The Rocket Lab Iridium deal, announced on June 29, 2026, sees Rocket Lab Corporation agree to acquire Iridium Communications for approximately $8 billion in a cash-and-stock transaction. It joins together two American companies to play a leading role in the space economy, merging Rocket Lab’s launch capabilities and satellite manufacturing with Iridium’s global satellite communications network, spectrum, and 500-plus partner ecosystem. In short, a rocket builder just became a full-stack space telecom giant overnight.
What is the Rocket Lab Iridium deal?
Rocket Lab agreed to acquire Iridium Communications in a cash-and-stock deal worth about $8 billion. Under the terms, Iridium shareholders will receive $27 in cash plus a portion of Rocket Lab stock for each share, implying a value of about $54 per Iridium share.
The deal is financed by a $3.6 billion bridge loan from Deutsche Bank and Wells Fargo, with the remainder coming from cash and other debt and equity sources. Iridium brought in $871.7 million in revenue in 2025 at a 57% EBITDA margin.
Following the announcement, Rocket Lab shares surged almost 12% to about $94, while Iridium stock jumped 22% to about $53. The transaction is expected to close in mid-2027, pending Iridium shareholder approval and regulatory clearance.
Why does Iridium matter so much?
Most people outside the tech world have never heard of Iridium Communications. But the company runs one of the most unique satellite networks ever built.
The Iridium constellation consists of 66 active satellites in low Earth orbit at a height of about 781 kilometres, with additional spare satellites ready in case of failure. This LEO constellation guarantees seamless connectivity even in the most remote and inaccessible areas of the world.
The secret weapon is Iridium’s spectrum. Iridium holds globally harmonised L-band spectrum, a slice of the radio frequency range between 1,616 and 1,626.5 MHz that took decades of international coordination to secure and cannot be created by any new entrant regardless of capital available. That spectrum is recognised in every country on Earth through the International Telecommunication Union, making it effectively impossible to replicate from scratch.
Iridium’s L-band spectrum is a scarce and highly regulated asset that represents one of the highest barriers to entry in the satellite communications industry. That is why this deal is so significant.
What does Rocket Lab gain from this?
For Rocket Lab, the acquisition eliminates three critical barriers to competing in satellite services: spectrum access, infrastructure deployment costs, and an established subscriber base.
Rocket Lab said the acquisition would expand its business beyond launch and manufacturing into recurring satellite services, while improving cash flow and profitability. The deal also gives it direct access to spectrum and end-user applications, including IoT, direct-to-device connectivity, and positioning, navigation, and timing services.
The acquisition flips Rocket Lab’s profitability profile immediately upon close, while positioning the combined entity to reduce its largest future capital cost, constellation replenishment, through its own launch infrastructure. In other words, Rocket Lab can now launch its own satellites on its own rockets, cutting the cost of running the network for years to come.
Iridium’s 2.55 million active subscribers span commercial, government, defence, aviation, and maritime sectors. That is a ready-made, paying customer base that Rocket Lab inherits on day one.
How does this compare to Starlink?
Starlink, built by SpaceX, is the biggest name in satellite internet right now. According to SpaceX’s IPO prospectus filed in May 2026, Starlink ended the first quarter of 2026 with approximately 10.3 million subscribers, up from 2.3 million at the end of 2023.
But the Rocket Lab Iridium deal is not about copying Starlink. The two networks work differently. Iridium’s L-band broadband service tops out at 704 kbps versus Starlink’s multi-hundred Mbps, but in exchange it offers weather-resilient, polar-coverage connectivity from devices that fit in a pocket. For aviation, maritime, government, and emergency response users who need reliability above all else, and who operate where Starlink’s inclined-orbit constellation has gaps at the poles, that is not a limitation but an advantage.
Put simply, Iridium is for reliability everywhere. Starlink is for high speed in most places. The combined Rocket Lab and Iridium entity will target the users that Starlink simply cannot reach.
What this means for Pakistan
Pakistan is right in the middle of its own satellite internet push. The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority has introduced a new Fixed Satellite Services licence framework aimed at enabling satellite internet services to be offered directly to consumers across Pakistan, paving the way for Starlink-style services.
Currently, five companies are seeking licences to offer satellite-based internet in Pakistan. According to the Pakistan Space Activities Regulatory Board, these include Starlink, Shanghai Spacecom Satellite Technology, OneWeb of the Eutelsat Group, Amazon’s Project Kuiper, and Canadian operator Telesat.
Pakistan has roughly 60 to 70 million people in areas where terrestrial broadband either does not reach or delivers below 1 Mbps. Satellite LEO internet, with median download speeds of 50 to 200 Mbps and latency of 20 to 40ms, would represent a major leap in connectivity for these communities.
The Rocket Lab Iridium deal adds another player to watch. With Iridium’s L-band spectrum recognised in every country, including Pakistan, the new Rocket Lab entity could eventually seek a footprint here too. That would add yet more competition to a market that is already drawing global names. More competition generally means better prices and faster rollout for Pakistani users.
For Starlink, which is the furthest along in preparations, commercial service is possible before the end of 2026 in a best-case scenario, with rural and remote areas likely to be the first deployment priority. However, industry experts warn that Pakistan’s push for next-generation connectivity could be weakened by policy delays, weak long-term planning, and inconsistent regulation.
The global satellite market is moving fast. The Rocket Lab Iridium deal is proof that the LEO connectivity race is about more than just broadband speed. It is about spectrum, reach, and long-term control of the infrastructure that will connect the next billion people.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Rocket Lab Iridium deal in simple terms?
Rocket Lab, a rocket launch and satellite building company, agreed on June 29, 2026 to buy Iridium Communications for about $8 billion. Iridium runs a network of 66 satellites in low Earth orbit that provides voice, data, and IoT coverage to every corner of the planet, including the poles.
Why is Iridium’s L-band spectrum so valuable?
Iridium’s L-band spectrum is a scarce, highly regulated asset that represents one of the highest barriers to entry in the satellite communications industry. It took decades of international coordination to secure and no new company can replicate it today, no matter how much money they have.
Will this deal affect Pakistan’s satellite internet plans?
Not directly in the short term. Pakistan is still working through its own licensing process for LEO satellite services. But the deal adds a powerful new player to global LEO connectivity. As the new Rocket Lab grows, it could eventually look at Pakistan as a market, adding more competition alongside Starlink, OneWeb, and Amazon Kuiper.
When will the Rocket Lab and Iridium merger close?
The transaction is expected to close in mid-2027, pending Iridium shareholder approval and regulatory clearance. Both companies’ boards have already unanimously approved the deal.












