SpaceX has officially confirmed its intent to go public in mid-2026, but the headlines regarding a $7.5 trillion target refer to a massive, long-term compensation package for Elon Musk rather than its immediate IPO valuation.
Reports from April 28–29, 2026, indicate that SpaceX’s board has approved a “cosmic” pay plan for Musk, as detailed in the company’s confidential SEC registration filings.
1. The $7.5 Trillion “Mars Bonus”
The $7.5 trillion figure is not the current valuation, but the ultimate performance milestone required for Elon Musk to unlock a record-breaking stock award.
- The Valuation Milestone: To receive 200 million shares of super-voting restricted stock, SpaceX must reach a market capitalization of $7.5 trillion.
- The “Physical” Milestone: Valuation alone isn’t enough; the payout is also tied to the establishment of a permanent colony on Mars housing at least 1 million people.
- The Computing Goal: An additional 60.4 million shares are tied to a separate goal: building a space-based data center network providing 100 terawatts of computing power (roughly 30x the world’s current total power consumption).
2. The 2026 IPO: Realistic Targets
While the $7.5 trillion goal is for the future, the immediate IPO—potentially scheduled for June 28, 2026 (Musk’s birthday)—is targeting more terrestrial figures.
| Metric | IPO Target (June 2026) | Long-Term Milestone |
| Valuation | $1.75 Trillion | $7.5 Trillion |
| Funding Goal | $50 Billion – $75 Billion | N/A |
| Primary Driver | Starlink & Starship | Mars Colony & Space Data Centers |
- Historical Significance: At a $1.75 trillion valuation, SpaceX would immediately become one of the most valuable companies on Earth, potentially the largest IPO in history.
- Confidential Filing: The company used a confidential “S-1” filing process in early April to allow for regulatory review before the public frenzy begins.
3. Investor & Corporate Conflict
The sheer scale of this plan has raised red flags among corporate governance experts.
- Tesla Tensions: Experts warn that tying Musk’s wealth so heavily to SpaceX milestones might distract him from Tesla, especially given the “all-or-nothing” nature of the $7.5 trillion Mars target.
- IPO Retention: Analysts view the massive award as a strategic “golden handcuff” designed by the SpaceX board to ensure Musk remains focused on the company after it goes public.
- Market Access: Currently, only institutions and accredited buyers can access “pre-IPO” shares, which are surging in demand as the June listing date approaches.
