starlink's subscriber base doubling from 2.3 million to 4.6 million active customers during the year, combined with the continued expansion of Starlink's commercial service tiers into aviation and maritime.
In 2025, the S-1 prospectus data provides the clearest picture yet.
Stripping out the AI segment — which reflects SpaceX's growing data center and compute infrastructure — the core launch-and-connectivity business generated approximately $15.5 billion in 2025.
The most important structural shift in SpaceX's financial profile is not the total revenue number — it is the revenue mix.
In 2020 and 2021, government launch contracts and commercial satellite deployments dominated SpaceX's income statement.
Starlink, still early in its rollout, contributed very little.
By 2024, the equation had inverted entirely.
SpaceX's own S-1 confirmed the trend continued into 2025, with Starlink at 61% of total revenue even as the denominator expanded significantly.
For investors, this shift carries two major implications.
Subscription revenue is recurring and highly predictable, which supports premium valuation multiples — a quality that per-launch revenue simply does not offer.
And as Starlink's average revenue per user grows with higher-tier enterprise and government connectivity contracts, the margin profile continues to strengthen.
The profitability question is one of the most searched questions about SpaceX, and the honest answer requires separating two very different accounting frameworks.
SpaceX's draft IPO prospectus, as analyzed by financial research firms including Sacra and Morningstar, disclosed that the company generated approximately $6.6 billion in adjusted EBITDA in 2025 — a non-GAAP figure that excludes certain costs included in the GAAP net loss figure reported alongside it.
On that basis, the core business is operationally profitable — and Starlink on its own generated $4.4 billion in operating profit in 2025, per the same prospectus data disclosed via Via Satellite's reporting on the S-1 filing.
However, SpaceX simultaneously posted a GAAP net loss of approximately $4.9 billion for the same year.
That gap exists because GAAP accounting captures costs that adjusted EBITDA does not: billions in annual capital expenditure on Starship development, substantial stock-based compensation, long-term debt servicing, and costs associated with the xAI acquisition completed in early 2026.
Morningstar noted in its review of the S-1 that SpaceX's spending has risen significantly following the xAI deal, with Starlink's operating profit effectively cross-subsidizing xAI's intensive capital requirements.
The most accurate framing for investors is this: SpaceX is operationally profitable as a launch and connectivity business, but it is not yet net profitable under GAAP accounting.
That distinction matters for anyone assessing SpaceX's IPO valuation against comparable public companies.
SpaceX has raised capital through more than 20 private funding rounds since Elon Musk founded the company in 2002 with proceeds from his PayPal exit.
The valuation trajectory over the past two years has been dramatic.
According to Sacra's tracking, SpaceX's implied valuation reached $350 billion in December 2024 through a secondary share sale, climbed to approximately $400 billion by July 2025 through an insider share transaction, and surged to roughly $800 billion in December 2025 through a sale priced at $421 per share.
SpaceX confidentially filed for an IPO on April 1, 2026, and filed Amendment No. 1 to its Form S-1 with the SEC on June 1, 2026, applying to list Class A common stock on Nasdaq under the ticker symbol SPCX.
Reporting on the S-1 filing clusters around a target valuation of approximately $1.75 trillion — which, if achieved, would make it one of the largest public market debuts in history.
At that valuation against 2025 revenue of approximately $18.7 billion, SpaceX would trade at roughly 94 times revenue — an aggressive multiple that reflects investors pricing in Starlink's long-term subscriber potential and Starship's eventual commercialization rather than current earnings.
One of the most persistent misconceptions surrounding SpaceX's revenue model is treating government contracts as equivalent to "government funding" or "subsidies."
They are not.
SpaceX does not receive grants, unconditional subsidies, or equity investment from the federal government.
What SpaceX earns from NASA, the Space Force, and other agencies are payments for competitively awarded, performance-based contracts — made only when specific milestones or delivery conditions are met.
That means NASA does not write blank checks — SpaceX gets paid when it delivers against contractual benchmarks, and not before.
This distinction matters because it changes how investors should interpret SpaceX's revenue concentration risk.
Government revenue is earned through competitive performance, not political patronage — and SpaceX's track record of winning re-competed contracts across multiple administrations suggests it has earned that business on merit.
Is SpaceX profitable?
SpaceX generated approximately $6.6 billion in adjusted EBITDA in 2025 per its draft IPO prospectus, making it operationally profitable, though it posted a $4.9 billion GAAP net loss due to heavy Starship capital expenditure and costs from the xAI acquisition.
Does SpaceX get government funding?
SpaceX earns competitively awarded, milestone-based government contracts from NASA and the U.S. Department of Defense — these are payments for services delivered, not grants or subsidies.
What is SpaceX's annual revenue?
Payload Space estimated SpaceX generated $13.1 billion in revenue in 2024; SpaceX's own S-1 filing, analyzed by Sacra, disclosed total 2025 revenues of approximately $18.7 billion across its three business segments.
How much does Starlink contribute to SpaceX revenue?
According to SpaceX's Form S-1 prospectus, the Starlink Connectivity segment generated $11.4 billion in 2025 — representing approximately 61% of SpaceX's total revenue that year.
Is SpaceX government funded?
SpaceX holds approximately $22 billion in cumulative federal contracts across multiple agencies, per SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell — but those represent earned payments for services, not government equity or investment in the company.
How much money does SpaceX make per launch?
Commercial Falcon 9 launches are priced at approximately $67 to $74 million per mission for outside customers, with SpaceX's actual cost per launch estimated significantly below that threshold due to booster reusability.
SpaceX's transformation from a near-bankrupt rocket startup to an operationally profitable, multi-segment technology company is one of the more extraordinary business stories of the past two decades.
Three revenue pillars — government contracts, Falcon 9 commercial launches, and Starlink subscriptions — now support a company on the verge of a historic public debut.
Starlink is the dominant growth driver, and its expansion to 10 million subscribers across 160+ markets shows that the addressable opportunity is far larger than early sceptics projected.
For investors interested in the space economy and its intersection with emerging financial markets, understanding SpaceX's revenue model is the starting point for any credible analysis of the sector.
Those looking to trade SpaceX's pre-IPO derivative products can explore exposure available on MEXC.