SpaceX's Starship Advances with Version 3: Pioneering Lunar and Mars Missions

May 1, 2026
SpaceX's Starship Advances with Version 3: Pioneering Lunar and Mars Missions
  • NASA and industry partners are watching Starship’s milestones closely as it competes with other lunar lander concepts and aligns with Artemis program goals, while Musk signals a shift toward lunar-city concepts before Mars exploration.

  • SpaceX’s Starship, a giant fully reusable rocket designed for Moon and Mars missions, has logged 11 test flights since its debut, enduring several explosions and anomalies along the way.

  • A core development path is Starship Version 3 (V3), which is aimed at reaching orbit and enabling in-flight refueling between two Starships, expanding its deep-space capabilities.

  • Starbase in South Texas has evolved into a major test and development hub for Starship, with regulatory progress and organizational growth toward a dedicated SpaceX community.

  • Starship stands over 400 feet tall, comprising a Super Heavy booster and the Starship upper stage, powered by 33 Raptors, with missions focused on proving reusability and in-flight refueling.

  • The next flight, Flight 12, was slated for early to mid-May 2026, though an exact date remained unconfirmed as of May 1, 2026 due to preparations for the more capable V3 and prior delays.

  • Observers note SpaceX’s philosophy blends high risk tolerance with rapid testing, treating failures as data to drive improvements toward orbital flight and deep-space missions.

  • Despite setbacks, SpaceX has hit milestones such as booster reuse, deploying mock Starlink satellites, catching returning boosters with large robotic arms, and achieving suborbital and long-range IC flights for the upper stage.

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3 years after explosive debut, SpaceX’s Starship still chases moon, Mars

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