Fractional SpaceX shares: buy SPCX with $10, $50 or $100
SPCX listed at $135 and opened at $150— but you don't need the price of a full share to own SpaceX stock. Fractional investing lets you buy a dollar amount of SPCX at any broker that supports it. Here's how it works and where to do it.
Short answer
Open an account at a broker with fractional shares — eToro, Revolut, Public, Trading 212, Webull or Interactive Brokers — search for SPCX, and enter the dollar amount you want to invest instead of a number of shares. You'll own a proportional fraction of a real SpaceX share, with the same percentage gains and losses as a full share.
How fractional SPCX shares work
When you place a $50 order for a stock trading at $150, your broker buys the share and credits you with one-third of it. Your fraction gains and loses exactly in proportion to the stock — there is no separate "fractional price." The broker holds the share; your account shows 0.333 SPCX.
For a volatile, newly listed stock like SPCX — which swung 25% in its first session — fractional buying has a practical advantage: you can size positions precisely and average in with small amounts instead of committing a full share at once.
Brokers with fractional SPCX shares
Fractional availability can vary by country and account type — confirm in the app before funding. For the full ranked comparison, see our best brokers for SpaceX stock.
What to watch for
- Currency conversion. If you deposit in a non-USD currency, FX fees can cost more than commissions. Check the rate before funding.
- Transferability.Fractions usually can't move between brokers — switching means selling and rebuying.
- Order types.Some brokers only execute fractional orders as market orders during regular hours. On a volatile stock, know what price you'll get.
- No voting. Fractions typically carry no voting rights — largely symbolic at SpaceX anyway, where Musk controls >82% (Elon Musk, after IPO) of votes.
Fractional SPCX shares: FAQ
Can I buy less than one share of SpaceX stock?+
Yes. Brokers with fractional-share support — including eToro, Revolut, Public, Trading 212, Webull and Interactive Brokers — let you buy a dollar amount of SPCX instead of whole shares. You can start with $10–$100 and own a proportional fraction of a share.
What is the minimum amount to invest in SPCX?+
It depends on the broker, not the stock. Fractional brokers typically allow orders from $1–$10. Without fractional support you need the price of one full share — SPCX listed at $135 and opened at $150 on June 12, 2026, so a full share costs whatever the live market price is.
Do fractional SPCX shares pay dividends?+
SpaceX does not currently pay a dividend — it reported a $4.9 billion net loss in 2025 and reinvests in Starship and Starlink. If it ever pays one, fractional holders at most brokers receive a proportional amount.
Can I vote with fractional shares?+
Generally no — most brokers don't pass voting rights through on fractions, and some hold fractional inventory in street name. Voting power at SpaceX is largely symbolic anyway: Elon Musk controls over 82% of votes through dual-class shares.
Are fractional shares riskier than whole shares?+
The price risk is identical — a fraction moves exactly like the stock. The differences are operational: fractions usually can't be transferred between brokers (you'd sell and rebuy), and they only trade through your broker's own systems. For small amounts, those trade-offs rarely matter.
No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.
This site is for informational purposes only and is not financial, investment, legal, or tax advice. Investing involves risk, including the possible loss of principal. Do your own research and consider consulting a licensed financial advisor. SPCX.capital is an independent publisher. We are not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by Space Exploration Technologies Corp. (SpaceX), Nasdaq, or any platform listed. “SpaceX” and related marks are the property of their respective owners. We may earn a commission when you open an account or invest through links on this site, at no extra cost to you. This never affects which platforms we list or how we describe them.