Lux Aeterna raises $4M for reusuable satellite platform

Lux Aeterna, a new space infrastructure company, has raised $4 million in funding for reusable satellites.

The company said it is reinventing orbital operations through reentry and reusability, and it is emerging from stealth today with a pre-seed funding round.

Space Capital led the funding with participation from Dynamo Ventures, Mission One Capital, Alumni Ventures, Service Provider Capital, and strategic deep tech angels, including the co-founders of Dive Technologies (acquired by Anduril).

Lux Aeterna is developing the world’s first fully reusable satellite bus, engineered for high reliability and designed to meet emerging demands from the U.S. Department of Defense for responsive space capabilities. The company is building a future in which satellites aren’t single-use assets but dependable infrastructure that can be launched, returned, and redeployed like reusable rockets.

Lux Aeterna is based in Denver, Colorado. Source: Lux Aeterna.

The company plans to embark on its pathfinder demonstration in early 2027, when it will launch its first spacecraft, Delphi, via a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket integrated by Exolaunch. Delphi will demonstrate an end-to-end mission by hosting an onboard payload, conducting on-orbit tests, then re-entering Earth’s atmosphere to be recovered and refurbished for another flight, making it the first satellite ever to fly twice.

Unlike traditional satellite buses that burn up after each mission, Lux Aeterna’s platform is fully reusable, from avionics to propulsion. This breakthrough not only lowers costs but also sets a new standard for resilience and sustainability in orbital operations. As part of this shift, Lux Aeterna is rolling out multiple business models to give customers a range of ways to access and operate satellites. Whether a mission lasts six months or five years, the cost can align with time on station, unlocking new operational and economic agility.

“We’re taking the high-risk, high-cost nature out of space missions and replacing it with reliability, flexibility, and reusability,” said Brian Taylor, CEO of Lux Aeterna, in a statement.

Taylor is a former engineering leader at SpaceX, Amazon Project Kuiper, and Loft Orbital.

“This funding is the first milestone in our mission to industrialize space through reusable infrastructure. While the satellite industry has evolved rapidly, its core infrastructure is still designed to be disposable,” Taylor said. Lux Aeterna is changing that fundamental approach from the ground up.”

Brian Taylor, CEO of Lux Aeterna. Source: Lux Aeterna.

“We backed Lux Aeterna because this team has been at the leading edge of satellite innovation for years—building some of the most advanced spacecraft at the most ambitious companies,” said Justus Kilian, partner at Space Capital, in a statement. “That experience gave them a rare vantage point to rethink how satellites are designed, deployed, and reused. They’re not just iterating—they’re stepping boldly into what’s next. With the DoD actively seeking more dynamic and recoverable space platforms, this capability isn’t just visionary—it’s urgently needed.”

With growing interest from U.S. government agencies and strong demand across commercial markets, Lux Aeterna is building a scalable fleet model for the future space economy. The company’s 6,000-square-foot engineering and integration facility in Denver, Colorado, is now operational and will serve as the hub for upcoming development and testing.

In a message to GamesBeat, the company said Lux Aeterna is Latin for eternal light, which is a nod to reusability and the spark that space ignites in all of us.

Lux Aeterna has seven employees and it’s growing. The company was founded in 2024.

Asked about the timing for the business, the company said, “We believe that reentry and reusability are critical to opening up new mission architectures and business models for our customers, so we’re excited to bring this platform to market.”

And it said, “We are actively collaborating with other industry leaders to co-develop a market-focused framework that prioritizes customer flexibility, mission diversity, and operational choice in this expanding sector. We’re building a platform that’s designed for reusability from the ground up. That requires a fresh look at every system and requirement.”

Dean Takahashi

Dean Takahashi is editorial director for GamesBeat at VentureBeat. He has been a tech journalist since 1988, and he has covered games as a beat since 1996. He was lead writer for GamesBeat at VentureBeat from 2008 to April 2025. Prior to that, he wrote for the San Jose Mercury News, the Red Herring, the Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times, and the Dallas Times-Herald. He is the author of two books, "Opening the Xbox" and "The Xbox 360 Uncloaked." He organizes the annual GamesBeat Next, GamesBeat Summit and GamesBeat Insider Series: Hollywood and Games conferences and is a frequent speaker at gaming and tech events. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.