Key Highlights
- Starcloud secured $170M in Series A funding, reaching a $1.1 billion valuation and unicorn status within 17 months of Y Combinator graduation
- The startup is developing orbital data center infrastructure in low Earth orbit to overcome terrestrial energy and land constraints
- November 2025 marked a milestone when Starcloud successfully deployed the first Nvidia H100 GPU in space and conducted AI training beyond Earth
- The company’s second satellite, scheduled for October 2026 launch, will deliver 100 times more power capacity and host AWS Outposts technology
- Major competitors including SpaceX and Blue Origin are developing comparable orbital data center initiatives, with Musk unveiling plans for a massive satellite constellation
A Washington-based space technology company called Starcloud has successfully closed a $170 million Series A funding round, propelling the startup to a $1.1 billion valuation. The remarkable achievement makes Starcloud a unicorn merely 17 months following its presentation at Y Combinator’s demo day.
StarCloud today announced it has raised a $170 million Series A, at a $1.1 billion valuation.
Achieving unicorn status just 17 months after its Y Combinator demo day, Starcloud is now the fastest unicorn in Y Combinator history.
"By moving AI compute to space, we unlock access… pic.twitter.com/23bhkNY4HA
— Space Investor (@SpaceInvestor_D) March 30, 2026
Benchmark and EQT Ventures co-led the financing round, with participation from Macquarie Capital, NFX, Y Combinator, and notable angel investors such as Dennis Muilenburg, former Boeing chief executive, and Kevin Johnson, who previously led Starbucks.
The latest capital injection brings Starcloud’s cumulative fundraising to $200 million. Earlier backing came from prominent investors including Andreessen Horowitz and In-Q-Tel, the venture investment division of the Central Intelligence Agency, who contributed $34 million previously.
Starcloud’s mission centers on establishing data processing facilities in low Earth orbit. The strategy leverages virtually uninterrupted solar energy available in space, eliminating the energy supply and land availability challenges that hamper terrestrial data center development.
Constructing conventional data centers on Earth typically requires up to five years due to regulatory approvals and power infrastructure delays. Starcloud contends that orbital infrastructure circumvents these obstacles completely.
“The artificial intelligence boom is confronting the fundamental limitations of our planet-based power infrastructure,” explained CEO Philip Johnston. “Relocating AI computation to space provides access to boundless solar energy and eliminates the power supply constraint entirely.”
Pioneering GPU Deployment Beyond Earth
Starcloud launched its inaugural satellite, Starcloud-1, in November 2025, equipped with an Nvidia H100 processor. According to the company, this represented the first instance of this GPU model being utilized in space. The mission successfully completed the initial AI model training conducted in orbit and executed a variant of Google’s Gemini model extraterrestrially.
The satellite was conceptualized and manufactured in merely 21 months using a pre-seed budget of $3 million, which the company characterizes as unprecedented speed for aerospace development.
Starcloud has established collaborative relationships with Nvidia, Amazon Web Services, and Google Cloud.
Second Orbital Deployment Set for Fall 2026
The startup’s follow-up satellite, Starcloud-2, is scheduled for deployment in October 2026. This unit will incorporate AWS Outposts equipment and produce 100 times greater power output than its predecessor. Additionally, it will showcase the largest commercial deployable thermal radiator ever launched into space.
Starcloud-2 will mark the company’s first satellite to process commercial cloud computing tasks for revenue-generating clients, including inaugural customer Crusoe.
The newly acquired capital will finance the development of advanced Starcloud-3 satellites, expand production capabilities, grow the workforce, and lock in additional launch agreements.
The company envisions a future constellation comprising 88,000 satellites. Starcloud projects that space-based data centers will achieve price parity with ground-based facilities by 2028 or 2029, as rocket launch expenses continue declining.
Starcloud faces competition in this emerging sector. In February 2026, Elon Musk’s SpaceX revealed intentions for an orbital data center network consisting of one million satellites following the acquisition of his artificial intelligence venture xAI. Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin has similarly signaled interest in comparable infrastructure projects.
Johnston indicated that Starcloud is negotiating energy purchase agreements with leading cloud service providers, with public announcements anticipated in upcoming months.
