Boeing and Millennium Space Systems Expand Satellite Production and Portfolio
Boeing and its subsidiary Millennium Space Systems have announced plans to expand satellite production capacity and broaden their portfolio to address increasing demand from government and commercial customers.

The initiative focuses on scaling manufacturing output, enhancing product offerings and improving flexibility in satellite deployment across multiple mission requirements.
Boeing Targets Higher Satellite Output with New Platform Launch
New Mid-Class Satellite Platform Introduced
As part of the expansion, the companies introduced a new mid-class satellite platform named Resolute. The platform is designed to offer capabilities between traditional small satellites and larger satellite systems, targeting missions that require a balance of performance, flexibility and deployment speed.
The platform is built using existing components and avionics systems developed by Millennium Space Systems, with the aim of supporting applications such as communications and sensing across different orbital environments.
Production and Capacity Expansion
Boeing is targeting the delivery of 26 satellites in 2026 as part of its efforts to increase production output. The company stated that this expansion is supported by investments in standardised manufacturing processes, shared components and integration across its satellite programmes.
Millennium Space Systems is also increasing its production capacity to manage a growing order backlog while maintaining flexibility to customise spacecraft based on mission requirements.
Focus on Market Demand
The companies indicated that the strategy is aimed at meeting evolving demand in both defence and commercial space sectors. This includes the need for scalable satellite architectures, faster deployment timelines and adaptable systems that can respond to changing mission requirements.
“We’re aligning our space business to meet a market that is moving faster and asking for more flexibility,” said Kay Sears, vice president and general manager of Boeing Space, Intelligence & Weapons Systems. “That means increasing production throughput, broadening the portfolio and giving customers more options for how they field and scale capability over time.”
“This is about more than one product,” said Tony Gingiss, CEO of Millennium Space Systems. “We are building the production depth, common architecture and capacity to scale with demand. That includes expanding into mission areas where customers want more capability, while staying focused on execution and delivery across the backlog already in front of us.”
Boeing, which has more than six decades of experience in satellite development, continues to invest in technologies and manufacturing capabilities to support long-term growth in the space segment.











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