Mission Plan · Founding to Flight

Apogee Launch Co. — Earth to Space in 24 Months

A founding-to-flight program plan for a 5-person team with $200M and 24 months to put its first rocket across the Kármán line (100 km). Program Day 1 = Jul 1, 2026. Every one of the 730 days is planned below.

$200M
Funding
5
Core employees
730
Days planned
100 km
Target apogee
10
Program phases

Phase roadmap

Ten non-overlapping phases spanning Day 1–730. Each has a single accountable lead and a hard exit gate.

PhaseDaysWksLeadGoalExit gate
1. Foundation & Setup 1–45 6 E5 Stand up the company, facility, compliance, and tooling. Entity, ITAR, facility, PLM, insurance all live.
2. Mission & System Requirements 46–105 9 E1 Lock the mission, vehicle architecture, and requirements. System Requirements Review (SRR) signed off.
3. Preliminary Design (→ PDR) 106–195 13 E3 Mature every subsystem to a coherent preliminary design. Preliminary Design Review (PDR) passed.
4. Detailed Design (→ CDR) 196–315 17 E4 Release build-ready drawings and commit long-lead buys. Critical Design Review (CDR) passed; drawings released.
5. Component Fab & Subsystem Test 316–435 17 E4 Build and bench-qualify every subsystem. All subsystems pass qualification & data sign-off.
6. Propulsion Hot-Fire Campaign 436–540 15 E2 Qualify the engine from ignition to full mission duration. Engine qualified; flight engine accepted.
7. Vehicle Integration & Stage Qual 541–630 13 E1 Integrate the flight vehicle and qualify the full stage. Integrated static fire passed; vehicle qualified.
8. Launch Site Prep & FAA Licensing 631–690 9 E5 Secure the license, range, and site; rehearse the launch. FAA license granted; wet dress rehearsal complete.
9. Launch Campaign & Flight 691–715 4 E1 Fly the vehicle across the Kármán line (100 km). Successful flight to space; vehicle & range safed.
10. Post-Flight Analysis & Next Steps 716–730 2 E1 Reduce the data, prove the result, and set the roadmap. Flight report published; next-vehicle roadmap defined.

Capital plan

Planned spend against the $200M envelope. Reserves ~$12M of contingency unspent at flight.

Cumulative spend vs $200M funding cap

$0M$50M$100M$150M$200M Funding cap $200M M1M6M12M18M24
X: program month (M1–M24). Y: planned cumulative spend ($M). Source: plan model (CUM_SPEND_M).

Budget allocation

Propulsion dev & test: $48M (24.0%)Tooling & mfg equipment: $25M (12.5%)Structures & materials: $22M (11.0%)Test facilities & stands: $20M (10.0%)Avionics & GNC: $14M (7.0%)Launch, range & FAA: $9M (4.5%)Salaries (5 core, 24 mo): $7M (3.5%)Ground support equipment: $6M (3.0%)Insurance & legal: $6M (3.0%)Software / IT / PLM: $3M (1.5%)Contingency reserve: $40M (20.0%)$200Mallocated
  • Propulsion dev & test $48M
  • Tooling & mfg equipment $25M
  • Structures & materials $22M
  • Test facilities & stands $20M
  • Avionics & GNC $14M
  • Launch, range & FAA $9M
  • Salaries (5 core, 24 mo) $7M
  • Ground support equipment $6M
  • Insurance & legal $6M
  • Software / IT / PLM $3M
  • Contingency reserve $40M

The 5-person crew

Lean core team; everything else is contracted or vendor-supplied.

#RolePhase ownership
E1 CEO & Chief Systems Engineer
Program management, requirements, GNC oversight, launch director
Requirements, Integration, Launch, Post-flight
E2 Propulsion Lead
Engine design, feed system, hot-fire test campaign
Hot-fire campaign
E3 Structures, Avionics & GNC Lead
Airframe, flight computer, flight software, trajectory
Preliminary design
E4 Manufacturing & Test Lead
Fabrication, tooling, vehicle integration, test stands
Detailed design, Component fab
E5 Operations, Regulatory & Supply Lead
FAA/ITAR, procurement, range, finance, insurance
Foundation, FAA licensing

Milestones & gates

17 gates from kickoff to flight.

DayDateMilestoneLeadGate
1 Jul 1, 2026 Company formation & program kickoff E5 Kickoff
45 Aug 14, 2026 Foundation complete (facility, ITAR, banking, PLM) E5 Gate
105 Oct 13, 2026 System Requirements Review (SRR) E1 Review
195 Jan 11, 2027 Preliminary Design Review (PDR) E3 Review
250 Mar 7, 2027 Long-lead procurement committed E5 Gate
315 May 11, 2027 Critical Design Review (CDR) E4 Review
380 Jul 15, 2027 First tank proof-pressure test E4 Test
435 Sep 8, 2027 All subsystems bench-qualified E4 Gate
470 Oct 13, 2027 First engine hot-fire (ignition → short burn) E2 Test
520 Dec 2, 2027 Full-duration hot-fire / engine qualified E2 Test
600 Feb 20, 2028 Integrated stage static fire E1 Test
630 Mar 21, 2028 Vehicle qualification complete E1 Gate
665 Apr 25, 2028 FAA launch license granted E5 Regulatory
690 May 20, 2028 Wet dress rehearsal complete E5 Test
705 Jun 4, 2028 Launch Readiness Review (LRR) E1 Review
710 Jun 9, 2028 LAUNCH — cross the Kármán line (100 km) E1 FLIGHT
730 Jun 29, 2028 Post-flight report & program review E1 Gate

Risk register

The 24-month timeline and 5-person headcount are the top risks — disclosed, not hidden.

RiskLikelihoodImpactOwnerMitigation
24-month schedule too aggressive end-to-end High High E1 Suborbital scope, parallel tracks, contractor surge, fixed gates
Engine combustion instability Med High E2 Incremental hot-fire, injector iteration, stability aids
FAA Part 450 license slips past Day 665 Med High E5 Pre-application by Day 30; draft application by Day 400
Long-lead supplier delay High High E5 Dual-source, order at CDR, buffer stock on critical parts
Key-person dependency (only 5 core staff) High High E1 Contractors, documentation, cross-training, on-call rota
Tank / structural qualification failure Med High E4 Coupon tests, early proof testing, design margin
Test-campaign cost overrun Med Med E1 $40M reserve, fixed-price test-stand lease, staged commit
Weather scrubs at launch window Med Low E1 Wide launch window, recycle procedures, backup dates

Day-by-day planner

Pick any month, then any day. All 730 days have a plan.

DayDatePhasePrimary focusLeadSpend