Paris, France, April 23, 2026--The 11th edition of Novaspace’s Prospects for the Small Satellite Market report forecasts 16,900 small satellites (under 500 kg) to be launched between 2026 and 2035. This equates to an average of 230 tons per year, or approximately 640 kg launched daily, driven by growing sovereign constellation demand.
Smallsats are expected to account for 33% of all satellites launched over the period, but only 6% of total mass, underscoring the continued dominance of larger systems in overall launch weight. While large-scale constellations such as Starlink continue to influence demand, market expansion is increasingly supported by a broader base of national and regional programs.
“The smallsat market is entering a more mature phase, where industrial maturity, production readiness, and secure access to demand will determine who succeeds,” said Julie Taillandier, Senior Consultant at Novaspace. “The key question is no longer who has a concept, but who can execute at scale.”
Investment remains strong. In 2025, smallsat-related private funding reached approximately $11.5 billion, supporting the transition from concept to deployment and reinforcing the scalability of next-generation constellations and missions.
At the same time, structural shifts are reshaping the competitive landscape. As vertical integration accelerates, independent suppliers face a narrowing addressable market, and achieving profitability is becoming more challenging, particularly for newer entrants.
Companies that can scale efficiently, deliver reliably, and secure long-term customer demand will be best positioned to lead the next phase of market growth. With investment levels remaining robust and constellation activity expanding across commercial and sovereign domains, the opportunity remains significant, but execution will be the defining factor.
About the Report
The 11th edition of Prospects for the Small Satellite Market offers a focused 2026–2035 forecast and global view of shifting smallsat demand and supply. Drawing on Novaspace’s proprietary database, it analyzes key applications, regions, orbits, mass classes, constellations, and market forces.
The report spans seven applications, six orbit classes, and five mass categories with emphasis on constellation growth. Its 10‑year outlook covers operators, integrators, launch providers, launcher types, and mission types.
