Trump's $1.5 trillion defense plan supercharges Space Force
The Trump administration is teeing up a massive expansion of military spending, with space and missile defense among the biggest beneficiaries.
The White House's fiscal 2027 budget blueprint, released April 3, calls for $1.5 trillion in national defense spending, a roughly 42% jump that would shatter previous records. The pitch: rebuild the defense industrial base and accelerate next-gen systems, with particular focus on space-enabled missile defense for the Golden Dome for America program.
Space Force is a big winner
The service's budget would surge to more than $71 billion — about $40 billion above its 2026 level. But the news is not just the size of the request, it's how the administration wants to pay for it.
Roughly $350 billion of the defense total would come through budget reconciliation, alongside $1.15 trillion in traditional appropriations. The Space Force is deeply tied to that strategy. About $12 billion of its request would flow through reconciliation, much of it in procurement and R&D accounts that normally sit in the base budget.
Reconciliation allows the majority party to move spending with a simple Senate majority. It's still unclear whether Congress will accept using reconciliation to fund defense at this scale.
Missile defense increase
The proposal includes about $17 billion for the Golden Dome missile defense shield, with just $400 million in the traditional budget and the rest dependent on reconciliation.
The budget supports a significant expansion of tracking constellations. Funding for low Earth orbit missile-tracking satellites would jump by nearly $2 billion, with another $700 million for medium Earth orbit systems. Programs to field sensors capable of tracking moving targets from space would get a $2 billion boost, including about $800 million routed through mandatory funding.
Funding for national security space launches would increase from $1.3 billion in fiscal year 2026 for 13 launches to $4.2 billion for 22 launches in fiscal year 2027. The budget also seeds new infrastructure: a $1.5 billion Space Data Network, automated satellite command-and-control systems and expanded procurement of proliferated LEO communications satellites.
Altogether, the Space Force request breaks down to $40.6 billion for R&D, $19 billion for procurement, $9.6 billion for operations and maintenance, and $1.8 billion for personnel.
Space Force to accelerate programs
"Our team has done a really good job of explaining why Space Force capabilities are so critical," Gen. Chance Saltzman, the Space Force's top officer, said last week at the Mitchell Institute's Spacepower Security Forum. "The leadership … agree with our advocacy that space capabilities need to grow."
The plan, he said, is to scale existing programs and compress timelines. "You can't wait five, six, seven years to be where we need to be," Saltzman said. "We need to be there in two years, three years."
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