Reflection AI Gets SpaceX GB300 Access for Open AI Models


TL;DR

  • Compute Deal: Reflection AI has secured SpaceX Colossus 2 access for Nvidia GB300 AI chips.
  • Contract Caveat: The agreement is set at $150 million per month and could reach about $6.3 billion only if it runs through 2029.
  • Open-Model Test: Reflection must turn the rented hardware into model releases or customer deployments that justify its open-model pitch.

Open-model startup Reflection AI has reportedly secured GB300 Nvidia AI chips and other hardware from SpaceX’s Colossus 2 data-center capacity near Memphis, giving it high-end infrastructure for training and running frontier AI systems. Wider contract terms remain unclear. The agreement moves Reflection deeper into one of artificial intelligence’s costliest resource races.

Reflection is reportedly set to pay SpaceX $150 million a month beginning July 1, with access running through 2029 if the agreement reaches the end of its term. Monthly payments could total about $6.3 billion.

Either company can end the compute agreement after the first three months with 90 days’ notice. An exit right keeps the maximum value tied to contract duration rather than certain SpaceX revenue.

Why the Compute Access Matters

Compute, in this context, means rented access to specialized AI chips, memory, networking, power, and data-center operations. Reflection has reportedly secured immediate access to chips and hardware inside SpaceX’s Colossus 2 facility, including Nvidia GB300 systems used for advanced reasoning inference workloads.

Reflection AI is trying to build models whose trained parameters are available publicly, a contrast to closed models from OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google Gemini. A Reflection AI spokesperson said governments and enterprises are paying closer attention to open systems because dependence on closed models can create cost and control risks.