India’s space ambitions have moved beyond government-led missions, increasingly being fuelled by private capital as investors warm up to homegrown spacetech startups. After a breakout funding year in 2025, India’s spacetech ecosystem is entering a more decisive phase in 2026 — one where capital will flow less on promise and more on proof. Investors are expected to prioritise startups with clear commercial pathways, scalable business models and near-term revenue visibility. Industry stakeholders Inc42 spoke with believe investments in the space over the current calendar year will be more selective, with a sharper focus on segments such as small satellite constellations, earth-observation data platforms, launch services for small payloads and space-enabled communications infrastructure. Patient capital will still be critical, but founders will increasingly be pushed to demonstrate execution speed, business traction and operational readiness. “In 2026, aligning patient capital with clear commercial pathways will be essential to fully capitalise on funding growth and scale launch capabilities,” GalaxEye cofounder and CEO Suyash Singh told Inc42, adding that investors are now looking beyond technology readiness to business viability. 2025: The Takeoff Year That Set The Stage The shift comes on the back of a watershed 2025 for Indian spacetech. As per Inc42’s Annual…  ​Read MoreInc42 Media