Indian space startups had a record May 2026: GalaxEye, Pixxel, Skyroot lead a busy month
Indian private space firms had a standout May 2026. GalaxEye launched Mission Drishti, Pixxel won a US NRO contract, Skyroot became India’s first space-tech unicorn at 1.1 billion dollars, and IN-SPACe invited bids for PSLV technology transfer to a private Indian company.
May 2026 turned out to be a landmark month for India’s private space sector. Several home-grown startups recorded new launches, contracts and partnerships, while the Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre (IN-SPACe) opened the door for private firms to take over the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV).
Bengaluru-based GalaxEye successfully placed Mission Drishti in orbit. The satellite is described as the world’s first OptoSAR machine, combining optical and synthetic aperture radar imaging on one platform. It was launched aboard a Falcon 9 rocket of SpaceX from Vandenberg in California. Mission Drishti is India’s largest privately built earth observation satellite and is meant for defence, agriculture, disaster management, maritime monitoring and infrastructure planning. According to ISRO’s annual report, India currently operates 29 active earth observation satellites; Mission Drishti adds to this base. GalaxEye later confirmed that contact with the satellite is firmly established.
Another Bengaluru startup, Pixxel, won a contract from the United States National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) under its Commercial Systems Program Office. The contract is part of a US government effort to evaluate and integrate commercial hyperspectral data into national remote-sensing capabilities. Pixxel also tied up with Sarvam to develop Pathfinder, planned as India’s first orbital data centre satellite. The 200 kg-class craft is targeted for launch in the fourth quarter of 2026; Pixxel will build, launch and operate it, while Sarvam will provide on-orbit artificial intelligence, including language model training and inference.
Hyderabad-based Skyroot Aerospace raised 60 million dollars at a valuation of 1.1 billion dollars, becoming India’s first space-tech unicorn. The company said the funds will be used to scale launches of Vikram-1, India’s first privately built orbital rocket, planned for lift-off later this year from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota, and to develop the larger Vikram-2 with a cryogenic upper stage.
Andhra Pradesh-based AnduraX announced a high-altitude balloon drop test for its Reusable Reentry Vehicle, planned for the first week of June 2026. ISRO’s Telemetry, Tracking and Command Network (ISTRAC) and the Society for Applied Microwave Electronics Engineering and Research (SAMEER), under the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, signed a Memorandum of Understanding to design high-power systems based on indigenous Gallium Nitride (GaN) chip technology from DRDO’s Gallium Arsenide Enabling Technology Centre, for deep space communications.
Nine Indian space-tech companies, including Astrogate Labs, Astrobase Space Technologies, VyomIC, Suhora, Kepler Aerospace, Hyspace Technologies, TakeMe2Space, Jarbits and Dhruva Space, took part in Space Meetings Veneto 2026 at Venice in Italy. Astrobase signed an MoU with Impulso Space for launch services. Kepler Aerospace signed a framework agreement with Apogeo Space to expand Ground Station as a Service infrastructure between India and Europe.
A major policy step came from IN-SPACe, which invited Expressions of Interest from private Indian companies for technology transfer of the PSLV. The chosen Indian private entity will take over end-to-end realisation, operation and commercialisation of the launch vehicle. ISRO will provide infrastructure and hand-holding support for 30 months or until the private partner builds and launches two PSLVs, whichever is earlier. The transfer is open only to Indian private firms.
In international cooperation, India signed agreements with the Norwegian Space Agency on peaceful uses of outer space, and with the Italian Space Agency on earth observation, heliophysics, space exploration and protection of space infrastructure.
Key Points to Remember
- GalaxEye’s Mission Drishti — world’s first OptoSAR satellite — launched aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 from Vandenberg
- Pixxel won a contract from the US National Reconnaissance Office for hyperspectral data; partnered with Sarvam on Pathfinder, India’s first orbital data centre satellite
- Skyroot Aerospace raised 60 million dollars at a 1.1 billion dollar valuation, becoming India’s first space-tech unicorn
- ISTRAC and SAMEER signed an MoU for indigenous GaN-based high-power systems for deep space communications
- IN-SPACe invited Expressions of Interest from Indian private companies for end-to-end PSLV technology transfer
Exam Relevance
UPSC GS Paper III — Science and Technology, space sector reforms and indigenisation; GS Paper II — Statutory and regulatory bodies (IN-SPACe). Useful for UPSC prelims static GK on ISRO, PSLV and Indian space startups and SSC CGL general awareness.
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