CALIFORNIA: SpaceX placed 53 Starlink satellites into low Earth orbit over two Falcon 9 launches on Saturday, February 21, adding to the company’s growing broadband constellation and extending its record for reusing orbital-class rocket boosters. The missions lifted off from launch sites in California and Florida and both first stages returned for recovery on SpaceX drone ships, continuing a pattern of rapid turnaround operations for Falcon 9 flights.

The first launch carried 25 Starlink satellites and lifted off at 4:04 a.m. U.S. Eastern time from Space Launch Complex 4E at Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. SpaceX flew a previously used Falcon 9 first stage designated B1063, which completed its 31st flight before separating and descending to a landing on the drone ship Of Course I Still Love You in the Pacific Ocean, according to mission tracking updates released after liftoff.
The second mission launched at 10:47 p.m. U.S. Eastern time from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida, carrying 28 Starlink satellites. SpaceX used booster B1067, which completed its 33rd flight, a new company record for the number of missions flown by a single Falcon 9 first stage. After stage separation, the booster landed on the drone ship A Shortfall of Gravitas in the Atlantic Ocean while the upper stage continued toward orbit.
Record booster reuse
Saturday’s pair of missions underscored how central recoverable hardware has become to SpaceX’s launch cadence. Falcon 9 is designed to land and reuse its first stage, a capability SpaceX has applied across commercial, civil and internal missions, including the frequent deployment of Starlink satellites. The two flights were SpaceX’s 21st and 22nd Falcon 9 launches of 2026, reflecting a steady tempo of missions from both U.S. coasts using a mix of newer and heavily flown boosters.
Starlink is SpaceX’s satellite internet system, built around thousands of spacecraft in low Earth orbit that relay data between user terminals and ground infrastructure. SpaceX has said the network supports broadband service across large portions of the world, with capacity that can vary by region based on satellite coverage and ground connectivity. The latest additions brought the number of active Starlink satellites to more than 9,700, expanding the constellation’s available coverage and throughput as new satellites are phased into operational service.
Starlink mission operations
After each launch, SpaceX reported that the Starlink satellites were deployed, a standard milestone that occurs once the upper stage reaches the targeted orbit and releases the payload. The satellites are designed to maneuver independently after separation, raising or adjusting their orbits before joining the broader constellation. SpaceX has used a range of orbital paths from Florida and California to distribute Starlink satellites into different shells and inclinations, supporting coverage across mid-latitude regions and higher-latitude areas.
The dual-launch day also highlighted the operational approach behind SpaceX’s high flight rate: overlapping launch site activity, sea-based booster recoveries and repeat use of flight-proven hardware. With two successful recoveries and payload deployments on February 21, SpaceX added 53 more satellites to the Starlink constellation while extending its booster reuse record, keeping Falcon 9 at the center of the company’s routine access to orbit. – By Content Syndication Services.
