A Redmond, Washington-based startup called Starcloud has successfully closed a $170 million Series A funding round. The investment values the company at $1.1 billion, granting it unicorn status merely 17 months following its presentation at Y Combinator’s demo day.
Benchmark and EQT Ventures co-led the financing round. Additional participants included Macquarie Capital, NFX, Y Combinator, along with notable angel backers such as Dennis Muilenburg, former Boeing chief executive, and Kevin Johnson, who previously led Starbucks.
This latest capital injection elevates Starcloud’s cumulative funding to $200 million. Earlier financing rounds brought in $34 million from backers including Andreessen Horowitz and In-Q-Tel, the venture investment division of the CIA.
Starcloud’s mission centers on establishing data processing facilities in low Earth orbit. The strategy leverages the virtually uninterrupted solar energy available in space, eliminating the land availability and power supply challenges that hamper terrestrial data center development.
Constructing traditional Earth-based data centers typically requires up to five years because of regulatory approvals and energy infrastructure lead times. Starcloud contends that orbital infrastructure sidesteps these obstacles completely.
“We’re witnessing the AI revolution hit the hard limits of terrestrial power infrastructure,” stated CEO Philip Johnston. “Relocating AI computation to orbit grants us access to boundless solar energy and eliminates the power constraint entirely.”
Starcloud deployed its inaugural satellite, Starcloud-1, in November 2025, equipped with an Nvidia H100 processor. According to the company, this marked the first instance of this GPU operating in the space environment. The mission achieved another milestone by completing the first orbital AI model training session and executing a variant of Google’s Gemini model beyond Earth’s atmosphere.
The satellite’s design and construction took only 21 months using a modest $3 million pre-seed budget—a timeline the company characterizes as unprecedented in aerospace development.
Starcloud has already established collaborative agreements with Nvidia, Amazon Web Services, and Google Cloud.
Starcloud’s follow-up satellite, designated Starcloud-2, is scheduled for deployment in October 2026. This spacecraft will transport AWS Outposts equipment and produce 100 times the power output of its predecessor. The satellite will also debut the largest commercial deployable thermal radiator ever launched into space.
Starcloud-2 represents the company’s first satellite designed to process commercial cloud computing tasks for revenue-generating clients, including initial customer Crusoe.
The fresh capital will fund development of next-generation Starcloud-3 satellites, scale up manufacturing operations, expand the workforce, and lock in future launch service agreements.
Long-term projections call for a constellation comprising 88,000 satellites. The company anticipates orbital data centers will achieve price parity with ground-based alternatives by 2028 or 2029, driven by declining launch expenses.
Starcloud faces emerging competition in this sector. SpaceX, under Elon Musk’s leadership, revealed plans in February 2026 for an orbital data center network featuring one million satellites following the acquisition of his AI venture xAI. Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin has similarly signaled interest in comparable infrastructure projects.
Johnston indicated that Starcloud is negotiating energy capacity agreements with major cloud service providers, with public announcements anticipated in upcoming months.
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