BusinessRockets

SpaceX Increases Rideshare Prices  

SpaceX launches Transporter-4, which included a satellite operated by Lynk Global, in April 2022
SpaceX launches Transporter-4 in April. Image: SpaceX

For the second time in less than a year, SpaceX has adjusted pricing on rideshare launches and Starlink. 

Rideshare: The price tag of a Falcon 9 Transporter launch increased by 18%, from $5,500 per kg to $6,500 per kg. The hike comes after a 10% increase the previous year.

Starlink: In an email to customers, Starlink announced it was moving to a tiered pricing system, where monthly fees will vary by geographic coverage capacity. 

  • “Limited Capacity” areas will see prices increase by $10 a month to $120. 
  • “Excess Capacity” regions saw prices decrease by $20 a month to $90. 

Inflation and pricing power: While SpaceX pegged its 2022 price hikes to inflation, the company declined to offer a public justification for its Transporter price increases. 

The reason is likely part inflation, part pricing power. SpaceX has an opportunity to improve margins amid high demand for its Transporter rideshare services. Spacecraft operators are currently facing a two-year wait to fly economy on a Falcon 9. And despite the price increase, the $6,500 per kg rideshare price remains significantly cheaper than alternative options.

Related Stories
BusinessMilitary

Booz Allen Preps for the Golden Dome

The president wants a Golden Dome missile defense system, and the space industry is standing ready to get him one. Booz Allen Hamilton is the latest space firm to publish a concept for a distributed satellite system that could identify and help to intercept missile attacks in their tracks. The constellation design, which the company […]

AnalysisRockets

New Small Launchers are in Decline

Outside of the established companies, investment in small US launchers has slowed to a crawl, forcing dozens of companies to go dormant, or pivot to defense. 

BusinessPolicy

State Looking For Industry Input In Colorado Springs

The State Department is asking industry how it can better support American space startups, and it’s looking to kick off the conversation at Space Symposium next month. 

BusinessCivilPolicy

AIA Shares Top Space Priorities For 2025

The list includes nearly three dozen to-dos for government agencies ranging from the DoD to the FAA to NASA.