SpaceX could become the biggest IPO in U.S. history, with a possible 2026 NASDAQ listing at a $1.75 trillion valuation. While direct share access is mostly limited to accredited investors with $100,000+ minimums, everyday investors can still gain indirect exposure through ETFs, interval funds, and proxy stocks, with some starting at just $500. Here are the seven main ways to invest before the IPO.
SpaceX leads the commercial space industry with reusable Falcon 9 rockets and lower launch costs. Starlink already serves 9+ million users and could generate $15–16 billion in 2025 revenue.
Investors who gained exposure before major tech listings have historically benefited.
That said, high valuations cut both ways. Meta, Uber, and Lyft all dropped sharply post-listing, and SpaceX at $1.75 trillion trades at over 100x its annual revenues.
An accredited investor SpaceX opportunity is usually limited to someone with:
Most platforms selling private company shares only allow accredited investors. They also often require investments of $100,000 or more. This makes direct SpaceX investing difficult for ordinary investors.
However, the good news is that some ETFs and interval funds are open to everyone and investments can start with as little as $500.
Here are some methods if you want to learn how to buy SpaceX stock before the IPO.
XOVR is a daily-traded ETF combining public tech stocks with private company exposure. The only U.S.-listed ETF that explicitly holds SpaceX, currently at roughly $230M through an SPV structure.
Cathie Wood’s closed-end interval fund with SpaceX as its top holding at 13-17% of the portfolio.
Interval fund focused on late-stage private companies. SpaceX and xAI combined represent ~19% of the portfolio.
Actively managed mutual fund by veteran investor Ron Baron, who has been building his SpaceX position since 2017. Highest SpaceX concentration among traditional mutual funds at ~32%.
Unlike XOVR, this ETF holds direct SpaceX shares rather than through an SPV, split across Class A and Class C for ~9% total exposure.
Buying shares of public companies that already own SpaceX equity. Alphabet (GOOGL) is one of the most popular SpaceX proxy stocks, thanks to its Alphabet Google SpaceX stake from a $900M investment in 2015.
Direct purchase of SpaceX shares from employees or early investors via Forge Global, Hiive, and EquityZen. Minimums of $100,000+, transaction fees of 5-10%, and zero liquidity until IPO or a secondary sale. Accredited investor verification required.
| Method | Min. Investment | SpaceX Exposure | Liquidity | Best For |
| XOVR ETF | 1 share (Current Share Price: ~$19.35) | ~50% | Daily | Max concentration + liquidity |
| ARK Venture (ARKVX) | $500 | ~13-17% | Quarterly | Low minimum, long-term hold |
| Private Shares (PRIVX) | $2,500 | ~19% | Quarterly | Diversified private equity |
| Baron Partners (BPTRX) | $2,000 | ~32% | Daily | High concentration mutual fund |
| Baron First Principles (RONB) | 1 share (~$23–24 currently) | ~9% | Daily | Direct shares in ETF format |
| Proxy Stocks (e.g. GOOGL) | ~$1/share | Diluted | Daily | Bonus exposure + quality stock |
| Secondary Markets | $100,000+ | 100% direct | None pre-IPO | Accredited investors only |
XOVR does not own SpaceX shares directly. Instead, it invests through an SPV (Special Purpose Vehicle) that holds the SpaceX exposure. This means investors are indirectly connected to SpaceX through multiple layers.
Benefits:
Risks:
Pre-IPO SpaceX investing also comes with important risks:
These risks do not mean you should avoid investing. They simply mean you should fully understand what you are buying first.
There is no single right answer, and it comes down to your risk appetite.
Case for investing now:
Case for waiting:
The balanced approach most advisors suggest is to open a small position, around 5-10% of intended allocation, through an ETF like XOVR before the IPO, then reassess after seeing opening price action. Waiting 1-3 months post-listing for volatility to settle often leads to a cleaner entry.
Not directly. SpaceX is still private. However, investors can get indirect exposure through ETFs, interval funds, or secondary market platforms like Forge Global and EquityZen.
XOVR has the highest SpaceX exposure among ETFs at around 50%. BPTRX has about 32% exposure among mutual funds.
No, not for ETFs or interval funds. Accreditation is only needed for direct SpaceX share purchases through secondary markets.
ETFs like XOVR and RONB only require the price of one share (around $30–40). ARK Venture Fund starts at $500. Direct secondary market investments usually require $100,000+.
Yes. Risks include high valuations, indirect ownership, limited liquidity, and uncertainty in private market pricing.
SpaceX is reportedly targeting a June–July 2026 NASDAQ listing under ticker SPCX. Expected valuation is around $1.75–2 trillion.
The pressure on maintenance teams across UK commercial and industrial environments has rarely been greater. According to CBRE's 2025 Facilities…
Instagram users are increasingly looking for ways to check the public "stories" without logging in, whether they're investigating creators, checking…
I pulled last quarter's paid social report and hit a familiar problem: 400 leads from LinkedIn and Meta, but only…
Remote access cloud solutions and industrial connectivity by IXON Italia enable machine builders and industrial end-users to securely monitor, manage,…
When B2B SaaS leaders ask which SEO agencies stand out, two names come up fast: MADX Digital and Breaking B2B.…
In a market where every company competes for attention on the same social platforms, brands are rediscovering the mascot. Once…