Humans have been exploring space since 1957, when the Soviet Union launched Sputnik 1. At the height of the space race, government agencies conducted all space missions, but that's no longer the case. Private space companies now launch satellites, operate entire "constellations" of privately-owned satellites in orbit, shuttle NASA astronauts to and from the International Space Station -- and are in the early stages of offering space tourism.
The development of the space industry is exciting from a technological and scientific standpoint. It could also make investors in space stocks a lot of money.
How fast is space exploration growing, and which space companies offer the best prospects for investors? Find out in this detailed look at space launch statistics.
SpaceX’s dominance has continued to grow in the 2020s. It hit new launch records every year from 2020 to 2024, will set yet another record when 2025 wraps up, and is now responsible for roughly 80% of U.S. space launches.
SpaceX’s commercial launch pace and market share capture have been impressive, to say the least:
- 2020: 25 commercial launches, 64% market share
- 2021: 32 commercial launches, 59% market share
- 2022: 57 commercial launches, 72% market share
- 2023: 92 commercial launches, 80% market share
- 2024: 130 commercial launches, 84% market share
- 2025: 161 commercial launches, 82% market share
Space launches by country
From 1957 until its dissolution in 1991, the USSR conducted 2,760 space launches, more than twice as many as the U.S. (1,221). Despite what the space launch numbers suggest, however, the United States clearly had the more successful space program, winning the race to land humans on the moon, and developing and flying reusable space shuttles 135 times. (The Soviets also developed a shuttle, the Buran, but it flew only once -- uncrewed -- in 1988).
In more recent years, and especially since the start of the Ukraine war, Russian launches have slowed considerably. It has ceded its second-place position in space to China, where launches are accelerating. Still, the U.S. remains far and away the leader in space exploration, launching 7,605 times from 2010 through 2023, versus 3,277 times for the rest of the world combined.
Why commercial space launches matter for investors
The increasing number of commercial space launches and the upward trend in upmass serve as unmistakable signs of space industry growth. Space is a high-risk, high-reward industry, however. Space launches are expensive, and space companies often operate at a loss for years while developing their businesses.
Luckily for investors, in the West at least, publicly-traded space stocks such as Boeing, Lockheed, Rocket Lab, and -- maybe soon -- SpaceX continue to blaze the way to U.S. dominance in space.
Investors also benefit from the fact that many space names are fairly well-known and high-profile. It's easy to identify potential prospects with names as famed as Boeing and Lockheed Martin, for example, both well-known defense contractors, and also space stalwarts. SpaceX, if it goes public, will be just as easy to identify and invest in.
Second-tier space players -- if not exactly second-tier companies -- include such well-known defense names as Northrop Grumman (NOC -1.21%) and L3Harris Technologies (LHX -0.84%). Rocket Lab, too, probably belongs in this grouping -- although one could argue Rocket Lab is moving up in visibility, while Northrop and L3Harris are perhaps becoming lower-profile.
Things get a bit more complicated as you enter the realm of "newspace" companies, space start-ups with names like AST SpaceMobile (ASTS +2.60%), BlackSky (BKSY +2.03%), Firefly Aerospace (FLY -7.18%), and Planet Labs (PL -0.78%). Smaller in market capitalization and largely unprofitable, these are the kind of "get in on the ground floor" space companies offering the most potential for profit -- and also the biggest risk of going broke.
Those who want to invest in a broad swath of space stocks, to diversify and limit their risk by owning both established space companies and a smattering of start-ups, might consider investing in space-focused exchange-traded funds (ETFs) instead. The ARK Space Exploration & Innovation ETF (ARKX -2.70%) is probably the best-known ETF in this camp.
Instant diversification and exposure to a brand new industry in space? It's hard to argue with that.
Sources
- BryceTech (2025). “Q1 2025 Global Space Activity.”
- Federal Aviation Administration (2025). “Commercial Space Data.”
- Planet 4589 (2025). “Annual Upmass.”
- RocketLaunch.org (2025). “Past Rocket Launches.”
- Space Stats (2025). “Orbital launches by year.”










