Virgin Galactic continues to make solid progress on developing its next generation spaceships, targeting the first research spaceflight in summer 2026 and private astronaut flights beginning in February 2026.
The company remains focused on cost control, with Q1 2025 operating expenses down 21% year-over-year to $89 million, and a strong balance sheet with $567 million in cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities.
Capital expenditures increased to $46 million in Q1 as production of the first two Delta-class spaceships advances; free cash flow was negative $122 million, but management expects quarterly cash burn to decline below $100 million by Q4 2025 and to continue decreasing into 2026.
Virgin Galactic plans to reopen ticket sales in Q1 2026 with a wave-based, white-glove onboarding process, expecting higher prices than the previous $600,000 per seat and aiming for a one- to two-year backlog; initial flight cadence is targeted at 125 flights per year with six seats per flight.
The company is exploring incremental revenue opportunities for its carrier aircraft platform (including government and research uses), advancing feasibility for a new spaceport in Italy, and projects steady-state annual revenue of $450 million and EBITDA of $90–100 million once two spaceships are in service.