SpaceX Uses $20 Billion Bridge Loan to Cut Elon Musk’s Debt Costs in Half Before IPO
May 21, 2026 – 8:48 pm
Summary
SpaceX’s initial public offering (IPO) filing reveals a significant financial move. The company secured a $20 billion bridge loan from prominent banks to replace and reduce high-interest debt from X and xAI. This strategic refinancing cut Musk’s combined annual interest costs by approximately half, to around $900 million.
Elon Musk’s decision to consolidate his companies under one conglomerate is bearing fruit. The IPO filing details a $20 billion bridge loan obtained from Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, and Morgan Stanley. This loan served to retire $17.5 billion in high-interest junk debt accumulated by X and xAI.
The financial improvement is notable. The original junk bonds and leveraged loans carried interest rates up to 12.5%, whereas the bridge loan offered a much lower 4.58% effective rate as of March 31st.
Debt Trail and Refinancing
The debt trail begins with Musk’s 2022 acquisition of Twitter, which left the company with $12.5 billion in borrowings. Banks that underwrote this deal struggled to sell the subsequent debt for years. Subsequently, xAI acquired X in March 2025, and Morgan Stanley facilitated an additional $5 billion debt raise for xAI six months later.
When SpaceX acquired xAI in February 2026, it assumed a substantial debt pile. The bridge loan was structured to repay this entire amount, clearing SpaceX’s balance sheet before its anticipated IPO, the largest in history. SpaceX aims to list on Nasdaq under the ticker SPCX with a valuation of approximately $1.75 trillion, targeting a raise of up to $75 billion.
Complex Financial Landscape
While the bridge loan is a significant development, SpaceX’s financial position is multifaceted. The IPO filing includes $9 billion in additional "other financings" and an undrawn revolving credit facility increased from $1.5 billion to up to $5 billion. These factors, along with Musk’s controversial government affairs involvement and the viability of orbital AI data centers, contribute to a comprehensive risk assessment for potential investors.