- SpaceX filed its S-1 on Wednesday, a required step ahead of an IPO.
- The document offers a glimpse into the company's financials.
- Here are the biggest takeaways from the filing.
Elon Musk's SpaceX officially kicked off its march to Wall Street on Wednesday, filing the S-1 paperwork required for its hotly anticipated IPO.
Although the S-1 didn't reveal key figures investors are waiting on — such as SpaceX's estimated stock value and anticipated public share price — it did offer the first close-up look at the financial details and strategies behind Musk's rocket company and AI business, xAI.
Here are the biggest takeaways from the filing.
There's an incentive to build a 'human colony'
Making life "multiplanetary" is at the forefront of SpaceX's mission, and Musk has a massive financial incentive to make it so: 1 billion shares of SpaceX.
The filing shows that, among market-cap milestones, SpaceX will have to establish a "permanent human colony on Mars with at least one million inhabitants" for Musk to access the package.
Musk will also still have to be employed by SpaceX at the time of this milestone achievement, and the shares would be split into 15 tranches.
Still, it's a highly unusual compensation trigger for an otherwise not normal IPO.
Musk's pay package could be worth up to $737B
Musk could get a hefty payday if he builds interplanetary cities and orbital data centers.
Based on the implied share count in the filing, Musk's two performance awards could be worth roughly $737 billion if fully vested.
That includes about $583 billion from the one-billion share award that vests if SpaceX reaches a $7.5 trillion market cap and establishes a permanent Mars colony. It also includes about $154 billion from a separate award of about 302 million shares tied to orbital data centers that deliver 100 terawatts of compute a year, along with a SpaceX market-cap milestone of about $6.6 trillion.
Anthropic is paying a lot for SpaceX's compute
Anthropic is paying SpaceX $1.25 billion a month through May 2029 for access to the rocket company's compute capacity, the filing showed. That's about $15 billion in revenue coming from Anthropic.
The compute refers to SpaceX's Colossus and Colossus II, massive supercomputers and data centers designed for training AI.
The filing said the agreement for cloud and compute services begins in May 2026.
Musk has massive voting power
Voting rights in stocks mean each share owned gives the shareholder one vote on eligible matters. The S-1 revealed that Musk, who serves as the company's chief executive, Chief Technical Officer, and Chairman of the board, holds 85.1% of the combined voting power on company matters, based on his 5,569,053,075 shares.
Grok's CapEx was higher than Starship's
"For the three months ended March 31, 2026, capital expenditures for our Space segment was $1,052 million, for our Connectivity segment was $1,332 million and for our AI segment was $7,723 million," the S-1 reads.
That means spending on xAI's projects, like Grok, was higher than SpaceX's rocket division's spending, which includes its Super Heavy and Starship rockets.
The numbers were starker in 2025, with the Space segment spending $3,832 million and the AI segment spending $12,727 million, according to the filing.
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Katherine Tangalakis-Lippert is a senior reporter on Business Insider's West Coast team. When she's not writing about trending business and tech news, from the latest supply chain snarls or advancements in AI, she covers the food and restaurant industries, specifically companies such as Starbucks and McDonald's.Some of her prior areas of focus have included coverage of the Supreme Court and emerging technologies such as quantum computing.Katherine has worked on award-nominated projects and has appeared on Good Morning America, NBC, CNN, and other outlets to discuss her reporting.Prior to joining Business Insider, she covered retail, hospitality, and nonprofits at the San Fernando Valley Business Journal and received a master's degree in investigative reporting from the University of Southern California.Reach outDo you have feedback or a story tip? Contact Katherine on Signal at byktl.50, or email her at [email protected].Follow her on Twitter and Instagram @scrawlgirl.Some of her recent scoops, exclusives, and original stories include: Starbucks set up a new office. It's a 5-minute drive from the CEO's California home.Inside Starbucks' crackdown on cup notesEndless Shrimp was Red Lobster's rock bottom. Now it's clawing back.Chipotle's new PAC signals a change in how the company engages in politicsKFC lost its footing in the Chicken Wars. Now it's gunning for a 'Kentucky Fried Comeback.'A few other highlights include: Clarence Thomas raised him 'as a son.' Now he's facing 25-plus years on weapons and drug charges.Call her Ivanka Kushner'Maybe I'll just resign:' Federal workers react to DOGE productivity emailSpaceX launches cause late-night booms that rattle windows, set off car alarms, and may damage property. Locals are pushing back.The US-China tech race is moving from chips to the raw materials they're made of













