Blue Origin Eyes First External Funding for Launch Expansion

Key Takeaways

- Blue Origin is considering its first external fundraising after 25 years of sole funding from Jeff Bezos
- The company expects to spend roughly $4.8 billion this year and has spent nearly $28 billion since inception
- SpaceX's upcoming IPO at a $1.75 trillion valuation has boosted investor appetite for space ventures
Blue Origin is considering raising outside capital for the first time in its 25-year history. The move would end Jeff Bezos's run as the rocket company's sole investor and fund an aggressive push to compete with SpaceX.
CEO Dave Limp told employees at a recent all-hands meeting that hitting the company's launch targets would "take a lot of capital." More money, he said, than would be available with "just one investor."
Blue Origin declined to comment on the fundraising discussions.
The Numbers Behind the Need
Blue Origin's spending has accelerated sharply. The company is expected to spend roughly $4.8 billion this year, according to analysts at Capstone, a Washington-based consulting firm. Since its founding in 2000, Blue Origin has burned through nearly $28 billion.
The money is going toward major infrastructure projects. Blue Origin is building an 800,000-square-foot manufacturing facility and a second launch pad in Florida. The company is also investing heavily in testing its reusable rocket booster and orbital upper stage.
Josh Parker, an analyst at Capstone, pointed to cost pressures beyond normal expansion. Blue Origin developed its New Glenn rocket in a "brutal inflationary environment," he said. Competition for talent with SpaceX has also forced up salaries.
New Glenn Changes the Equation
Blue Origin reached orbit with New Glenn for the first time in January 2025. The 98-meter-tall heavy-lift rocket represents the company's bid to compete for large commercial contracts and NASA's Artemis lunar lander program.

But getting to orbit was the easy part. Scaling to a high launch cadence requires capital that even Bezos, who owns nearly 9% of Amazon according to proxy filings, may not want to provide alone.
SpaceX IPO Creates Investor Appetite
The timing isn't accidental. SpaceX is preparing to list publicly as early as June with a valuation exceeding $1.75 trillion. That blockbuster number has boosted investor appetite for space ventures.
Limp told employees Blue Origin would need to demonstrate strong economics, but external funding was "on the table." He said he was confident in strong interest from outside investors.
Stock Options as a Catalyst
Limp's comments came during a discussion about a new stock option plan for employees. He noted that fundraising rounds could help staff exercise their options, similar to how OpenAI and SpaceX have structured their programs.
“We wrote this plan intentionally to allow for that.”
— Dave Limp, Blue Origin CEO, on using fundraising rounds for employee stock options
The stock option plan signals Blue Origin is preparing for a future with external shareholders. Limp told employees the company needed to be "ready for external funding."
No Sale, Possible IPO
Limp was clear on one point: he does not expect Bezos will ever sell Blue Origin. But he did not rule out a potential IPO.
Bezos founded Blue Origin in 2000, the same year Amazon's market cap first hit $20 billion. For a quarter century, he has funded the rocket company primarily through Amazon stock sales. That era appears to be ending.
Logicity's Take
Related coverage of SpaceX's growing commercial ambitions
Frequently Asked Questions
How much has Blue Origin spent since its founding?
Nearly $28 billion since Jeff Bezos founded the company in 2000, according to estimates from Capstone, a Washington-based consulting firm.
When did Blue Origin reach orbit with New Glenn?
Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket reached orbit for the first time in January 2025. The 98-meter-tall heavy-lift rocket is designed to compete for large commercial contracts.
Will Jeff Bezos sell Blue Origin?
CEO Dave Limp told employees he does not expect Bezos will ever sell the business. However, Limp did not rule out a potential IPO in the future.
How much is SpaceX worth ahead of its IPO?
SpaceX is preparing to list publicly with a valuation exceeding $1.75 trillion, potentially as early as June.
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Source: Ars Technica
Huma Shazia
Senior AI & Tech Writer
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