Space Force budget boom meets Capitol Hill reality
House appropriators last week advanced a $1.07 trillion defense bill built entirely around funding that has a clear legislative path, while leaving out an additional $350 billion the administration wants through reconciliation.
House Republican leaders continue to keep the door open to another party-line package, but Senate appropriators have publicly expressed doubts that another reconciliation bill will happen.
What this means for Space Force
The administration's full 2027 plan includes $71.1 billion for Space Force, but roughly $12 billion of that funding depends on reconciliation. The House appropriations bill provides about $55.5 billion, still a substantial increase from the roughly $31 billion enacted in 2026.
A party-line reconciliation bill remains a priority for some House Republicans, who see it as the most viable path to significantly increase defense spending without reopening broader budget fights. House GOP leaders continue to encourage members to keep working toward another package. But skepticism is growing on Capitol Hill, particularly in the Senate.
The administration's plans for Golden Dome, the proposed layered missile defense architecture, rely heavily on reconciliation funding. The administration is seeking more than $17 billion for Golden Dome through reconciliation.
Funding ‘Objective Force’
In a new white paper, the National Security Space Association is urging lawmakers to approve the full $71 billion request for the Space Force.
Rather than comparing the Space Force budget to last year's $31 billion topline, NSSA argues Congress should evaluate the request against the service's long-term "Objective Force 2040" plan, which outlines the capabilities the Space Force says it needs to operate in a contested space environment.
With reconciliation now on shaky political ground, the paper argues that the Space Force's larger budget request should not be viewed as optional supplemental spending or a partisan budget maneuver. Instead, the NSSA says, Congress should fund the service against the force design it says will be required over the next two decades.
NSSA notes that space control, missile warning and tracking, command and control, satellite communications, launch infrastructure, training and commercial integration are no longer niche capabilities or future add-ons but are now core functions.
The big question now is whether Congress is willing to pay for that vision through reconciliation, regular appropriations or some combination of the two.
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