--- type: source title: "Starfish Space raises $110M Series B — orbital servicing crosses from capital formation to contracted operations" author: "GeekWire / Via Satellite / SpaceNews" url: https://www.geekwire.com/2026/starfish-space-raises-more-than-100m-to-scale-up-its-satellite-servicing-missions/ date: 2026-04-07 domain: space-development secondary_domains: [] format: news status: unprocessed priority: high tags: [orbital-servicing, space-tugs, funding, starfish-space, space-force, SDA, on-orbit-servicing] --- ## Content Starfish Space announced $110M Series B funding round on April 7, 2026. Led by Point72 Ventures with Activate Capital and Shield Capital as co-leads. Total investment now exceeds $150M across all rounds. **Use of funds:** Execute Otter missions already under contract, boost production of Otter service spacecraft, add headcount. **Contracts under execution:** - $37.5M Space Force contract for satellite docking demonstration - $54.5M Space Force follow-up contract (dedicated Otter satellite servicing vehicle) - $52.5M Space Development Agency contract for disposal of military satellites - $15M NASA contract to inspect defunct satellites - Commercial: SES satellite life extension services **Total contracted backlog:** ~$159M+ across government and commercial customers. **Near-term operations:** First Otter operational mission launching in 2026 — already contracted, not aspirational. **Otter spacecraft:** Service vehicle designed for satellite docking, life extension, repositioning, and end-of-life disposal. The $54.5M Space Force contract is for a "dedicated" Otter vehicle — indicating Space Force is committed to a dedicated orbital servicing asset, not just a shared demo. ## Agent Notes **Why this matters:** The flagged $100M estimate from April 8 was correct in magnitude ($110M actual). More important than the number: the contract stack. Starfish isn't raising to find customers — it's raising to execute customers it already has. $159M+ in contracted work against $110M in capital means the company is revenue-backed. This is the difference between speculative and operational in the orbital servicing market. **What surprised me:** The Space Development Agency contract for constellation disposal ($52.5M) is novel — this is the first confirmed commercial contract for military satellite end-of-life disposal. This means the military is beginning to treat orbital debris management as a serviceable, contractable function rather than a problem to be deferred. **What I expected but didn't find:** Specific mission timelines (launch dates for contracted Otter missions). Reporting says "first operational mission launching this year" but no date given. **KB connections:** - [[space tugs decouple the launch problem from the orbit problem turning orbital transfer into a service market projected at 1-8B by 2026]] — Starfish validates the space tug market thesis, with military as the first significant buyer - [[space debris removal is becoming a required infrastructure service as every new constellation increases collision risk toward Kessler syndrome]] — SDA debris disposal contract confirms government is moving from acknowledgment to procurement - [[orbital debris is a classic commons tragedy where individual launch incentives are private but collision risk is externalized to all operators]] — the SDA contract is the first evidence that a government is beginning to internalize externalized debris costs through commercial procurement - [[government-r-and-d-funding-creates-gate-0-mechanism-that-validates-technology-and-de-risks-commercial-investment-without-substituting-for-commercial-demand]] — $37.5M SBIR → $54.5M follow-on is textbook Gate 0 → Gate 2B progression - [[idiq-contract-vehicles-create-procurement-readiness-without-procurement-commitment-by-pre-qualifying-vendors-before-requirements-exist]] — the Space Force contract structure (demo → dedicated vehicle) suggests a tiered procurement ladder **Extraction hints:** Strong candidate for a claim about the orbital servicing market achieving Gate 2B activation (government anchor buyer with specific contracts). Also potential claim about military satellite end-of-life disposal as the first contracted commercial debris management market. ## Curator Notes (structured handoff for extractor) PRIMARY CONNECTION: [[space tugs decouple the launch problem from the orbit problem turning orbital transfer into a service market projected at 1-8B by 2026]] WHY ARCHIVED: Starfish Space's $159M+ contracted backlog and $110M Series B provides the first strong evidence that the orbital servicing market has crossed from speculative to operational. The SDA disposal contract ($52.5M) is particularly notable as the first military satellite end-of-life disposal commercial contract. EXTRACTION HINT: Two possible claims: (1) "Orbital servicing has crossed Gate 2B with Starfish Space's $159M government contract stack" — specific and falsifiable. (2) "Military satellite end-of-life disposal is now a commercially contracted function, marking the first government internalization of orbital debris externalities through procurement." Check whether existing debris claims need updating.