CopyTradeInsider
Browse research
Guides

Where to Buy SpaceX Stock (SPCX) in 2026: Brokers and Crypto

Where to buy SpaceX stock (SPCX) in 2026 after the IPO: real shares through a broker, or tokenized SpaceX and perps on crypto exchanges, with the risks.

SpaceX is one of the most searched stocks of 2026, and as of its Nasdaq debut you can finally get exposure two ways: buy real SpaceX shares (ticker SPCX) through a standard broker as the company goes public, or get crypto-native exposure through tokenized SpaceX and SpaceX perps on crypto exchanges. The crypto route uses a stablecoin and works in many regions, but it gives you a price-tracking product, not real equity. This guide covers where to buy, how each route works, and the risks.

Not financial advice. This is general education, not a recommendation to buy SpaceX in any form. IPO-week prices can be extremely volatile, tokenized products carry issuer risk, and you can lose money. Read our risk disclaimer and do your own research before buying.

Key takeaways

  • SpaceX is reported to list on the Nasdaq around June 12, 2026 as SPCX. Verify the live status yourself.
  • Two routes: real SPCX shares through a broker, or tokenized SpaceX and perps on crypto exchanges.
  • Tokenized SpaceX tracks the price but is not real equity: no ownership, no voting, plus issuer and region risk.
  • Tokenized stock is usually restricted in the US, UK, Canada, and Australia.
  • IPO week is volatile. Avoid leverage, size small, and only risk money you can afford to lose.

Is SpaceX publicly traded now?

For years SpaceX was private, and the only ways to get near it were pre-IPO SPVs for accredited investors or tokenized products on crypto rails. That changed with the IPO: SpaceX is reported to list on the Nasdaq around June 12, 2026 under the ticker SPCX, at an IPO price reported near 135 dollars. Treat those figures as reported, not fixed, and confirm the live listing and price with a primary source before you act.

As it goes public, the cleanest way to own SpaceX is the same as any other stock: real shares through a broker. The crypto routes still exist and matter, especially if you want stablecoin-based, around-the-clock access, but it helps to know exactly what each one gives you.

Where to buy SpaceX stock: the two routes

RouteWhat you actually getRegion and risk
Real SPCX shares (broker)Actual equity ownership of SpaceXBroadest legality, standard market hours, normal brokerage protections
Tokenized SpaceX (crypto)A token that tracks the share priceRestricted in US/UK/CA/AU, issuer and counterparty risk, often 24/7
SpaceX perps (crypto)A leveraged derivative on the priceHigh risk, liquidation, region-restricted

If you want real ownership and you can access a broker, route one is the straightforward answer. If you are crypto-native, live where tokenized products are allowed, and want stablecoin access, route two is built for you. Route three (perps) is for experienced traders only and is the highest risk.

Route 1: Real SPCX shares through a broker

As SpaceX lists on the Nasdaq, you can buy real SPCX shares the normal way: through a brokerage account such as Robinhood, Fidelity, Schwab, SoFi, or E*TRADE. This gives you genuine ownership, regulatory protections, and standard market hours. During the IPO allocation, demand was reported to far exceed supply, so requests at the IPO price were often only partly filled. Once shares trade openly, you buy at the live market price like any listed stock.

This is the honest answer for most long-term holders. We are a crypto site, so the rest of this guide focuses on the crypto routes, but real shares are the simplest way to actually own SpaceX.

Route 2: Tokenized SpaceX on a crypto exchange

A tokenized stock is a crypto token whose price is meant to track SpaceX shares, issued by a third party and traded on crypto rails. Around the IPO, tokenized SpaceX appeared across several venues: BingX lists SpaceX in its Pre-IPO zone (SPACEX and an SPCX tracker), Backpack launched a tokenized SPCX on Solana, Kraken offers SPCXx through xStocks, and other exchanges added their own versions. You buy it with a stablecoin, often with 24/7 access, without a traditional brokerage.

The trade-off is real: you do not own the underlying share. A tokenized stock mirrors the price, but it carries no voting rights or dividends, and your claim depends on the issuer holding real shares or hedges behind the token. For the wider picture, see our guides on how to buy tokenized stocks and the best tokenized stocks, and our breakdown of tokenized stocks vs real shares.

How to buy tokenized SpaceX step by step

This uses a tokenized SpaceX product on BingX as the worked example. Treat it as a small, deliberate position, not a lottery ticket.

Step 1: Pick an exchange that lists SpaceX

On BingX you can trade tokenized SpaceX and an SPCX pre-IPO market in its Pre-IPO zone, and tokenized SPCX also trades via flows like Kraken xStocks. Decide whether you want a price-tracking token or a leveraged derivative first.

Step 2: Verify your account and check your region

Complete identity verification. Tokenized stock is restricted in places like the US, UK, Canada, and Australia, and some access is limited to higher account tiers. Confirm it is available to you before funding.

Step 3: Fund with a stablecoin

Deposit or buy USDC or USDT, since these products are priced and settled in a stablecoin, not local cash. New to stablecoins? See is USDT safe.

