Back to the Moon: The Most Anticipated 2026 Space Exploration Missions
Explore the top 2026 Space Exploration Missions. From NASA's Artemis program to SpaceX and Blue Origin's lunar goals, PRISM analyzes the year humanity returns to the Moon.
It's been more than 54 years since humans last set eyes on the lunar surface from up close. That’s about to change. As of January 2026, astronauts are already in rigorous training for a journey to the Moon’s vicinity, with a potential launch window opening in just a few months.
2026 Space Exploration Missions: A Multi-Player Arena
This year isn't just about NASA. Private giants like SpaceX and Blue Origin are taking center stage. They’re poised to make major steps toward landing humans on the Moon within the next few years. We’re witnessing a shift from national pride to a robust, competitive space economy.
A fleet of new rockets is slated to debut throughout 2026. Scientists are eager to use these new platforms to open new windows on the Universe, tackling questions that have remained unanswered for decades. The next 12 months will be a litmus test for the viability of long-term deep space travel.
The Stakes of the New Launch Manifest
While 2025 gave us a record number of launches, 2026 is where the complexity increases. We're looking at highly anticipated missions that are ranked not just by their scientific value, but by their likelihood of actually happening. It's a high-stakes game where breakthroughs and setbacks coexist.
Authors
Related Articles
SpaceX's upgraded Starship V3 completed its first test flight, deploying 20 Starlink simulators but losing the Super Heavy booster. With an IPO weeks away, the stakes just got higher.
SpaceX's IPO filing puts AI at the center, claiming a $26.5 trillion market opportunity. But can Grok compete with OpenAI and Anthropic for enterprise customers?
SpaceX filed a nearly 400-page S-1 with the SEC, targeting an IPO as early as June 12. Here's what the filing reveals—and what it doesn't.
SpaceX has filed its S-1 with the SEC, targeting the Nasdaq under ticker SPCX. With $18.67B in revenue but a $4.9B loss, the IPO forces investors to answer one hard question.
Thoughts
Share your thoughts on this article
Sign in to join the conversation