Golden Dome moves to contracts amid cost and feasibility doubts
Space Force picks 12 firms for space-based interceptors as estimates swing from $175B to $3.6T
Summary
Trump's Golden Dome homeland missile shield is inching from vision to contracts. The Space Force named 12 companies in April 2026 for space-based- interceptor prototypes under OTA deals worth up to $3.2B; the FY26 appropriations bill carried $13.4B for space and missile-defence systems. But cost and feasibility doubts dominate: estimates run from $175B (White House) to $1.2T over 20 years (CBO) to $3.6T (AEI), and industry press reports the program "spinning its wheels" on unresolved architecture. Space Force Gen. Michael Guetlein conceded boost-phase intercept from space will not proceed "if it is not affordable and scalable." Initial capability is targeted for 2028, full architecture mid-2030s. The push tracks the Chinese and Russian threats it cites.
By the numbers
- 12 — firms picked for space-based-interceptor prototypes (up to $3.2B).
- $13.4B — FY26 funding for space and missile-defence systems.
- $175B → $1.2T → $3.6T — White House / CBO / AEI cost estimates.
- 2028 — targeted initial capability; mid-2030s full architecture.
Why it matters
Golden Dome is the most expensive missile-defence bet in decades, and its space-based layer is the least proven. If it consumes budget without working, it crowds out the interceptor rebuild that the Iran war showed is the real near-term gap.
What to watch
- Whether boost-phase SBI prototypes pass affordability/scalability tests.
- FY27 appropriations: sustained funding or congressional pushback.
- How the cost estimate settles as the architecture firms up.