

WASHINGTON — Congressional appropriators on Jan. 20 released a fiscal 2026 defense spending bill that funds the U.S. Space Force at $26 billion, matching the administration’s request, while faulting the Pentagon for failing to provide detail on its plans for the Golden Dome missile defense initiative.
The bill, part of a $1.2 trillion appropriations package, provides $838.7 billion for defense, about $8.4 billion above the administration’s request.
Appropriators said in a statement following the bill’s release that they are making “steady progress in fully funding the government before the January 30 deadline” to avert a shutdown.
The $26 billion appropriation for the Space Force does not capture the full scope of the service’s funding. The Space Force is also benefiting from mandatory defense spending approved last year under the reconciliation package known as the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act,” enacted July 4, 2025. Roughly $13.8 billion from that law is being counted toward the Space Force’s fiscal 2026 budget, largely for missile defense satellite systems in support of the administration’s proposed Golden Dome layered missile defense architecture. Combined, the Space Force’s planned resources approach $40 billion — nearly double its funding from five years ago.
On Golden Dome, defense appropriators said they support the initiative, but faulted the administration for failing to provide sufficient detail on how $23 billion in mandatory funding is being allocated. The 2026 spending bill directs the Pentagon to submit detailed plans and justifications for the program.
Although lawmakers approved the overall topline for the Space Force, they made some adjustments. Funding was shifted from research and development into procurement, which was increased by $528 million to pay for two new GPS satellites that were not requested by the administration.
The House is expected to vote on the minibus package this week. If it passes, the measure would move to the Senate, where leaders say they are optimistic it can advance given the bipartisan conference agreement. Passage would bring Congress closer to completing the fiscal 2026 appropriations cycle; six of the 12 regular spending bills have already been approved through earlier packages or standalone measures.






