Rocket Lab blew past expectations in Q1 2026 with record revenue and fresh contracts that push its launch pipeline and tech portfolio forward, while still reporting a modest net loss as it invests in Neutron and strategic acquisitions.
Rocket Lab reported first-quarter revenue of $200.3 million, a 63.5% increase year over year that handily beat analyst projections. The top-line surge reflects stronger demand for both Electron and the HASTE vehicle, and it pushed the company into its largest quarterly revenue haul to date. That momentum helped lift the company’s backlog to $2.2 billion, up about 20% from the prior quarter, showing heavier forward visibility for launches. Liquidity remained healthy, with total available resources topping $2 billion.
Despite the revenue win, Rocket Lab recorded a net loss of $45 million, or seven cents per share, an improvement from a $60.6 million loss in the year-ago quarter. GAAP gross margin expanded to 38.2%, and adjusted EBITDA posted a loss of $11.8 million as the company continues to scale operations and develop new systems. Management framed these numbers as an investment phase rather than a failure, emphasizing progress across engineering and program execution. Investors appear willing to reward growth and backlog expansion even while profitability catches up.
“Rocket Lab has delivered another exceptional quarter with record financial performance,” CEO Peter Beck said in a statement. “We’re already embedded in the most demanding and significant space programs of our generation and we’re in an incredibly strong position to continue expanding this.” Those words underline the company’s pitch: that current losses buy future capabilities tied to larger, high-value national and commercial programs. The CEO’s confidence is aimed at reassuring customers and shareholders that scale and capability are accelerating together.
For the second quarter, Rocket Lab outlined revenue guidance of $225 million to $240 million, a range that sits above many analyst forecasts and signals more growth is expected. The company warned of an adjusted EBITDA loss between $20 million and $26 million for the period, reflecting continued investment in Neutron development and production ramp activities. Management is projecting higher top-line performance while accepting near-term profitability pressure as it brings medium-lift capacity online. That tradeoff is typical for ambitious aerospace firms building new, larger-class rockets.
Commercial momentum showed in contract activity: 31 new agreements for Electron and HASTE launches and five additional deals for the Neutron medium-lift rocket were announced during the quarter. Rocket Lab said it sold more launches in the first quarter of 2026 than it did across all of 2025, pushing its total launch manifest past 70 contracted missions. The company also closed what it described as the largest launch contract in its history, a bulk purchase of Neutron and Electron flights from an undisclosed customer. Those deals help fund production and demonstrate market confidence in Rocket Lab’s multi-vehicle approach.
Technically, Neutron remains on schedule for a debut flight later this year, with ongoing work on engine qualification and first-flight hardware integration. The company is juggling rigorous test schedules while trying to keep manufacturing timelines tight, a classic aerospace balancing act. Progress on engines and flight hardware will be the immediate watch items for customers and the market, since Neutron is positioned to compete in a growing medium-lift segment for both national security and commercial missions. Success with the first launch would be a major de-risking event.
On the defense and systems side, Rocket Lab disclosed teaming activity and awards that expand its role in national programs. The company was selected, in partnership with Raytheon, to demonstrate advanced capabilities for the U.S. Space Force’s Space Based Interceptor program, part of President Donald Trump’s Golden Dome for America initiative. Separately, Anduril awarded Rocket Lab a $30 million contract to conduct hypersonic test flights on its HASTE vehicle. Those wins link the company directly to high-priority defense work and diversify revenue beyond pure launch services.
Strategic moves rounded out the quarter as Rocket Lab completed the acquisition of Mynaric AG, a maker of laser optical communications terminals, and signed a definitive agreement to buy Motiv Space Systems, a robotics firm with Mars-tested tech. These additions establish Rocket Lab’s first footprint in Europe and add in-orbit robotic capability to its offering. The deals signal a company moving from pure launch provider to an integrated space systems player, combining vehicles, communications, and on-orbit services to chase larger program opportunities.
