Seraphim Space expands early-stage fund for SpaceTech startups
London-based investment group Seraphim Space has announced the latest closing of its oversubscribed early-stage venture fund, reinforcing its position as one of the most active backers of emerging SpaceTech companies worldwide. The vehicle is designed to support founders building critical orbital infrastructure, data platforms and downstream space-enabled applications.
Backing the next wave of orbital infrastructure
The fund targets pre-seed and early-stage ventures working across launch services, satellite constellations, in-orbit services, Earth observation analytics and secure communications. By closing the fund above its initial target, Seraphim Space signals strong institutional and strategic investor confidence in the long-term growth of the commercial space economy.
According to the firm, capital will be deployed globally, with a focus on teams that can demonstrate defensible deep tech, scalable software layers on top of space infrastructure, and clear commercial pathways in sectors such as climate intelligence, defence, telecommunications and mobility.
Strategic role in the global SpaceTech ecosystem
Seraphim Space has built an ecosystem that combines a dedicated venture capital platform with accelerator programs and corporate partnerships. This latest closing strengthens its ability to lead rounds, provide follow-on funding and connect portfolio companies with satellite operators, aerospace primes and government agencies.
Investor demand and market timing
The oversubscription of the fund reflects growing interest in space infrastructure as a critical layer of modern digital and security architecture. Investors increasingly view SpaceTech as an enabler of resilient data networks, real-time Earth observation and secure navigation, rather than a niche segment of the broader technology market.
With this additional capital, Seraphim Space is positioned to back a new generation of founders building dual-use technologies that serve both commercial and governmental customers. The group aims to accelerate innovation while helping startups navigate complex regulatory environments, long development cycles and the capital-intensive nature of space hardware.

