SpaceX secures $4.16B contract from US Space Force for airborne threat tracking

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SpaceX just landed a $4.16 billion contract from the US Space Force to build a space-based surveillance system capable of tracking and targeting airborne threats globally. The contract, announced on May 29, falls under a program called the Space-Based Airborne Moving Target Indicator, or SB-AMTI, and it represents a serious escalation in the company’s role as a defense contractor.

To put that number in perspective: $4.16 billion is nearly double the $2.29 billion contract SpaceX received just three days earlier for a separate Space Data Network Backbone program. In the span of a single week, Elon Musk’s rocket company added roughly $6.45 billion in new government defense work to its books.

What SB-AMTI actually does

The SB-AMTI program aims to build a constellation of satellites designed to identify and track moving airborne targets, including aircraft and cruise missiles, from space. The “targeting” part is key here. This isn’t just passive surveillance. The system is intended to feed targeting data into the broader US military kill chain.

The broader context matters too. The US Space Force initiated a multi-vendor approach to SB-AMTI back in April 2026, awarding initial contracts to nine different vendors for early-stage capability development. SpaceX winning the $4.16 billion production contract suggests its proposal outperformed the competition, or at minimum, that the Space Force sees SpaceX’s satellite manufacturing and deployment infrastructure as the most viable path to fielding the system quickly.

SpaceX’s defense portfolio is getting large, fast

The $2.29 billion Space Data Network Backbone contract, announced May 26, tasks SpaceX with building communications infrastructure that connects military assets across domains. SB-AMTI, by contrast, is the sensor itself.

The contracts also align with 2026 National Defense Strategy priorities, which have emphasized space-based capabilities as critical to maintaining military advantage. The SB-AMTI initiative is also closely aligned with the Golden Dome missile defense program, which aims to create an integrated sensor-to-shooter network to enhance ballistic defense measures.

What this means for investors

SpaceX remains privately held, so you can’t buy the stock directly. For defense and aerospace investors, the signal is clear: the government is willing to hand multi-billion-dollar production contracts to commercial space companies, not just study contracts or prototype deals.

The week’s combined $6.45 billion in new contracts cements SpaceX’s position as arguably the most important defense technology company that most retail investors can’t actually invest in. Whether that changes through an eventual IPO of Starlink or SpaceX itself remains one of the most watched questions in both aerospace and financial markets.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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