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Wednesday, June 30, 2027 · 385 days away
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NASA Artemis III Launch
Event overview
NASA Artemis III crewed mission; rescoped to lunar rendezvous and HLS docking demonstration. NET mid-2027.
Editorial context
NASA Artemis III is the third crewed mission of the Artemis program and was originally planned as the first crewed lunar landing since Apollo 17 in December 1972. NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman confirmed in House Appropriations testimony on April 27, 2026 that Artemis III has slipped from early 2027 to late 2027 because of delays in both SpaceX's Starship Human Landing System and Blue Origin's Blue Moon lander. The mission profile was also restructured: under the updated plan, Artemis III would no longer attempt a lunar surface landing on its first flight, instead conducting rendezvous and docking tests in low Earth orbit with SpaceX's Starship HLS and Blue Origin's Blue Moon plus the Axiom Extravehicular Mobility Unit (AxEMU). The crew of four launches aboard the Space Launch System carrying Orion; the surface-landing demonstration has shifted to a subsequent mission window.
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Last manual verification: 2026-05-11. This note adds context only; the source trail below still controls date confidence.
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Primary source
nasa.gov
Last reviewed
2026-04-30
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expected
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The launch of NASA's Artemis III mission, currently targeted for no earlier than mid-2027 from Launch Complex 39B at Kennedy Space Center, Florida, atop the Space Launch System (SLS) Block 1. Originally planned to land the first humans on the Moon since Apollo 17 in December 1972, Artemis III's profile was re-scoped in 2025 to a lunar-orbit rendezvous and a Human Landing System (HLS) docking demonstration with SpaceX Starship — the first crewed test of the integrated stack — with a separate, later mission expected to attempt the first crewed lunar surface landing of the Artemis era.
Artemis is NASA's flagship human-spaceflight programme to return to and remain at the Moon and prepare for crewed Mars exploration. The architecture rests on three industrial pillars: the SLS heavy-lift rocket built by Boeing, Northrop Grumman, Aerojet Rocketdyne and L3Harris; the Orion crewed spacecraft built by Lockheed Martin with the European Service Module by Airbus on contract to ESA; and the Human Landing System awarded to SpaceX (Starship) in April 2021 and a sustainable HLS option awarded to Blue Origin (Blue Moon) in May 2023.
Artemis I flew uncrewed in November–December 2022. Artemis II completed its uncrewed flyby and crewed-flyby objective on 1–11 April 2026 with Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen — the first crewed flight beyond low Earth orbit since Apollo 17. The Artemis III crew has not been publicly named at full strength, but NASA and CSA have indicated US and Canadian astronauts in mission slots, with the surface-mission re-scoping leaving the precise crew composition to be announced ahead of launch.
The re-scoped Artemis III plan calls for the SLS to deliver Orion and the crew to a near-rectilinear halo orbit around the Moon, where the crew will rendezvous and dock with the Starship HLS staged in lunar orbit by a separate uncrewed launch. The crew will perform an integrated systems checkout of the Starship HLS as a crew habitat and lander, demonstrate transfer between Orion and Starship, validate environmental control, communications, and rendezvous procedures, and return to Earth with Orion for a Pacific Ocean splashdown. The original "first woman and next man" surface landing has been deferred to a later Artemis mission (currently anticipated as Artemis IV in 2028 or later) to give Starship HLS more time to mature its complex orbital-refuelling concept of operations and a polar landing demonstration. The Artemis Generation programme partners with CSA, ESA, JAXA and the broader Artemis Accords signatories.
NASA TV and NASA's official YouTube and X channels carry the prelaunch programming, launch and mission events. nasa.gov/artemis is the principal source for crew assignments, launch updates and technical documentation. Reuters, AP, AFP, BBC, NHK, Spaceflight Now, Eric Berger at Ars Technica, Marcia Smith at SpacePolicyOnline, Stephen Clark, NASASpaceflight.com and Spacefor publish in-depth analysis. The Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex hosts viewing for ticketed members; the launch is also visible from Cocoa Beach, Titusville and parts of Cape Canaveral. International coverage spans CSA, ESA, JAXA and CNSA mirror sites for partner participation.
Pair Artemis III with Chandrayaan-4 launch — India's first lunar sample-return mission — and the Gaganyaan H1 crewed flight for India's first orbital crewed mission. The robotic-mission cluster includes NASA Dragonfly to Titan, NASA Roman Space Telescope, and the Shukrayaan Venus orbiter. The Bharatiya Antariksh Station begins with the BAS-01 launch.
When is Artemis III? No earlier than mid-2027, from Launch Complex 39B at NASA Kennedy Space Center, Florida. Where will the mission go? To near-rectilinear halo orbit around the Moon for a rendezvous and docking demonstration with SpaceX Starship HLS, returning to a Pacific splashdown. Why does Artemis III matter? It is the first crewed test of the integrated SLS-Orion-Starship lunar architecture and the next step toward a sustained American return to the lunar surface. Will Artemis III land on the Moon? No — the mission was re-scoped in 2025 to a lunar-orbit rendezvous and HLS checkout; the next crewed surface-landing attempt is anticipated on a later Artemis flight.
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NASA Artemis III Launch has an expected date signal, but the source has not locked every detail. Treat the countdown as a monitoring aid and verify the linked source before making time-sensitive plans.
Source
https://www.nasa.gov/mission/artemis-iii/Structured data posture
This page does not emit a precise Event startDate because the tracked record is expected or windowed. The countdown stays useful for monitoring, while schema avoids making a stronger claim than the source supports.
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Source reviewed Apr 30, 2026. The countdown record is intentionally labeled as scheduled or expected; use the source link and any range notes before treating the date as final.
Live values rendered at Jun 2, 10:52 AM UTC.
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