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How to Buy SpaceX Stocks

SpaceX finally went public on June 12, 2026, after years of speculation about when (or if) it would ever happen. The IPO raised $75 billion, making it the biggest stock market debut in history, and shares now trade on the Nasdaq under the ticker SPCX. If you have been waiting for a simple way to own a piece of Elon Musk's rocket and satellite empire, that wait is over. This guide walks you through exactly how to buy SpaceX stock, what to watch out for, and how to manage the risk that comes with a brand-new, highly volatile listing.

Key Moments

  • SpaceX IPO'd on June 12, 2026, pricing at $135 a share and raising $75 billion.
  • Shares opened around $150 and closed day one near $161, valuing the company above $2 trillion.
  • The stock has since been volatile, trading between roughly $147 and $226 in its first weeks, so checking the current SpaceX stock price before you trade matters more than usual right now.
  • SpaceX trades on the Nasdaq under ticker SPCX and can be bought through almost any regular brokerage account, no accreditation required.
  • The company is not yet profitable, posting a net loss of $4.9 billion in 2025 due to heavy AI spending after its xAI acquisition.

How to Buy SpaceX Stocks

Buying SpaceX stock today is no different from buying any other listed company. You open a brokerage account, search for SPCX, decide how many shares you want, and place an order. The tricky part is doing it sensibly: picking a trustworthy platform, understanding what you actually own, and managing a position in a stock that has already swung by tens of dollars within days of listing. Below are seven practical steps to do it right.

1. Understand What You Are Buying

When you buy SPCX shares, you are buying a small piece of a company that builds rockets, runs the Starlink satellite internet network, and now also owns xAI and the social platform X following a 2026 acquisition. Three businesses drive its revenue: Starlink, rocket launches, and AI, with Starlink alone responsible for the majority of sales. The company grew revenue 33% in 2025 but actually lost money that year because of how much it is spending on AI infrastructure. Know that you are buying a growth stock with real risk attached, it's not a steady profitable blue-chip.

2. Choose a Regulated Broker or Trading Platform

Pick a regulated broker before you do anything else. Most major US brokers such as Fidelity, Charles Schwab, and Robinhood now list SPCX, and international traders often prefer CFD and multi-asset platforms instead. If you go that route, look for a broker that lets you download MetaTrader 4 or use the MetaTrader 5 trading platform, since both are widely trusted, well-regulated, and easy to use even if you are new to investing.

3. Understand the Difference Between Stocks and CFDs

Buying actual SPCX shares means you legally own a piece of SpaceX, can hold it for as long as you like, and may benefit from shareholder rights like voting or dividends if they are ever introduced. A CFD is different: you are simply speculating on the stock's price movement without ever owning the underlying share, which means you can trade with leverage but also lose more than your initial deposit. Short term traders prefer CFDs for flexibility.

4. Assess Your Risk

SpaceX stock has already proven how volatile a fresh, massively hyped IPO can be, swinging from a high near $226 down to around $147 within its first couple of weeks of trading. The company is not currently profitable, reporting a $4.9 billion net loss in 2025, so its share price is largely driven by future expectations rather than current earnings. Only invest money you can afford to lose, and think honestly about whether you can handle big day to day price swings without panic selling. A small position sized to your overall portfolio is usually smarter than going all in on a single hyped stock.

5. Analyse the Stock Before Entering

Before placing any order, take a few minutes to check the latest SpaceX stock price, recent trading volume, and any news that might be moving it that day, since sentiment on this stock changes quickly. Look at analyst price targets too, some firms see fair value well below the current trading price, while others remain bullish on Starlink and AI growth, so opinions vary widely. It also helps to track the IPO lockup schedule, since SpaceX is letting early employees and investors sell shares earlier than usual, and a wave of insider selling can pressure the price. A few minutes of research can save you from buying at a short term peak.

6. Place Your Order Correctly

Once you are ready, log into your brokerage account, search for the ticker SPCX, and choose between a market order or a limit order. A market order buys immediately at whatever the current price is, which is fast but risky on a volatile stock, while a limit order lets you set the exact price you are willing to pay and only fills if the market reaches it. Many platforms, including those that support the MetaTrader 5 trading platform, also let you buy fractional shares, so you do not need hundreds of dollars to get started. Double check the order type, quantity, and price before confirming, since mistakes on fast moving (speculative) stocks can be costly.

7. Set a StopLoss and Take Profit

Given how sharply SPCX has already moved since its debut, a stop-loss order is one of the simplest ways to protect yourself from a sudden drop while you are not watching the market. Decide in advance what price would make you exit if the trade goes wrong, and set your stop-loss there rather than reacting emotionally in the moment. At the same time, pick a realistic target price or a long-term holding plan, so you are not just guessing when to take profits. Writing this plan down before you buy, rather than after, is what separates disciplined investors from people who get shaken out by normal volatility.

Details
Author
Mary Wild
Last Updated
09/07/26
Reading Time
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