SpaceX signs $920M monthly AI compute deal with Google through 2029
The contract could generate $30 billion in total revenue and marks SpaceX's second massive AI infrastructure deal ahead of its anticipated IPO.
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Add us on Google by Editorial Team Jun. 7, 2026SpaceX just locked in a deal with Google worth $920 million per month for AI compute capacity, running from October 2026 through June 2029. If the contract runs its full course, that’s roughly $30 billion in total revenue for Elon Musk’s rocket company, which has quietly become one of the largest GPU landlords on the planet.
The arrangement, disclosed in an SEC filing dated June 5, 2026, gives Google access to approximately 110,000 NVIDIA GPUs along with associated CPUs, memory, and supporting infrastructure. The hardware is housed primarily in SpaceX’s data centers, which absorbed xAI’s compute assets after SpaceX acquired the AI company back in February 2026.
From rockets to racks: how the deal works
The structure is straightforward. SpaceX owns the GPU infrastructure. Google rents it. Google retains intellectual property rights over its data and models, meaning this is a pure compute-as-a-service arrangement rather than a joint venture.
AdvertisementThere’s a ramp-up period baked into the contract. Google will gradually increase utilization at a reduced fee until full capacity kicks in at the $920 million monthly rate starting October 2026. Either party can walk away with 90 days’ notice after December 31, 2026.
This isn’t even SpaceX’s first deal of this magnitude. The company has already signed a separate AI compute contract with Anthropic valued at $1.25 billion per month. Combined, these two deals alone represent a monthly revenue stream north of $2 billion, just from renting out GPUs.
Why Google needs someone else’s GPUs
The deal is designed to address larger-than-expected demand for Google’s Gemini Enterprise platform. Google’s own AI products are so popular that its existing infrastructure can’t keep up, and building new data centers takes years. SpaceX’s GPU clusters, including the Colossus supercluster inherited from the xAI acquisition, serve as bridge capacity while Google scales its own facilities.
SpaceX’s strategic pivot and IPO implications
SpaceX’s transformation from a pure aerospace company into an AI infrastructure heavyweight didn’t happen by accident. The February 2026 acquisition of xAI brought massive GPU clusters under SpaceX’s corporate umbrella, which SpaceX is now monetizing as recurring revenue.
At $920 million monthly, the Google deal alone represents roughly $11 billion in annualized revenue. Stack the Anthropic contract on top, and SpaceX’s AI compute business could generate over $25 billion per year. SpaceX is widely expected to pursue an IPO, with reports pointing to a target market capitalization between $1.75 trillion and $1.8 trillion. Having locked-in, multi-year contracts with Google and Anthropic gives prospective public market investors predictable revenue.
What this means for investors
The 90-day termination clause protects both parties, but it also means that the $30 billion total is a ceiling, not a guarantee. If Google builds out its own capacity faster than expected, those monthly payments could stop with just three months’ warning.
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