Hungary Launches HUSAT Satellite Program, Strengthens US Defense Ties

April 8, 2026
Hungary Launches HUSAT Satellite Program, Strengthens US Defense Ties
  • Hungary has launched its first sovereign geosynchronous satellite program, HUSAT, with Northrop Grumman as the satellite supplier and a collaboration that includes 4iG Space and Defence Technologies.

  • The project emphasizes speed, scale, and proven production capabilities to deliver ready-now technologies for allied security and resilience in Europe.

  • The satellite will enable secure Ka-band communications for government and commercial use across the region.

  • International partners are contributing components: Vertex for ground antenna systems, TelePIX for imaging payloads, and MetaSensing for synthetic aperture radar capabilities.

  • The initiative builds on a memorandum of understanding among the collaborating companies to pursue space and defence programs.

  • The collaboration aims to strengthen US-Hungary relations and national security through advanced space technologies.

  • Previously, 4iG signaled ongoing U.S.-Hungary space industry ties by planning investments in Axiom Space, broadening strategic ambitions beyond Hungary’s borders.

  • The program signals Europe’s shift toward sovereign space capabilities, allowing countries to control satellite tasking, data, and operations amid geopolitical tensions and cost pressures.

  • In addition to HUSAT, 4iG is collaborating with L3Harris Technologies to integrate local production and support for the HIMARS artillery rocket system, widening defense ties with the United States.

  • HUSAT is part of a broader plan that envisions a constellation of eight Earth observation satellites, with 4iG Space and Defense Technologies managing the imaging platforms.

  • 4iG also signed an agreement with Apex to explore a joint venture for building small satellites in Europe to meet demand for large-scale constellations.

  • The HUSAT platform will use Northrop Grumman’s GEOStar-3 spacecraft, a proven backbone with a track record of more than 50 missions.

Summary based on 2 sources


Get a daily email with more Space News stories

More Stories