Skyroot Vikram-1 Locks In Big Historic Launch Window

Avinash
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Avinash
Avinash is a dedicated MBA professional with expertise in business operations, team management, and AI-driven content development. Backed by global certifications and published HR research, he...
Mission Aagaman will carry domestic and international payloads to a targeted 450 km orbit during its July–August 2026 launch window.

Quick Take

  • Skyroot Vikram-1 has a launch window of July 12 to August 4, 2026, from Sriharikota.
  • Mission Aagaman targets a 450 km orbit and carries domestic plus international customer payloads.
  • A successful flight makes it India’s first privately built rocket to reach orbit.

Skyroot Vikram-1 will fly between July 12 and August 4, 2026, in a maiden test flight from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota, the Hyderabad startup announced on July 2, 2026. Named Mission Aagaman, meaning “the arrival”, it is India’s first bid to send a privately built rocket to orbit.

The company confirmed the window on its official channels, adding that the final lift-off date depends on assembly, testing, weather, and range clearance (Skyroot Aerospace announcement). All stages of the rocket are already integrated and stacked at the launch pad. The flight will carry a mix of domestic and international customer payloads.

StartupFeed Insight

The real story is not the rocket, it is the order book waiting behind it. A KPMG valuation report pegs Skyroot’s Space Systems arm at Rs 100.6 Cr in FY26 revenue with a Rs 605.4 Cr backlog, so revenue exists even before orbit. Rival small-satellite operators and every Indian spacetech founder should watch this window closely. If Vikram-1 reaches its 450 km target cleanly, StartupFeed expects Skyroot to sign at least one large multi-launch contract within six months, converting a demo into a real launch business. By Avinash.

Skyroot Vikram-1 Mission Details

Skyroot Vikram-1 is a seven-storey, multi-stage orbital rocket built to place small satellites in low Earth orbit (LEO). The maiden mission targets an altitude of 450 km with a 60-degree orbital inclination. The launch window runs from July 12 to August 4, 2026, from the first launch pad at Sriharikota.

Metric Detail Notes
Mission Name Aagaman (“the arrival”) Skyroot’s second mission after Vikram-S
Launch Window July 12 to August 4, 2026 Subject to weather and range clearance
Launch Site Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota First launch pad, SDSC-SHAR
Target Orbit 450 km, 60-degree inclination Low Earth Orbit (LEO)
Payload Capacity Up to 350 kg Domestic and international customers
Vehicle Status Fully integrated and stacked As of July 1, 2026

The most striking detail is that this test flight is partly commercial. Skyroot is carrying paying customers on its very first orbital attempt, according to the company.

About Skyroot Aerospace

Skyroot Aerospace designs and builds the Vikram series of small-satellite launch vehicles. Founded in 2018 by former ISRO scientists Pawan Kumar Chandana and Naga Bharath Daka, it is headquartered in Hyderabad, Telangana. It became India’s first spacetech unicorn in May 2026 and runs a “space taxi” model of dedicated, on-demand launches. Key backers include GIC, Temasek, Sherpalo Ventures, and BlackRock.

What Does This Mean for India’s Space Sector?

A successful Vikram-1 flight would make Skyroot the first private Indian firm to reach orbit, a threshold ISRO alone has held. The mission builds on Vikram-S, the suborbital rocket Skyroot flew on November 18, 2022, the first private Indian rocket to reach space. Chief Executive Pawan Kumar Chandana said ground testing has clear limits.

“The single most important objective of Mission Aagaman is to capture the real in-flight performance data from every system on Vikram-1. This data cannot be fully replicated through ground testing,” said Pawan Kumar Chandana, Co-founder and CEO, Skyroot Aerospace.

The flight matters because it validates a homegrown launch stack. India’s space economy is projected to grow from about $8.4 Bn (Rs 80,052 Cr) today to $44 Bn (Rs 4,19,320 Cr) by 2033, per industry estimates. Private launch capability is a core enabler of that growth.

