StartupsTechnologyVC/PE

Inversion Raises $44M Series A To Build Its Arc

Ray. Image: Inversion Space
Ray. Image: Inversion Space

Inversion, a California startup trying to crack space-based delivery with an autonomous reentry vehicle called Arc, announced a $44M Series A yesterday.

The round was led by Spark Capital and Adjacent, with investment from Lockheed Martin Ventures, Kindred Ventures, and Y Combinator, bringing the company’s total funding to $54M since 2021.

Anytime, anywhere: Inversion plans to use these funds to scale up its operations to deliver a full-scale reentry vehicle on orbit by 2026.

  • Workforce: Over the next year, the company plans to grow its headcount from about 30 employees to as many as 80.
  • Facilities: Inversion will invest in a new facility and headquarters where it will manufacture its Arc vehicles.
  • Tech: Ray, a 20-inch diameter subscale demonstrator for the Arc reentry vehicle, will test the capsule, the bus, the propulsion systems, and the parachutes Inversion is developing in-house.

In October, Inversion received FAA approval to launch and return Ray on SpaceX’s Transporter-12 rideshare later this year.

Last 62-mile delivery: Inversion isn’t the only company betting that the future of logistics is above the Karman Line. In the last few years, the DoD has invested over $200M—including a $71M AFRL/SpaceWERX STRATFI awarded to Inversion—to make the idea a reality, backing companies like Outpost, Sierra Space, Varda, Stoke Space, and SpaceX.

For Inversion CEO Justin Fiaschetti, in-space delivery capabilities will drive a shift in national defense strategies. 

“Speed is critical to any national security group,” Fiaschetti told Payload. “Every single group is going to need to have their cargo stationed in orbit and have it able to be delivered in under an hour, both domestically and internationally. So from our perspective, that’s 1000s and 1000s of capsules.”

Related Stories
BusinessLEOTechnology

Momentus and Solstar Team Up on Orbital WiFi Demo

The local WiFi connection offered by Deke aims to keep payloads aboard the Momentus spacecraft in contact with operators on the ground 24/7.

BusinessLEOStartups

Charter Launches Space Insurance Product at SXSW

The CA-based space program management startup partnered with five of the largest space insurers around the world to collaborate on a system to increase access to insurance across the space industry.

SatcomStartups

UTVate Rebrands to Farcast to Expand Its Customer Base

UTVate, a CA-based startup developing next-generation user terminals, has changed its name to Farcast in an effort to attract a wider range of customers as it ramps up to full production next year.

EOInternationalStartups

Esper Satellites Raises $3.1M Seed Round

The funds will help Esper meet the upcoming launch date of its flagship four-sat constellation, dubbed “Four Leaf Clover,” which could see its first two sats launch in February 2026.