ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA / Content Syndication Services / — SpaceX is targeting 10,000 launches annually within five years, Federal Aviation Administration chief Bryan Bedford said, outlining a proposed scale of commercial spaceflight far above current launch activity. Bedford said SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell described the five-year target during a recent meeting. The figure places new attention on the regulatory and operational demands facing U.S. commercial space transportation as launch providers expand satellite deployment and reusable rocket operations.

Bedford said federal officials would need to see stronger reliability before approving activity at that level. The Federal Aviation Administration licenses U.S. commercial space launches and reentries and is responsible for protecting public safety during those operations. SpaceX conducted 170 launches in 2025 and deployed about 2,500 satellites, according to figures cited by the FAA administrator. A 10,000-launch annual target equates to about 27 launches per day across a full calendar year.
The remarks come as SpaceX continues to dominate U.S. launch activity through frequent Falcon 9 missions and ongoing development of Starship, its large reusable vehicle. Bedford said the FAA is reviewing launch and operational data to assess risk, reliability and potential impacts on aviation. Launches can require airspace restrictions, and accidents or aborted missions can extend disruption for commercial air traffic, adding a separate planning challenge for regulators and airlines.
Reliability threshold remains central
Bedford said the Federal Aviation Administration is not currently the limiting factor for commercial space activity, but he warned that the agency’s space office could become a constraint if resources do not keep pace with the sector’s growth. The FAA’s commercial space transportation division reviews license applications, mission profiles, launch sites, reentry plans and public safety calculations before granting approvals. Any large increase in launch cadence would remain subject to that regulatory process.
SpaceX has expanded its launch rate in recent years as it deploys Starlink satellites and carries payloads for commercial, civil and national security customers. The company’s 2025 launch total already represented one of the highest annual cadences achieved by a single launch provider. Bedford said he and Shotwell discussed the need for both the regulator and the company to improve performance standards as launch volume rises.
Starship approvals show measured expansion
The Federal Aviation Administration last year approved SpaceX to increase annual Starship launches from Boca Chica, Texas, from five to 25 after an environmental review. That approval covered a defined launch site and specific operational parameters, including booster landings and mission-related activity. The Starship decision remains separate from any broader target of thousands of annual launches and does not authorize the scale described in Bedford’s latest comments.
SpaceX did not issue an immediate public response to the FAA administrator’s remarks. Elon Musk has previously said the company has about 10,000 satellites in orbit and wants to launch 10,000 communications satellites per year, without giving the same five-year schedule cited by Bedford. The new target, as described by the FAA chief, places launch reliability, licensing capacity and airspace coordination at the center of the next phase of U.S. commercial space oversight.