Step 4: Open the SpaceX or SPCX market

Find the tokenized SpaceX product or the SpaceX perp. Confirm whether it is a tokenized share that tracks price or a leveraged derivative, because the risk is very different.

Step 5: Place a small order and avoid leverage

Enter a small position. In IPO week the price can swing hard in both directions, so avoid leverage and never invest money you cannot afford to lose.

Step 6: Manage and exit

Track the price and, on perps, the funding cost. Close or sell the position whenever you decide to take profit or cut a loss. You can trade on BingX or compare venues in our BingX review and Bybit review.

Pre-IPO style perps and derivatives

Some exchanges offer SpaceX perps, leveraged contracts that track the price without you owning anything. They can profit in both directions, but leverage means liquidation risk and losses that can exceed your deposit. If you do not already understand perps and liquidation, this is not the place to start. Our Bitcoin shorting guide explains how leverage and liquidation work before you risk capital here.

IPO week is volatile: read this first

Newly listed stocks often whip around in their first days as the market figures out a price, and tokenized versions and perps can move even more. A fast green candle on day one can reverse just as fast. The discipline that protects you is boring: size small, skip leverage, do not chase, and decide your exit before you enter. Our tokenized stocks explainer covers how these RWA products behave.

Tokenized vs real shares: what you give up

  • Ownership. Real SPCX shares are equity you own. A tokenized version is a price-tracking product, nothing more.
  • Rights. No voting and no dividends with most tokenized stock.
  • Counterparty risk. Your tokenized claim depends on the issuer staying solvent and honoring redemptions.
  • Region. Tokenized stock is restricted in many large markets, including the US.
  • Hours and access. Tokenized and crypto routes often trade 24/7 with stablecoins, which is their main advantage over a broker.

Bottom line

Where you buy SpaceX depends on what you want. For real ownership once SPCX begins trading, a standard broker is the simplest route. For crypto-native, stablecoin-based access where it is allowed, tokenized SpaceX on BingX (its Pre-IPO zone lists SPACEX and SPCX) gives you price exposure, and its perps offer leveraged trades for experienced users only. Just remember the crypto routes track the price without giving you real equity, they are region-restricted, and IPO week is volatile. When you understand the risk, you can trade on BingX.

This article is general information, not financial advice. Tokenized products carry issuer and counterparty risk, leveraged perps can lose more than you deposit, and IPO-week prices are volatile. Read our risk disclaimer, confirm availability in your region, verify the live listing yourself, and never invest money you cannot afford to lose.

Frequently asked questions

Where can I buy SpaceX stock?

There are two routes. Real SpaceX shares (ticker SPCX) trade through standard brokers such as Robinhood, Fidelity, Schwab, SoFi, or E*TRADE as the company goes public. For crypto-native exposure, tokenized SpaceX and SpaceX perps trade on exchanges like BingX (its Pre-IPO zone lists SPACEX and SPCX) and via flows like Kraken xStocks, though those are derivatives, not real equity, and are region-restricted.

Is SpaceX publicly traded now?

SpaceX is reported to list on the Nasdaq around June 12, 2026 under the ticker SPCX, at an IPO price reported near 135 dollars. Before this, SpaceX was private and only reachable through pre-IPO SPVs or tokenized products. Always verify the live listing status and price with a primary source, since IPO details can change.

Can I buy SpaceX stock with crypto?

Yes, indirectly. You can buy tokenized SpaceX that tracks the share price, or trade SpaceX perps, on crypto exchanges using a stablecoin like USDC or USDT. You are not buying real equity: a tokenized stock is a product that mirrors the price, without share ownership, voting rights, or dividends, and it carries issuer and counterparty risk.

What is tokenized SpaceX stock?

It is a crypto token whose price is meant to track SpaceX shares, issued by a third party and traded on crypto rails. It lets you get price exposure without a traditional brokerage, but you do not own the underlying share, and your claim depends on the issuer holding real shares or hedges behind the token. Read the issuer terms before buying.

Is tokenized SpaceX available in the US?

Usually not. Tokenized stock products are commonly restricted in the US, UK, Canada, and Australia for regulatory reasons. In those regions the realistic route is buying real SPCX shares through a normal broker. Check your exchange's terms, because availability varies by country and can change.

Real SPCX shares vs tokenized: which is better?

Real SPCX shares through a broker give you actual ownership, regulatory protections, and standard market hours, which suits long-term holders. Tokenized SpaceX gives crypto-native, often 24/7 access using stablecoins, but no real ownership and added issuer risk. Neither is universally better: it depends on your region, goals, and risk tolerance.

Is buying SpaceX on IPO day risky?

Yes. Newly listed stocks are often very volatile in the first days as price discovery plays out, and tokenized versions and perps can be even more volatile. Avoid leverage, size small, and do not chase a fast move. This is general information, not advice, and you can lose money on any of these routes.

Discussion

Loading comments…