How Is Vikram-1 Built?

Vikram-1 uses an all-carbon composite structure and propulsion systems developed fully in-house. The rocket runs on 3D-printed engines and high-thrust solid-fuel boosters, a stack Skyroot built for rapid manufacturing and a high launch cadence. Prime Minister Narendra Modi unveiled the flight-ready rocket in November 2025 during the opening of Skyroot’s Infinity campus.

Skyroot’s propulsion families span the solid Kalam series, liquid Raman series, and cryogenic Dhawan series, all built at its Max-Q and Infinity campuses in Hyderabad. The company says its all-carbon build helps compress launch vehicle assembly to a fraction of traditional timelines, a key edge as it chases global small-satellite demand.

Is Skyroot Ready to Turn Commercial?

Skyroot plans full commercial flights after one or two successful orbital demonstrations, the company said. A KPMG valuation report forecasts revenue of Rs 977 Cr in FY27, rising to Rs 2,039 Cr in FY28 and Rs 13,205 Cr by FY32, driven by launch services and satellite systems. The report projects EBITDA positivity in FY29 at Rs 285 Cr, against a Rs 130.3 Cr loss in FY26.

Financial Marker Figure Period
Projected Revenue Rs 977 Cr FY27
Projected Revenue Rs 13,205 Cr FY32
EBITDA Rs 285 Cr (positive) FY29
Valuation $1.1 Bn (Rs 10,483 Cr) May 2026

Skyroot raised nearly $60 Mn (Rs 572 Cr) in May 2026 at a pre-money valuation of $1.1 Bn (Rs 10,483 Cr), co-led by Sherpalo Ventures and GIC, taking cumulative funding to about $160 Mn (Rs 1,525 Cr), per company disclosures. That capital is funding Vikram-1 cadence and the heavier Vikram-2.

What’s Next

All eyes now turn to the exact lift-off date inside the July 12 to August 4 window, pending final ISRO and IN-SPACe clearances (IN-SPACe official website). If the demo succeeds, Skyroot targets a high-cadence commercial programme and a growing contract book. Will Vikram-1 make India’s first private trip to orbit on the first try?

Frequently Asked Questions

When will Skyroot Vikram-1 launch?
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Skyroot Vikram-1 has a launch window between July 12 and August 4, 2026, from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota. The exact date depends on final assembly, testing, weather, and range clearance from ISRO and IN-SPACe.

What does Skyroot Aerospace do?
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Skyroot Aerospace builds the Vikram series of rockets to launch small satellites into orbit. Founded in 2018 in Hyderabad by former ISRO scientists Pawan Kumar Chandana and Naga Bharath Daka, it became India’s first spacetech unicorn in May 2026.

What payload can Vikram-1 carry?
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Vikram-1 can carry small satellites weighing up to 350 kg into low Earth orbit. Its maiden mission targets a 450 km orbit at a 60-degree inclination and carries a mix of domestic and international customer payloads on a partly commercial test flight.

Why is the Skyroot Vikram-1 launch important?
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A successful flight would make Skyroot the first private Indian company to reach orbit, a milestone held only by ISRO. It validates a homegrown launch stack and supports India’s growing commercial space sector, projected to expand sharply through 2033.

How much funding has Skyroot raised?
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Skyroot has raised about $160 Mn (Rs 1,525 Cr) cumulatively. In May 2026 it raised nearly $60 Mn (Rs 572 Cr) at a $1.1 Bn (Rs 10,483 Cr) valuation, co-led by Sherpalo Ventures and GIC, with backers including Temasek and BlackRock.

Written by Avinash. Have a tip? Write to us at editorial@startupfeed.in.

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Avinash is a dedicated MBA professional with expertise in business operations, team management, and AI-driven content development. Backed by global certifications and published HR research, he leverages innovation and strategic management to drive organizational success.