Voyager Technologies Doubles Production Capacity at Colorado Facility to Support Growing Demand for Satellite Propulsion

VOYG
April 13, 2026

Voyager Technologies announced that it has doubled the production capacity at its Denver‑metro (Littleton) facility, increasing output from the level it had a year ago and setting a target to quadruple capacity from that baseline. The expansion is designed to accelerate the manufacturing of satellite propulsion modules for both commercial and national‑security customers.

The capacity increase is a direct result of Voyager’s acquisition of ExoTerra Resource in October 2025, which added the Littleton plant to the company’s portfolio. While the company also acquired Estes Energetics in November 2025, the ExoTerra deal was the catalyst for the current expansion, providing the additional space and equipment needed to scale production.

The expansion positions Voyager to support the U.S. government’s Golden Dome missile‑defense program, a multi‑layer space architecture announced in January 2025. By expanding its propulsion manufacturing capability, Voyager can meet the projected build‑out of satellite constellations and capture a larger share of the propulsion market, reinforcing its strategy of integrating defense and space solutions.

Voyager’s financial outlook reflects the impact of the expansion. The company raised its 2026 revenue guidance to $225 million–$255 million, up from a prior forecast of $225 million–$255 million, based on a record backlog of $265.6 million at the end of 2025. Despite a net loss of $112.3 million in FY 2025, Voyager expects an EBITDA loss in 2026 due to increased investment in R&D, acquisitions, and manufacturing scale‑up, underscoring a focus on growth over short‑term profitability.

Management emphasized the strategic importance of the expansion. President of Space, Defense and National Security Matt Magaña said, "As programs like Golden Dome accelerate the build‑out of resilient, multi‑layer space architectures, the propulsion systems that make those satellites maneuverable and survivable have to keep pace. That's exactly what we're delivering, and we are now scaling production even further to quadruple capacity from a year ago." CEO Dylan Taylor added, "We are closing a key gap in our national readiness posture by ensuring American leadership over energetics, which are foundational to how we protect, maneuver and project strength. This significantly strengthens the position of our propulsion capabilities from ground to orbit."

The expansion strengthens Voyager’s supply‑chain footprint and supports its broader strategy of integrating defense and space solutions, potentially accelerating revenue growth in the coming quarters.

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