Seattle-based Hubble Network, the company building the world’s first satellite-powered Bluetooth network, has raised $70 million in a Series B, bringing its total funding to $100 million in under four years. Participants include Ryan Swagar (Swagar Capital), Tom Gonser (DocuSign), Mike Farley (Tile), Marc Weiser (RPM Ventures, former NASA board), Tuff Yen (Seraph Group), andY Combinator.
With the new funding, the company is planning to expand their satellite constellation to provide global coverage. The company is also working to enhance its developer ecosystem, simplifying integration to the level of plugging in an SDK. Additionally, they aim to support enterprise deployments across logistics, infrastructure, defence, and consumer IoT sectors.
“Hubble is doing what many thought was impossible, making space accessible for everyday devices,” said Ryan Swagar, Co-founder of Swagar Capital. “Their unique architecture, strong technical execution, and proven customer demand position them to define the future of global connectivity.”
Founded in 2021 byAlex HaroandBen Wild, Hubble is creating the world’s first satellite-powered Bluetooth network, delivering global connectivity without cellular infrastructure.
Hubble Network is on a mission to connect billions of devices to space cost-effectively, and without the need for cell towers, gateways, or custom hardware.
Since 2021, Hubble has achieved important milestones. It successfully launched its first satellites with pilot customers, made the first Bluetooth connection to space, and partnered with Life360 and Tile to connect to over 90 million devices.
Hubble has also launched a Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) Finding Network, increased its number of satellites to seven for global tracking, and worked with Muon Space to create larger satellites for broader coverage.
The applications of this technology are far-reaching — container & pallet tracking, wildfire detection, energy grid monitoring, heavy equipment, tool tracking, fleet management, logistics, predictive maintenance, safety for children, fall detection for the elderly, agricultural technology, & environmental monitoring, to name a few.
“Our vision has always been to connect billions of devices seamlessly and cost-effectively, without requiring hardware or infrastructure,” said Alex Haro, Co-founder and CEO of Hubble Network. “This round confirms the strong demand for scalable, low-power, global IoT connectivity.”






