The global space economy exceeds $626 billion in 2026 and is projected to surpass $1 trillion by 2034. This page maps the complete commercial space value chain across 14 layers, from foundational launch infrastructure to emerging space computing platforms. Each layer includes current market size, compound annual growth rate, and key companies operating in that segment. Data is sourced from industry reports, SEC filings, and company disclosures.
The 14 layers of the space economy stack, ordered from foundational infrastructure (Layer 1) to frontier applications (Layer 14). Market sizes are 2026 estimates; growth rates reflect trailing 3-year CAGR.
| # | Layer | Market Size | CAGR | Key Companies |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Launch | $18B | 12% | SpaceX, Rocket Lab, Blue Origin, ULA |
| 2 | Satellite Manufacturing | $22B | 8% | Airbus Defence & Space, Northrop Grumman, Maxar, York Space Systems |
| 3 | Ground Systems | $5B | 15% | AWS Ground Station, Microsoft Azure Orbital, KSAT, Atlas Space Operations |
| 4 | Satellite Communications | $45B | 10% | SpaceX (Starlink), Amazon Kuiper, OneWeb (Eutelsat), Iridium |
| 5 | Earth Observation | $8B | 14% | Planet Labs, Maxar, ICEYE, Capella Space |
| 6 | Navigation & PNT | $3B | 18% | Xona Space Systems, TrustPoint, Regulus Cyber |
| 7 | Space Situational Awareness | $2B | 22% | LeoLabs, Slingshot Aerospace, ExoAnalytic Solutions, Kayhan Space |
| 8 | On-Orbit Servicing | $1.5B | 28% | Astroscale, Orbit Fab, ClearSpace, Starfish Space |
| 9 | In-Space Manufacturing | $0.5B | 35% | Varda Space Industries, Redwire, Space Forge, Inversion Space |
| 10 | Human Spaceflight & Habitation | $4B | 20% | Axiom Space, Vast, Sierra Space, Voyager Space |
| 11 | Lunar Economy | $2B | 30% | Intuitive Machines, Astrobotic, ispace, Firefly Aerospace |
| 12 | Space Defense | $30B | 7% | Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, L3Harris, RTX |
| 13 | Space Data & Analytics | $6B | 16% | Orbital Insight, HawkEye 360, Slingshot Aerospace, UP42 |
| 14 | Space Computing & Cloud | $1B | 40% | Starcloud, Loft Orbital, AWS Ground Station, Microsoft Azure Orbital |
Each card represents one layer of the space economy. Layers are ordered from foundational infrastructure at the bottom to frontier applications at the top. The width of each bar is proportional to market size.
Emerging and frontier segments of the space economy are growing at multiples of the overall industry rate. These layers represent nascent markets with transformative potential but currently account for a small share of total space revenue.
Detailed breakdown of each layer with full company lists, market sizing, and growth trajectories.
Vehicles that deliver payloads to orbit, including expendable and reusable rockets, small launchers, and heavy-lift systems.
Design, assembly, integration, and testing of spacecraft buses and payloads for communications, EO, defense, and scientific missions.
Ground stations, antennas, TT&C infrastructure, and cloud-based satellite data downlink and processing services.
LEO, MEO, and GEO satellite constellations providing broadband, IoT, direct-to-cell, and enterprise connectivity.
Optical, SAR, hyperspectral, and thermal satellite imaging for intelligence, agriculture, climate, insurance, and finance applications.
Positioning, navigation, and timing systems including GPS augmentation, alternative PNT, and anti-jamming/anti-spoofing solutions.
Tracking, cataloging, and characterizing objects in orbit using ground-based and space-based sensors for collision avoidance and domain awareness.
Satellite life extension, debris removal, refueling, inspection, and repair services performed in orbit.
Production of pharmaceuticals, semiconductors, fiber optics, and advanced materials in microgravity for Earth return or in-space use.
Commercial space stations, crew capsules, spacesuits, life support, and space tourism platforms in LEO and beyond.
Lunar landing services, surface mobility, communication relay, resource prospecting, and in-situ resource utilization (ISRU).
Military space systems, missile warning satellites, protected communications, space domain awareness, and counter-space capabilities.
AI-powered geospatial analytics, satellite data platforms, imagery processing, and decision-support tools built on space-derived data.
On-orbit data processing, edge computing in space, space-based cloud infrastructure, and satellite-cloud integration.
The space economy has more than doubled since 2010, driven by commercial satellite services, reusable launch vehicles, and government procurement of commercial space capabilities. The trajectory from $626B (2026) to $1T+ (2034) implies 6-8% CAGR at the aggregate level, with frontier segments (in-space manufacturing, lunar, space computing) growing at 20-40% annually. Satellite communications remains the largest single segment, accounting for roughly $45 billion of the commercial total. The defense segment ($30B) reflects growing military space budgets across the US, China, and Europe.
The space economy stack reveals two distinct dynamics: mature infrastructure layers (launch, satellite manufacturing, communications) that generate the bulk of revenue, and high-growth frontier layers (in-space manufacturing, lunar, space computing) that are growing at 20-40% CAGR but from small bases. The critical enabler is launch cost reduction -- SpaceX has driven cost-per-kg down by over 90%, and Starship could reduce it by another order of magnitude. Every layer above launch benefits from cheaper access to orbit. The space economy crossed $500B in 2023 and is on trajectory to reach $1T by 2034, making it one of the most predictable growth markets in deep tech.