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NASA plans a base on the moon spanning hundreds of square miles

Three missions slated to launch this year will begin to search the lunar surface for a suitable base location

By Alex Wilkins

27 May 2026

NASA administrator Jared Isaacman (left) announcing its plans to establish a permanent presence on the moon during a press conference at the agency's headquarters in Washington, DC, on 26 May

NASA administrator Jared Isaacman (left) announced its plans to establish a permanent presence on the moon during a press conference at the agency’s headquarters in Washington, D.C. on 26 May

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

NASA has revealed details of its plans to build a permanent base on the moon. Initially, this will see autonomous rovers and hopping drones scouting out the lunar surface. Down the line, the plan is for astronauts to build a future lunar home, slated to be hundreds of square miles.

Plans for a lunar base have been part of the Artemis programme for years, but its main focus has been landing astronauts on the moon for the first time since the 1970s. The human spaceflight part of Artemis has been successful so far, with the Artemis II mission sending four astronauts on a path round the moon and back to Earth in April earlier this year. But until recently, NASA had released fewer concrete details about a timeline for building a moon base.

However, on 26 May, it that the first three missions to build a lunar base will be targeted for this year, with at least a further nine to be announced before 2027. The overall programme will consist of three phases, with the first lasting until 2029 to “secure reliable access” to the moon’s surface. The second will last until 2032 for “initial operating capability”, and the actual base itself is to be built near the lunar south pole in the third and final phase, lasting up to 2036.

An artist's illustration depicting astronauts, rovers, power systems and cargo operations at the planned base

An artist’s illustration depicting astronauts, rovers, power systems and cargo operations at the planned base

NASA

This year’s missions will not be manned, and will look to study the lunar surface in detail to reduce the risk of future landing missions, as well as to test out autonomous rovers to help guide the design of future moon vehicles. The first of these missions, Moon Base I, will launch toward the end of this year, and will feature a lander built by Jeff Bezos’ space company Blue Origin, which has not yet tested a lunar lander.

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Moon Base II and III are also planned for launch this year, though with no launch window, and each will see a lander from two different private companies: Astrobotic, which will land its Griffin lander and carry an autonomous rover, and Intuitive Machines, which has already attempted two lunar landings, neither of which were fully successful.

As well as these upcoming missions, NASA has also announced that two companies, Astrolab and Lunar Outpost, will each be given more than $200 million dollars to develop future lunar terrain vehicles, as part of the agency’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services. Astrolab’s will be a bulkier, human-operated design, capable of carrying nearly 1000 kilograms and travelling at 6 miles per hour, while Lunar Outpost’s design will be more nimble, moving at up to 9 miles per hour and capable of doing so autonomously.

NASA has also given further details of its MoonFall mission, which in 2028 will see four drones make short hopping journeys across the lunar surface, taking high-resolution pictures to find suitable landing sites for future Artemis missions. While NASA will make the drones in house, at its Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, the company Firefly Aerospace will build the spacecraft that takes the drones from Earth to the moon.

However, there are still scant details on crucial elements of a future moon base, such as how it might be powered, constructed and shielded from the harsh radiation in outer space. Previous NASA administrator Sean Duffy had announced that a nuclear fission reactor would be built on the lunar surface by 2030, but there were no updates about this in the most recent announcement from NASA, which is now led by Jared Isaacman.

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