Launching a spacecraft shouldn’t feel like navigating the dark.
Yet today, for many mission teams, it still does.
Launch options are fragmented, incentives are biased, and critical decisions are often made with incomplete or asymmetric information.
Starviax is a space launch logistics and mission planning platform designed to help teams plan, compare, and execute spacecraft launches with clarity and confidence — from Earth orbit to the Moon and deep space.
We are building what the space industry still lacks:
a neutral logistics layer for launch planning, similar to what Flexport created for global freight.
Practically, this means:
— objective comparison of launch vehicles and deployment scenarios,
— mission-specific optimization across cost, schedule, and risk,
— and structured planning tools that teams can actually use in real missions.
A major focus for Starviax is supporting emerging space regions — the Middle East (MENA), Africa, and Asia.
These regions are developing satellites, startups, university missions, and national programs — but often without access to transparent planning tools or global launch decision frameworks. We want to lower that barrier.
Our goal is simple:
to make access to space more predictable, more efficient, and more achievable — especially for teams building the next generation of space capabilities.
Starviax is being built with real missions, real constraints, and real partners.
And this is just the beginning.
Yet today, for many mission teams, it still does.
Launch options are fragmented, incentives are biased, and critical decisions are often made with incomplete or asymmetric information.
Starviax is a space launch logistics and mission planning platform designed to help teams plan, compare, and execute spacecraft launches with clarity and confidence — from Earth orbit to the Moon and deep space.
We are building what the space industry still lacks:
a neutral logistics layer for launch planning, similar to what Flexport created for global freight.
Practically, this means:
— objective comparison of launch vehicles and deployment scenarios,
— mission-specific optimization across cost, schedule, and risk,
— and structured planning tools that teams can actually use in real missions.
A major focus for Starviax is supporting emerging space regions — the Middle East (MENA), Africa, and Asia.
These regions are developing satellites, startups, university missions, and national programs — but often without access to transparent planning tools or global launch decision frameworks. We want to lower that barrier.
Our goal is simple:
to make access to space more predictable, more efficient, and more achievable — especially for teams building the next generation of space capabilities.
Starviax is being built with real missions, real constraints, and real partners.
And this is just the beginning.