Sidus Space utilized its fourth quarter and fiscal year 2025 earnings presentation to detail its current position: three operational satellites in orbit, an expanding defense portfolio, and a rapidly transforming business strategy.
Chief Executive Carol Craig characterized 2025 as the pivotal year when the organization transitioned from “development into on-orbit operations.” This represents a significant milestone for an enterprise that dedicated years building toward operational capability.
Sidus Space, Inc., SIDU
LizzieSat-3, which deployed in March 2025, represents the company’s most technically advanced operational asset. The satellite completed comprehensive bus-level commissioning procedures, achieved pointing precision exceeding 30 arc seconds, and currently supports active customer payloads — including maritime Automatic Identification System data and imaging operations through HEO USA’s camera system.
LizzieSat-1 has fulfilled its operational mandate and entered decommissioning protocols. LizzieSat-2, deployed into equatorial orbit, remains in commissioning phase. Craig explained that equatorial orbits provide superior long-duration coverage capabilities but present fewer ground communication opportunities, extending the commissioning timeline.
All three satellites represent company-owned, company-financed assets, engineered specifically to accommodate multiple customer payloads. This defines the revenue framework: infrastructure developed once, generating income from diverse sources throughout the mission lifecycle.
Within the defense arena, Sidus secured access to the Missile Defense Agency’s SHIELD IDIQ contract vehicle, a decade-long opportunity Craig linked to the comprehensive “Golden Dome missile defense architecture.” The company maintains an additional IDIQ with Tobyhanna Army Depot and participates as a subcontractor in a NASA SBIR Radar Initiative utilizing LizzieSat as the host platform.
The organization expanded its lunar manufacturing partnership with Lonestar Data Holdings, elevating total contract value to $120 million. A dedicated payload will integrate with the LS-5 mission. Sidus unveiled LunarLizzie, its advanced-generation lunar spacecraft design, targeting the 800+ kilogram class category.
LizzieSat-4 and LizzieSat-5 are progressing as software-defined satellite platforms featuring laser communication systems and hyperspectral imaging technology. A partnership with Simera Sense is advancing AI-powered hyperspectral Earth observation capabilities.
The Fortis VPX modular computing architecture represents another strategic component — a hardened processing solution currently undergoing evaluation by defense prime contractors and systems integrators for satellite, unmanned vehicle, and terrestrial applications.
Fiscal 2025 revenue reached $3.38 million, declining from $4.7 million in 2024. Sidus attributed this reduction to a strategic pivot away from traditional contract work toward enhanced-value platform and data service offerings.
Cost of revenue increased 48% to $9.1 million, reflecting depreciation from the satellite constellation, elevated material and labor expenditures, and supply chain constraints. This expansion drove gross losses to $5.7 million.
Selling, general, and administrative expenses climbed to $22.3 million, incorporating a $4.5 million non-cash impairment charge related to LizzieSat-1. Annual net loss totaled $29.47 million, compared to $17.5 million in the previous year.
Cash position concluded the year at $43.2 million, advancing from $15.7 million, following $53.3 million raised through equity offerings. Sidus commenced 2026 with zero outstanding term debt obligations.
Craig indicated the company’s strategic priorities over the subsequent 12 to 18 months encompass LizzieSat-4 and -5 production, initial Fortis VPX customer implementations, and broadening its defense contract portfolio.
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