European Spacetech Startups Face 8-10 Year R&D Cycles as Funding Accelerates
European spacetech startups raised €1 billion in 2026 funding, with companies already on pace to match that figure this year after securing €174 million as of mid-February, according to data from Sifted. The sector includes German rocket maker Isar Aerospace and Bulgarian satellite manufacturer EnduroSat.
The capital influx masks a fundamental challenge for CFOs evaluating deeptech investments: spacetech companies operate on timelines incompatible with traditional venture funding models. R&D cycles typically span eight to ten years from founding to first product launch, requiring investors to sustain capital deployment far longer than software or SaaS businesses.
Catherine Wright, Director of Consumer Internet, Climate and Deeptech at HSBC Innovation Banking, noted that venture capitalists accustomed to asset-light software businesses often underestimate spacetech's capital intensity. "Funding a spacetech company is significantly different," Wright said, highlighting the sector's complexity beyond typical enterprise software investment profiles.
Space Dots CEO Bianca Cefalo emphasized that success demands investor flexibility and founder patience—companies cannot demonstrate results until products reach orbit. The sector also requires tolerance for failure as a component of development.
The mismatch between funding timelines and development cycles remains the critical constraint for spacetech growth.


















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