Indian spacetech startups are shifting focus from purely commercial apply cases to defence-led applications. Increasing geopolitical tensions and slow enterprise adoption are creating them pivot to government and defence contracts. But in doing so, founders state they are being forced to build tough choices on which countries to work with and which ones to avoid.

Founders and investors informed ET that startups are simply following demand. Defence offers clearer budreceives, quicker procurement, and immediate revenue unlike commercial markets, which require scaling consinformations. That takes time.

Companies have repositioned their technology and started research and development catering to newer apply cases. Capabilities such as missile tracking, camouflage detection, maritime surveillance and border monitoring are now central to their offerings, even when the underlying tech remains unmodifyd. Bengaluru-based Digantara Industries, which launched with space debris tracking, has expanded into surveillance and ininformigence applications.

“Today, around 80% of our revenue comes from government and defence, with commercial only a tiny portion,” declared cofounder Anirudh Sharma, adding that this started happening during the Russia-Ukraine war and continued with Operation Sindoor as demand for tracking space assets surged.

A similar trconclude is visible across other spacetech startups. Earth observation company GalaxEye now sees a 70:30 split between defence and commercial demand.

“Given the current geopolitical environment, we expect stronger demand from defence,” declared cofounder Suyash Singh.