The Founder’s Playbook to India’s ₹44B Space Economy

IN-SPACe gives private companies access to ISRO test facilities, launch support, and expert mentors. Add the new ₹1,005 crore Antariksh VC Fund, ₹500 crore Technology Adoption Fund, and up to ₹1 crore seed grants. Here is exactly how founders like those at Skyroot (now a unicorn) and Agnikul are using this stack in 2026 to build real businesses instead of burning out.

Picture this. You have spent three years perfecting a small rocket engine or a camera that can see things from space no one else can. The science works in the lab. But turning it into something that actually flies costs tens of crores, takes years before any paying customer appears, and traditional investors get nervous about the timeline.

That story used to end with most founders running out of money or moving to easier software ideas. Not anymore.

Since 2020 the Indian government has quietly built a complete support system for people who want to build real space hardware. At the centre sits IN-SPACe — the agency that opens ISRO’s world-class test facilities, launch pads, and expert guidance to private companies. Layered on top are three funding windows that match the long timelines of space work: grants for early ideas, a technology adoption fund that pays up to 60% of your project costs, and a brand-new ₹1,005 crore venture capital fund managed by SIDBI that is ready to write cheques from ₹10 crore to ₹60 crore.

India now has more than 400 private space companies — up from just 54 in 2020. Skyroot Aerospace became the country’s first space-tech unicorn in May 2026 after raising another $60 million at a $1.1 billion valuation. Agnikul Cosmos launched a rocket from its own private pad at Sriharikota. Pixxel’s hyperspectral satellites are already in orbit with big corporate backing. The common thread? They all used the IN-SPACe ecosystem to survive the expensive early years.

This is no longer “government helping hobbyists.” It is a serious commercial playbook that has already produced multiple companies raising tens of millions from global investors while keeping Indian control and Indian IP. The space economy is growing toward a $44 billion target by 2030, and every rupee spent in space creates about 2.5 times that value elsewhere in the economy.

Most founders still think space is only for giant organisations with thousands of engineers. The ones winning right now treat IN-SPACe like a strategic co-founder that provides testing grounds, patient capital, and credibility that opens customer doors. This guide shows you exactly how they do it.

Why the old rules no longer apply

For fifty years ISRO carried almost the entire Indian space programme on its shoulders. Private companies could supply parts but rarely led entire missions. That changed in 2020 when IN-SPACe was created as a single-window agency to bring private players into every part of the value chain — satellites, rockets, data services, ground systems, and even launches.

Today more than 1,200 startups and organisations have registered on the IN-SPACe portal. The agency has signed 78 partnership agreements and issued over 70 formal permissions for private space activities. The message is clear: if you have a serious idea, the national infrastructure is available to you at subsidised rates.

The funding ladder is built to match the real timeline of space hardware. Early ideas get grants up to ₹1 crore plus mentoring. Technologies that need to move from lab prototypes to flight-ready versions can access the ₹500 crore Technology Adoption Fund, which covers up to 60% of project costs (maximum ₹25 crore per project for startups). Once you have proven traction, the ₹1,005 crore Antariksh Venture Capital Fund — now fully operational with SIDBI as manager — can invest ₹10–60 crore per company. It aims to back around 40 ventures over the next five years with annual deployments of ₹150–250 crore.

The Complete Funding Ladder in 2026

  • Ideation or Prototype: IN-SPACe Seed Fund — up to ₹1 crore grant plus mentoring and lab access.
  • Technology Maturation (TRL 3/4 to 7/8): Technology Adoption Fund — up to 60% of project cost, max ₹25 crore, with technical guidance.
  • Early Growth: Antariksh VC Fund — ₹10–30 crore equity.
  • Later Growth: Antariksh VC Fund — ₹30–60 crore equity to scale operations or prepare for larger commercial contracts.

All of this comes without forcing you to give away control too early. The government vehicles are designed as patient capital that understands hardware development takes time.

