SpaceX (NASDAQ: SPCX) insiders have sold approximately $1.2 million worth of the stock over the past year, according to insider trading data.
Data covering the period between June 28, 2025, and June 27, 2026, shows a single insider sale by SpaceX Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk.
The transaction involved the sale of 11,390 shares on April 2, 2026, at an average price of $105.32 per share, for a total value of $1,199,594.80.

The sale is notable because it occurred before SpaceX’s blockbuster June 2026 initial public offering, which priced shares at $135 each before the stock surged during its debut trading sessions.
Minimal SpaceX insider trades
Available records indicate that Musk was the only SpaceX insider to sell stock during the last 12 months. No insider purchases or additional sales were disclosed during the period.
Notably, the sale price of $105.32 per share was below both the IPO price and current market levels, suggesting the transaction was completed before investors fully priced in SpaceX’s public-market valuation.
SpaceX insider selling often attracts investor attention because company executives have direct insight into business performance. However, a single insider transaction does not necessarily signal weakening confidence in the company.
In SpaceX’s case, the reported sale appears relatively small compared to the company’s roughly $2 trillion market capitalization and does not indicate broader insider liquidation. The absence of multiple insider sales reduces concerns that executives are rushing to exit positions following the company’s public debut.
As a result, the disclosed transaction is unlikely to have a material impact on SPCX stock on its own. Investors typically become more cautious when several executives sell large portions of their holdings over a short period, a trend that has not emerged in recent SPCX insider trading activity.
SpaceX stock volatility
As of press time, SPCX was trading at approximately $153 per share, remaining above its IPO price despite retreating from post-listing highs above $225.

The stock initially surged on strong retail and institutional demand, pushing SpaceX’s valuation above $2 trillion.
Since then, shares have experienced increased volatility as investors reassessed the company’s premium valuation, ongoing losses, and significant capital expenditure requirements.
While the insider sale may draw attention, the near-term direction of SPCX stock is likely to be driven by Starlink subscriber growth, launch activity, profitability trends, AI-related investments, and broader market sentiment toward high-growth technology companies rather than a single $1.2 million insider transaction.