SpaceX Set To Bag $2B Government Funding To Develop Golden Dome Satellites: Report

SpaceX is also expected to play a major role in two other Pentagon projects involving satellites.

  • The funding was part of the tax-and-spending bill signed by Trump in July, though it wasn’t publicly tied to any specific contractor, the WSJ reported.
  • SpaceX is also expected to play a major role in two other Pentagon projects involving satellites.
  • The development highlights the increasing involvement of SpaceX in U.S. defense.

Elon Musk’s rocket company, SpaceX, is set to receive $2 billion to develop satellites that can track missiles and aircraft under President Trump’s Golden Dome project, the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday, citing unnamed sources.

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The funding was part of the tax-and-spending bill signed by Trump in July, though it wasn’t publicly tied to any specific contractor, the Journal reported. SpaceX did not respond to a Stocktwits query as of the time of writing this report.

The reported development underscores the growing involvement of SpaceX in the U.S. defense industry and a potential revival in the relationship between Musk and U.S. President Donald Trump, after Musk’s abrupt departure from the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) in May.

The Golden Dome is a proposed missile-defense system that combines space-based sensors and interceptors with ground-based radars and missiles to shield land-based assets and life from aerial attacks. It was announced by President Donald Trump in May 2025, with an outlay of $175 billion.

According to the Journal’s reporting, the proposed “air moving target indicator” network could eventually include up to 600 satellites. Meanwhile, SpaceX is also expected to play a major role in two other Pentagon satellite networks: Milnet, which would relay sensitive military communications, and another network involving satellites capable of tracking vehicles on the ground.

Past media reports said that Anduril Industries, a defense-tech startup, Palantir Technologies, and traditional defense contractors such as Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, and L3Harris have proposed technologies for the Golden Dome.

Privately held SpaceX, reportedly valued at $400 billion, recently announced that it had more than 10,000 satellites in orbit for its Starlink internet service.

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