Testing facilities that used to be completely off-limits

One of the biggest barriers for hardware startups is the cost of testing. A single vibration or thermal test can cost lakhs. Building your own facility is out of the question for most founders.

IN-SPACe changed that. Private companies can now use ISRO’s facilities at Sriharikota — the Satish Dhawan Space Centre — for propellant testing, motor static firing, vibration tables, thermal chambers, and full launch integration. Agnikul Cosmos became the first company to operate its own dedicated launch pad and mission control centre right inside Sriharikota in 2022. Skyroot tested its solid rocket motor there under IN-SPACe facilitation.

The new Kulasekarapattinam spaceport in Tamil Nadu is being built specifically with smaller rockets and private vehicles in mind. A third launch pad at Sriharikota was approved in 2025. The IN-SPACe Technical Centre in Ahmedabad offers shared satellite development labs, clean rooms, and co-working space where startups can work alongside mentors.

This infrastructure advantage cuts years and crores off your development timeline. Instead of raising a massive round just to build a test stand, you pay subsidised rates for world-class facilities that have already flown dozens of missions.

Mentorship and training that actually comes from people who have launched rockets

Access to facilities is powerful, but guidance from people who have flown real missions is priceless. IN-SPACe runs structured mentorship programmes where ISRO veterans work directly with founders. Over 900 people have already completed specialised training in satellite manufacturing, launch systems, and space cybersecurity.

Universities now host Space Technology Incubation Centres that bring students, researchers, and startups together with ISRO projects. The RESPOND programme funds university research that often spins out into commercial products.

Corporate partners have joined too. Microsoft offers mentoring in engineering, cloud tools, product design, fundraising, and sales. The AWS Space Accelerator programme runs intensive 14-week cohorts with technical experts and business coaches. Several cohorts have already graduated companies that later raised significant funding.

Real example: PierSight Space used IN-SPACe labs and direct mentorship from senior ISRO technical directors to develop its satellite systems. That combination of hands-on guidance and facility access helped them move faster than they could have alone.

Success stories that prove the model works

The proof is in the launches — literally.

Skyroot Aerospace, started by former ISRO engineers, used IN-SPACe authorisation and testing facilities for its Vikram-S sounding rocket — India’s first privately developed rocket to reach space. In May 2026 the company became India’s first space-tech unicorn after closing a $60 million round at a $1.1 billion valuation. They are now preparing the orbital Vikram-1 launch while continuing to use national infrastructure.

Agnikul Cosmos built the world’s first fully 3D-printed semi-cryogenic rocket engine. Their Agnibaan vehicle launched from a private pad they established at Sriharikota in 2024 — a historic first. Tamil Nadu state invested ₹25 crore, showing how state and central support can combine. The company has raised around $50 million so far.

Pixxel has launched multiple hyperspectral imaging satellites that capture data across 150+ spectral bands at 5-metre resolution. Alphabet (Google’s parent) invested $36 million, and the company won contracts for both commercial and strategic applications. Their work shows how data-focused space companies can reach revenue faster while still using government facilities for calibration and validation.

These are not isolated wins. More than 50 spy satellites are planned over the next few years, with private companies expected to build roughly half. Export opportunities are growing too — Indian rockets have already helped launch hundreds of foreign satellites.

State-level advantages worth considering

While IN-SPACe is national, some states are moving faster than others.

Karnataka’s Space Technology Policy aims to capture half of India’s space business and 5% of the global market. The state offers incentives for satellite operations, analytics, and software-heavy space applications. Bengaluru’s existing aerospace ecosystem makes it natural for companies focused on ground systems or data services.

Tamil Nadu is building dedicated “Space Bays” industrial clusters in cities near the new Kulasekarapattinam spaceport. The state is attracting manufacturers, propulsion companies, and launch service firms with fast approvals, capital subsidies, and proximity to testing facilities. Agnikul and L&T are already active there.

