The UK Government has announced a £500 million support package for Britain’s space industry as part of a new national strategy to boost growth in the sector.
It’ll be used to fund support schemes and tools designed to help UK-based space companies scale their operations and increase their competitive advantage internationally.
The biggest chunk of this investment (£105 million) will be used to ensure the British space sector has its own means of servicing spacecraft when it’s in-orbit, like giving satellites more fuel or performing maintenance tasks, and in-orbit manufacturing, such as producing semiconductors in space.
Government officials see this area as a way of delivering “significant commercial returns” for the British economy and bolstering “national resilience” amid a fast-changing geopolitical landscape.
Meanwhile, £85 million has been earmarked for the development of the National Space Operations Centre. Nearly half of this (£40 million) will be used for establishing a ground-based sensing network for real-time satellite and space environment analysis.
Another £80 million will fund the Connectivity in Low Earth Orbit (C-LEO) initiative, a UK Space Agency programme designed to increase research and development into next-generation satellite communications. It includes £30 million of funding now available for UK firms working on new satellites, hardware and AI data projects.
The National Space Innovation Programme – and the businesses it supports – is also set to benefit from this new funding pot. It’ll receive £65 million to fund the development of transformative space technologies and make them commercially viable.
Other investments include £40 million to help the Unlocking Space Programme accelerate growth across the British space industry, £37 million to set up nationwide space industry clusters and £20 million to shore up Scottish spaceport infrastructure.
These investments complement a range of recent space-related funding announcements made by the UK government. Most notably, in November 2025, it committed to investing £1.7 billion into the European Space Agency.
Space Minister Liz Lloyd said: “Our vision is clear – to make the UK a competitive, agile space power. We’re allocating £500 million today, on top of ESA funding, to drive forward our priorities and will continue to work closely with industry and investors to maximise private capital flows and unlock the full potential of commercial space. This is just the start, as we prepare to publish our full Plan for Space later this year.”
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