Looking Back: 2025 in Review

2025 delivered a range SpaceTech stories underlining the sector’s growing significance and its momentum towards a multi-trillion-dollar industry. Many of the trends we anticipated emerged, albeit with some surprising twists. (Our 2025 predictions here).

Funding was the first clear signal. Q3’s $3.5bn surge pushed trailing twelve-month investment to $10.4bn, putting 2025 just shy of the 2021 peak. And the mix told the real story: the momentum sat firmly with hardware-heavy infrastructure, Build, Launch, Downlink, and Beyond Earth. Meanwhile Software, analytics, and platforms cooled off, with no headline rounds above $100m, underscoring our predicted shift toward deep-tech companies with actual hardware, actual traction, and actual sovereign relevance.

Geopolitics played out similarly. We believed the return of Trump would push space back to the centre of the US agenda and intensify the competitive dynamic with China. Sure enough, the US retained roughly 55% of global funding while China made a strong Q3 showing on the back of state-aligned mega-rounds. The Space Race 2.0 narrative wasn’t a metaphor this year, it was the operating environment, driving government budgets, defence pull-through, and a renewed urgency around commercial capability.

On the technical side, the big swings landed. Firefly Aerospace pulled off the first commercial soft lunar landing, and Isar Aerospace inched Europe closer to orbital independence with a continental launch attempt. These were exactly the kinds of next-generation capabilities we expected to graduate from promise to proof. And direct-to-device satcom moved meaningfully closer to mainstream adoption, fulfilling our notion that 2025 would be the year consumers finally started to notice that their phones were quietly becoming space-enabled.

Public and private markets also behaved as forecasted. In public markets we witnessed a cautious but heating up environment where high-quality operators like Voyager Technologies and Firefly Aerospace reopened the IPO window. Meanwhile, private markets were busy: seed activity was everywhere, growth rounds concentrated in the emerging scale-ups we’ve been tracking, and exits still rare despite growing M&A interest from primes and Big Tech.

Taken together, 2025 was a year that reinforced a simple truth: the orbital economy is no longer an experiment. It’s accelerating, it’s hardware-led, it’s strategically important, and it’s increasingly shaped by venture-backed companies translating technical ambition into commercial and geopolitical reality.

With that foundation in place, 2026 has a chance to become something even bigger, an inflection point where commercial expansion, AI integration, and sovereign partnerships collide to redefine what the next decade of space looks like.

1. Space as the Hub for Intelligence and Defence

2026 will cement space as the backbone of modern defence. As geopolitical tensions escalate, nations are pouring billions into SpaceTech, from Europe’s €800bn defence push to the United States’ Golden Dome initiative. Sovereign satellite constellations, space-enabled communication systems, and orbital ISR systems are no longer optional, they are essential.

Recent conflicts have shown the power of dual-use SpaceTech. Starlink kept Ukraine connected under siege, commercial Earth observation constellations provided actionable intelligence, and satellites continued to counter electronic warfare. Both current and future military operations will continually rely on space for secure comms, navigation, drone operations, and real-time threat monitoring.

In 2026, space won’t just support defence, it will orchestrate it. The convergence of technology, sovereign investment, and commercial capability is making SpaceTech the backbone of global security, shaping how nations protect, project, and operate in an increasingly contested world.

2. AI Becomes the Central Nervous System of Space

We continue to believe that Space holds an impact analogous to AI, arguably one of the most transformative forces of our era. Yes, it’s a bold claim, but the potential is staggering: Space is poised to create a $trillion-plus investment opportunity, with implications for virtually every corner of the $100 trillion global economy.

Going forward, AI will be the central nervous system running the orbital ecosystem. Autonomous satellite constellations and edge computing platforms will manage bandwidth, prevent collisions, and optimise operations at a planetary scale. AI will orchestrate satellite networks for logistics and defence, provide real-time intelligence on potential threats, and it will further model climate, disaster, and ESG data with greater accuracy than ever before.

This scale of ambition is why some of the world’s most successful entrepreneurs, Musk, Bezos, and others are investing billions of their own wealth into space initiatives. By 2026, space will increasingly function as a global data and analytics platform, powering both industry and defence. AI won’t just make orbital operations smarter, it will integrate space into the fabric of the global economy, transforming how we produce, protect, and understand the planet. The era of SpaceTech, fuelled by AI, is just beginning and its reach will be nothing short of universal.

3. Sovereign Capabilities and Commercial Partnerships

2026 will see governments, defence primes, and private operators collaborating and competing like never before in orbit. Mergers, acquisitions, and dual-use innovations are accelerating as incumbents respond to the surge of private-sector ingenuity.

Space is no longer the domain of either governments or commercial players alone. Sovereign capabilities are being built hand-in-hand with commercial platforms, for example ICEYE’s Synthetic Aperture Radar constellation delivers images to governments and insurance providers. This collaboration strengthens national security while fuelling new market opportunities, driving faster deployment of critical infrastructure and unlocking unprecedented commercial scale.

The winners will be those who can navigate both worlds: delivering capabilities that meet government priorities while capturing the value of a rapidly growing orbital economy. In 2026, partnerships in space won’t just be strategic, they’ll be the engine powering the next era of global defence, commerce, and innovation.

4. Financial Markets and Investment Rebound

2026 will be the year investors increasingly back the space economy with confidence. A record-breaking SpaceX IPO will inject unprecedented liquidity into the space sector. This would validate space as a mainstream asset class, attracting institutional investors who previously viewed it as niche or high-risk. It would also free up capital for early investors and employees, creating a ripple effect where funds are redeployed into new SpaceTech ventures and secondary markets.

5. Space Infrastructure Becomes Foundational

2026 is the year orbital infrastructure starts being deployed at significant scale. Refuelling stations, secure communications, AI-driven logistics, in-space manufacturing and servicing will shift from pilots to operational assets that are relied upon day to day. This infrastructure will no longer be optional or experimental. It will be essential to how space systems function.

This infrastructure will power industry, defence, and commercial operations in orbit. Satellites, orbital factories, and servicing platforms will create a resilient ecosystem capable of supporting multiple missions simultaneously, reducing risk, and increasing operational efficiency. The orbital economy is moving fast, and its infrastructure will be as critical to the planet’s economy as ports, highways, and data centres are on Earth.

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