Boeing unveils ‘GEO-lite’
April 22, 2026
By Chris Forrester
Aerospace company Boeing has introduced what it describes as a “micro-Geostationary” satellite platform. Boeing is working with its subsidiary Millennium Space Systems combining advanced payloads and faster production. In Satellite engineering, the new concept targets flexible, mid-sized satellite missions.
The concept supports faster delivery and includes a new satellite option for missions that need more capability and flexibility.
The joint effort includes Resolute, a new mid-class satellite platform designed for missions that need more capability than a traditional small satellite can provide, with greater speed and flexibility than a typical large satellite program.
Satellites do a lot of work most people never see. They help connect troops and first responders, support communications when ground networks are weak or damaged, and collect data that helps operators understand what’s happening on Earth and in space. As customers ask for faster delivery and more adaptable mission options, Boeing is working to increase output and expand the range of capabilities it can offer.
“We’re aligning our space business to meet a market that is moving faster and asking for more flexibility,” said Kay Sears, VP/GM of Boeing Space, Intelligence & Weapons Systems. “That means increasing production throughput, broadening the portfolio and giving customers more options for how they field and scale capability over time.”
Resolute combines Boeing’s payload and mission expertise with Millennium’s rapid production approach and common products. Boeing is targeting 26 satellite deliveries in 2026, and the production push is being supported by investments in common products, repeatable manufacturing approaches and tighter integration across Boeing and Millennium.
Built on Millennium common products and flight-proven avionics with on-orbit heritage, Resolute is intended to support communications, sensing and other mission needs across multiple orbital paths. Boeing says it gives customers another option between very small satellites and larger, more complex systems that can take longer to build.
