SpaceX Grants Musk 1 Billion Shares for $7.5 Trillion Valuation and 1 Million-Person Mars Colony
Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · May 20
SpaceX Grants Musk 1 Billion Shares for $7.5 Trillion Valuation and 1 Million-Person Mars Colony
8 articles · Updated · Bloomberg · May 20
A January board award gives Elon Musk 1 billion performance-based restricted Class B shares, disclosed in a SpaceX filing with the SEC on Wednesday.
The full payout requires SpaceX to reach a $7.5 trillion market capitalization and establish a permanent human colony on Mars with at least 1 million inhabitants.
The incentive package also ties Musk’s compensation to building data centers in space, extending the company’s targets beyond rockets and satellites.
The filing shows SpaceX linking executive pay to long-range milestones that would push the company from launch services toward off-Earth infrastructure and settlement.
With investors protesting his control, is Musk's $7.5 trillion pay package truly about Mars or securing power before SpaceX's IPO?
Elon Musk's compensation is tied to colonizing Mars. So why is he now prioritizing a city on the Moon?
SpaceX’s $7.5 Trillion IPO: Musk’s Mars Colony Incentive, AI Ambitions, and the New Era of Corporate Governance
Overview
On May 20, 2026, SpaceX announced plans for an initial public offering and approved a groundbreaking compensation package for CEO Elon Musk. This new plan directly links Musk’s rewards to achieving a $7.5 trillion company valuation and building a 1 million-person colony on Mars, aiming to align his personal incentives with SpaceX’s boldest long-term goals. The company’s official IPO filing revealed detailed financial information and board structure for the first time, setting a new standard for executive compensation in the aerospace industry and marking a pivotal moment in SpaceX’s journey toward ambitious space exploration milestones.