Andhra Pradesh offers direct access to Sriharikota for integration and testing. Telangana is strong in ground stations and Earth observation. Smart founders pick their first base based on where their hardware will be tested and manufactured rather than just where the cheapest office space is.

Your practical three-phase playbook

Here is the exact sequence that working founders follow in 2026.

  1. Foundation (first 3 months): Register on the IN-SPACe portal today — it is free and gives you access to the full ecosystem. Apply for the Seed Fund if you are still at idea or early prototype stage. Connect with the nearest Space Technology Incubation Centre or apply to the AWS or Microsoft accelerator programmes. Pick one clear vertical (launch vehicles, satellite components, Earth observation data services, or ground systems) and map it to national priorities.
  2. Development and validation (months 3–12): Request facility access at Sriharikota or the Ahmedabad technical centre. Apply to the Technology Adoption Fund for help moving your technology from lab to flight-ready. Use the assigned ISRO mentors to refine your design and testing plan. Document everything — the data room you build here becomes extremely valuable when raising larger money.
  3. Scale and commercialisation (year 2 onward): With proven test data and early customer interest, approach the Antariksh VC Fund for growth capital. Use the credibility of IN-SPACe authorisation and ISRO heritage to win defence contracts, international launch orders, or large data service deals. Consider the liberalised FDI rules to bring in global capital without losing control. Explore state incentives in Karnataka or Tamil Nadu for manufacturing scale-up.

Throughout, focus on solving real problems — cheaper access to space, better climate data, improved connectivity, or stronger national security capabilities. The ecosystem rewards companies that align commercial success with national needs.

Immediate actions you can take this week

Your 7-Day Launch Sequence

  • Register on inspace.gov.in and explore the portal. Complete the startup profile — over 1,200 companies have already done this.
  • Download the latest Seed Fund and Technology Adoption Fund guidelines. Prepare a short concept note even if you are not ready to apply yet.
  • Identify one ISRO technology or facility that could accelerate your roadmap. Reach out through the portal for an initial discussion.
  • Look at the current open calls for the AWS Space Accelerator or Microsoft mentoring programme.
  • If you are in Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, or Andhra Pradesh, contact the state space cell for additional incentives and introductions.
  • Read one recent case study — Skyroot, Agnikul, or Pixxel — and note exactly which parts of the ecosystem they used at each stage.

The old excuse that “space is only for ISRO” no longer holds. The facilities are open. The funding ladder is built for long cycles. The mentorship is coming from people who have actually sent rockets to the moon and Mars. The number of serious private space companies has grown tenfold in six years, and the momentum is still building.

Skyroot’s unicorn round in May 2026 shows what is possible when technical excellence meets the right support system. Agnikul’s private launch pad proves you can move faster than many thought possible. Pixxel’s commercial success shows that data businesses can reach revenue while still using government infrastructure for calibration.

The infrastructure, the capital, and the policy tailwinds are finally aligned. The only remaining question is whether you will register today, start the conversations, and treat IN-SPACe as the strategic partner it is designed to be.

India is moving from being a space-faring nation to a space-startup superpower. The next chapter is being written by founders who understand that rocket science does not have to mean rocket bankruptcy anymore.

Start Your Space Journey This Week

Go to inspace.gov.in and register your company. Explore the Seed Fund and Technology Adoption Fund calls for proposals. Book a facility access discussion or apply to one of the accelerator programmes. Whether you are building launch vehicles, satellites, data platforms, or ground systems, the combination of subsidised world-class testing, patient capital up to ₹60 crore, direct ISRO mentorship, and liberalised foreign investment rules creates an environment that simply did not exist five years ago. Skyroot, Agnikul, Pixxel and more than 400 others have already shown the path. The facilities are open. The funds are deployed. The only thing left is for the next wave of founders to step forward and build.

ISRO-grade test facilities at subsidised rates. Grants up to ₹1 crore. Patient equity up to ₹60 crore. Real mentorship from people who have flown missions to Mars. All available to private founders in 2026. Register on the portal today and begin the conversation.

 

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