Investments in the Space Sector Breaks Records in the Q1 2026

New York City, April 14, 2026

New York City, April 14, 2026--The 1st Quarter 2026 edition of the The Space Investment Quarterly published by Space Capital revealed record-breaking investments in the space sector. Q1 2026 shattered the previous quarterly record with US$ 36 billion invested across 148 companies. The convergence of AI, geopolitics, and orbital compute is driving capital into the space economy at a pace that would have seemed implausible five years ago. The architecture is being redrawn in real time — and ownership is being decided now, according to the report.

Space Investment Quarterly Q1 2026The latest Space IQ shows Q1 setting a new single-quarter record, with orbital data centers emerging as a credible, well-capitalized candidate to be the first heavy industry to move off-planet — and the SpaceX IPO forcing institutional allocators to confront how much of this market they actually own.

Key insights from the report:

  • Q1 delivered US$ 36 billion across 148 companies, shattering the previous quarterly record as Applications posted its largest quarter ever and Infrastructure more than doubled year-over-year
  • The orbital data center race graduated from concept to capitalized competition, with SpaceX, Blue Origin, NVIDIA, and Google now in a four-horse race for compute in orbit
  • Distribution delivered back-to-back quarterly records driven by $3.8 billion in GEOINT alone — 86% of all of 2025's full-year total — as spatial computing and physical AI compounded rapidly
  • NASA's relationship with legacy contractors is being fundamentally renegotiated under Administrator Isaacman, with Starship replacing SLS as the core of the Artemis architecture and Starliner formally reclassified as a Type A mishap
  • Starlink crossed 10 million subscribers and is tracking toward $20 billion in 2026 revenue, confirming the anchor tenant of commercial satcom — and opening real launch capacity for Rocket Lab, Firefly, Stoke, and others

This report offers a closer look at the structural shifts underway — from the platform wars forming in orbit, to the policy inflection reshaping NASA, to the growing pipeline of late-stage companies preparing for public debuts.

You can download the full report here: https://www.spacecapital.com/reports/space-investment-quarterly-q1-2026