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The Golden Dome program is reshaping company capitalizations across the aerospace industry, benefiting companies like Redwire and Voyager while creating existential pressures for distressed firms like Momentus.
Under the earlier Johnson Space Center services contract, Voyager supported NASA's Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research payloads.
Voyager positions the new contract as a reinforcement of its role as a mission management service provider with end-to-end human spaceflight execution experience.
Voyager plans to apply its integrated mission management model to commercial platforms such as Starlab to support payload readiness, safety, and mission execution as operations shift to commercially led orbital infrastructure.
Scott Rodriguez is vice president, Government Programs at Voyager and emphasizes that exploration depends on execution and that Voyager makes missions routine, safe, and repeatable by integrating payloads, managing risk, and executing in real time.
Voyager expects to onboard three payload missions over the next quarter under the new contract.
Voyager will manage interfaces between payload providers and NASA and ensure that hardware and experiments meet safety and certification requirements for ISS missions.
Voyager's approach integrates payloads, manages risk, and operates in real time to differentiate the company in the ISS mission services market.
Voyager Technologies secured a US patent covering its process for manufacturing crystals in microgravity to support optical communications.
The multi-year contract framework gives Voyager a predictable channel for recurring mission management work while giving NASA flexibility to align task orders with evolving ISS needs.
Voyager will deliver end-to-end services that span payload integration, real-time mission operations, safety and compliance oversight, and post-mission closeout activities.
Under the earlier Johnson Space Center services contract, Voyager conducted waste deployment operations using the Bishop Airlock on the ISS.
The new award builds directly on Voyager's previous performance under an earlier NASA Johnson Space Center services contract during which Voyager executed more than 50 task orders.
Voyager views the early missions as part of a steady pipeline of task orders tied to ongoing ISS operations and user requirements.
Voyager Technologies (NYSE: VOYG) received a $24.5 million Indefinite Delivery/Indefinite Quantity contract from NASA’s Johnson Space Center on February 9, 2026.
The IDIQ contract with NASA’s Johnson Space Center is a four-year agreement that tasks Voyager Technologies with mission management and execution through 2030.
Voyager Technologies is preparing to onboard three new payload missions in the upcoming quarter.
Voyager Technologies supported payloads for NASA’s Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research.
Starlab is Voyager Technologies’ joint-venture commercial space station.
Voyager Technologies managed waste deployment operations through the Bishop Airlock on the International Space Station.