Sidus Space reported a lean fourth quarter that underscored the company’s strategic pivot from a traditional hardware supplier to a diversified, higher-margin space technology and AI-powered data services platform. Q4 2024 revenue came in at $0.826 million, contributing to a full-year revenue of roughly $4.7 million, down 22% year over year as Sidus prioritized margin-rich opportunities and expanded its technology and data services pipeline. The quarterly gross profit was negative, at -$0.75 million (gross margin -90.8%), and the company posted an EBTIDA loss of -$4.67 million for the quarter, with a full-year net loss of -$17.5 million. Management framed these results as the cost of a deliberate strategic transition aimed at building a recurring, higher‑margin revenue base through LizzieSat manufacturing, constellation operations, and on-orbit data services.
Operational milestones in 2024 emphasize execution against the five pillars management outlined: revenue diversification and growth, scaling production capabilities, pursuing breakthrough technologies, and leading the industry in space access. Highlights include three LizzieSat launches (LizzieSat-1 in March 2024, LizzieSat-2 in December 2024, and LizzieSat-3 in March 2025), FCC approval for a micro constellation, the establishment of a 24/7 mission control center, and strategic partnerships (LeoLabs, NeuroSpace) that bolster space traffic management and LEOP capabilities. Sidus also disclosed a significant backlog opportunity pipeline (~$200 million identified, with ~$78 million of proposals submitted in 2024) and moved to SAP across manufacturing for better efficiency. In 2025, Sidus aims to advance key satellite and AI milestones (LizzieSat-3 with Sidus Orlaith on-orbit analytics, space-to-space data relay, and Lonestar Lunar satellite design) while progressively moving toward EBITDA positivity and free cash flow generation. The company ended 2024 with $15.7 million in cash after a December equity raise, and with a net debt position of -$5.6 million, providing liquidity to fund the next phase of growth. Investors should monitor the cadence of contract awards, the conversion of the identified pipeline into backlog, the realization of recurring data service revenue, and the pace of operating leverage as scale improves.