Elon Musk's SpaceX has had quite the year. Between successful Starship test launches and the official incorporation of its Texas headquarters into the city of Starbase, the commercial space giant is riding high. But if you think 2025 was eventful, wait until you see what's queued up for 2026 and beyond.
With President Donald Trump leaning hard into space exploration and an IPO potentially on the table, SpaceX's roadmap is looking downright ambitious. Let's break down what's coming next for the company that's redefining humanity's relationship with orbit.
The IPO Everyone's Watching
The big headline here is SpaceX going public. Musk first floated the idea during a Tesla Inc. (TSLA) shareholder meeting back in November, mentioning he wanted to give Tesla investors a shot at owning a piece of SpaceX. That's a clever way to reward your existing shareholder base while tapping into fresh capital.
Reports suggest SpaceX is eyeing a valuation somewhere between $800 billion and $1.5 trillion for the IPO, which would place it among the most valuable companies on Earth and roughly on par with Tesla itself. Musk being Musk, he's also thrown out the possibility of eventually hitting a $100 trillion valuation, because why aim low?
Adding fuel to the IPO fire, investor Bill Ackman, founder of Pershing Square Capital Management, proposed that SpaceX could go public through his firm's special purpose acquisition rights vehicle, Pershing Square SPARC Holdings. Ackman framed this as a move that would "reward loyal Tesla shareholders," tying the two Musk ventures together in a neat package.
Trump's Space Ambitions
President Trump recently signed an executive order titled "Ensuring American Space Superiority," which sets an aggressive timeline for returning humans to the moon by 2028 through the Artemis program. It's the kind of bold declaration that sets the tone for national priorities and potentially opens funding floodgates.
SpaceX has already positioned itself as NASA's partner of choice for these missions, touting Starship as the ideal vehicle for Artemis. Musk has gone further, outlining plans for lunar surface factories that could support deeper space exploration missions and even orbital datacenters. It's ambitious stuff, but then again, landing reusable rockets seemed impossible not that long ago.
Speaking of Starship, Musk recently indicated that launches for the Starship V3 rocket could happen next year. Originally predicted for late 2025 testing, the V3 promises to be larger than its predecessors with enhanced payload capacity, which matters when you're talking about hauling equipment to the moon or Mars.
Orbital Datacenters and the Competition
Here's where things get interesting. Datacenters are the backbone of the AI boom, but they're power-hungry beasts consuming increasingly scarce earthly resources. Enter the concept of orbital datacenters, which Musk has championed on multiple occasions as solar-powered AI satellite facilities in space.
While Musk's comments suggest SpaceX may already be working toward this goal, they're not alone in the race. Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL) (GOOG) is reportedly exploring similar concepts, recognizing that space offers essentially unlimited solar power without the environmental concerns plaguing ground-based operations.
And SpaceX faces competition on multiple fronts. Rocket Lab Corp (RKLB) has been steadily building its capabilities, while Jeff Bezos's Blue Origin just announced that Tony Bruno, former CEO of United Launch Alliance, would lead its national security division. Bezos himself has expressed interest in orbital datacenters, setting up what could be a fascinating rivalry between two billionaire space barons.
Isaacman's Strategic Position
Jared Isaacman, the former CEO of Shift4 Payments Inc. (FOUR) and a close Musk ally, was recently confirmed as NASA's administrator by Trump. This appointment could prove enormously beneficial for SpaceX, given Isaacman's expressed passion for sending humans to Mars and his previous collaborations with the company.
Isaacman has already signaled his priorities, recently posting on X that NASA would focus on building a lunar surface base when asked about Trump's executive order calling for an "enduring presence" on the moon. Having a NASA administrator who's personally flown on SpaceX missions and shares Musk's vision for space exploration could streamline collaboration and accelerate timelines.
Between the potential IPO, Starship V3 development, the expansion of Starlink, and deepening NASA partnerships, SpaceX's trajectory looks remarkably strong heading into 2026. Whether the company can execute on all these fronts simultaneously remains to be seen, but one thing is certain: SpaceX will be impossible to ignore in the years ahead as the commercial space race enters its most exciting phase yet.




