The Satellite Industry Association’s Satellite Industry Report, reveals a historic period of growth and productivity for the global space sector throughout 2025.
The study confirms that the global space economy expanded to 429 billion dollars during the previous year. The commercial satellite industry continues to be the primary engine of this growth, generating 303 billion dollars in revenue and accounting for 71 percent of the total world space business.
Record-Breaking Deployment and Launch Activity
Innovation and increased investment have significantly improved the affordability and utility of space-based assets. This shift is most evident in the record-breaking activity within the launch and manufacturing sectors. During 2025, a historic high of 296 commercially procured launches deployed a record 4,434 satellites into Earth orbit. This represents a 65 percent increase over 2024 deployment figures. By the conclusion of the year, a total of 14,266 operational satellites were circling the globe, highlighting the rapid expansion of large-scale constellations. Worldwide commercial launch revenues subsequently increased to 12.4 billion dollars, a 33 percent rise compared with the previous year.
Ground Segment Performance and Infrastructure Growth
The ground segment remains the largest individual revenue generator within the industry, contributing 165.2 billion dollars in 2025. This growth was fueled by an 8 percent increase in satellite ground network equipment and a 6 percent rise in global navigation satellite services equipment. This sector reflects the massive rise in consumer broadband hardware and the back-end systems necessary to turn orbital signals into reliable customer experiences.
Satellite Services and the Broadband Surge
The satellite services sector reached 105 billion dollars, driven primarily by a massive 62 percent increase in the global satellite broadband subscriber base. There are now more than 10 million active satellite broadband subscribers worldwide, with revenue in this sub-sector increasing by 17 percent. Additionally, remote sensing revenue grew by 4 percent, supported by a 47 percent increase in the number of operational sensing satellites since 2016.
U.S. Manufacturing and Market Leadership
U.S. companies maintained a dominant leadership position across the value chain during this period. American firms manufactured 83 percent of the commercially procured satellites launched in 2025 and earned 47 percent of the corresponding manufacturing revenues.
At the end of the year, U.S. companies continued to wholly or partially operate more than 70 percent of the total number of satellites in orbit. This leadership is further bolstered by emerging markets such as direct-to-device services and space sustainability, the latter of which grew by 43 percent to reach 500 million dollars in revenue.
Strategic Shift Toward Direct-to-Device and Sustainability
Tom Stroup, president of the Satellite Industry Association, noted that space-based assets are more productive than ever before, allowing for more advanced capabilities at a lower cost to manufacture and deploy.
The report indicates that the continued acquisition of spectrum and planning for network upgrades will drive further expansion in the direct-to-device market throughout 2026. Simultaneously, the rise of space sustainability—including in-orbit servicing and debris mitigation—demonstrates an industry-wide focus on the long-term viability of the orbital environment.
