A look at the SpaceX IPO by the numbers

Elon Musk is all about big numbers — billions, trillions – and you can find them sprinkled throughout an extraordinary document he just filed to take his rocket maker public.
Running more than 250 pages, the prospectus for his SpaceX stock debut shows spending at a massive scale — greater than the economic output of some countries — and about to grow much larger as he races to make good on his promise to hurl men to distant planets. Money raised in the initial public offering — reportedly $75 billion or so — will help finance those futuristic, fantastical plans.
Assuming the IPO goes off without a hitch, it will rank as the largest ever. It will also likely make Musk, a major SpaceX owner and already the world’s richest man, the first trillionaire.
The document in part reads like a script for a Hollywood sci-fi movie as he details how he hopes to use his rockets to save the human race from extinction by making it an interplanetary species.
First, he will send men to the moon, then, maybe, Mars, where he hopes to build a permanent one-million person colony.
A look at the outsized numbers behind Musk’s outsized ambitions.
$1.75 trillion-$2 trillion
The expected valuation for SpaceX after its public offering, expected to take place next month. Nvidia is now the world’s most valuable public company at around $5.4 trillion. It went public in January 1999 and first closed with a market value above $2 trillion in March 2024.
$4.9 billion
SpaceX’s loss for the full year 2025. Tesla, Musk’s electric vehicle company, went public in 2010 but didn’t earn an annual profit until 2020.
$839 billion
Elon Musk’s net worth as of May 20, according to Forbes. Musk is a major stockholder in SpaceX, and also stands to reap hundreds of billions of dollars from a compensation package awarded to him at Tesla, assuming he hits some ambitious financial and business metrics.
85.1%
The voting power at SpaceX controlled by Musk by virtue of his owning more than 90% of the company’s Class B shares, which give the holder 10 votes for every share held. He also owns a 12% stake in the Class A shares, which carry one vote.
At least 1 million
That’s how many human inhabitants Musk needs to have living in a colony on Mars for him to receive a part of his SpaceX compensation package. There are no current capabilities of transporting one human to Mars, let alone 1 million.
$7.5 trillion
That’s the top market capitalization SpaceX has to reach for Musk to receive his full compensation. He will receive it in pieces as the market capitalization rises to certain milestones along the way. By comparison, Trump’s proposed defense budget for fiscal year 2027 is $1.5 trillion.
9,600
That’s approximately how many Starlink satellites SpaceX has in orbit. By comparison UPS says it has 135,000 delivery vehicles — including motorcycles — in its fleet. Delta Air Lines has a fleet of more than 1,200 when regional airline partners are included.
366
The number of days Musk is required to hold on to his SpaceX stock before he’s able to sell or transfer it. It’s called a lock-up period and prevents insiders dumping their shares or immediately cashing out. Other top SpaceX investors have to wait 180 days.
$20.7 billion
How much the company spent in 2025 for all its units, which include rockets, satellites and artificial intelligence technology. The bulk of the spending, at just under $11.4 billion, came from its connectivity unit that includes its Starlink satellites.
$131 million
That’s how much SpaceX spent in 2025 on Cybertrucks from Musk’s other public company, Tesla. The base model of a Cybertruck costs $69,990, so $131 million gets the buyer 1,871 vehicles. Musk’s businesses often interact, which has raised speculation that Tesla and SpaceX could eventually merge.


