You Can’t Join NASA’s Artemis II, But Here’s How Much It’ll Really Cost You To Go To Space

You Can’t Join NASA’s Artemis II, But Here’s How Much It’ll Really Cost You To Go To Space

With Artemis II launching tomorrow, space tourism is no longer a sci-fi dream. From $250k suborbital hops to $55m ISS stays, here is your 2026 guide to ‘Star-cationing’

The countdown has officially begun. Tomorrow, April 1, 2026, humanity prepares to break a 50-year silence in deep space. From the historic Launch Complex 39B at Kennedy Space Center, the Artemis II mission is scheduled to roar into the Florida sky during a two-hour window starting at 6:24 PM EDT (which is 3:54 AM IST on April 2).

Four astronauts—Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, Mission Specialist Christina Koch, and the CSA’s Jeremy Hansen—will become the first humans since the Apollo era to loop around the Moon. While they won’t be kicking up lunar dust just yet, their 10-day journey is the vital bridge to putting boots back on the lunar surface by 2028.

The Billionaire’s Playground: Space Tourism In 2026

While the Artemis crew represents the pinnacle of professional exploration, the “Final Frontier” is slowly opening its doors to civilians, provided your bank account has enough zeros. The dream of looking back at the blue marble is no longer restricted to NASA’s elite.

In May 2024, Indian entrepreneur Gopi Thotakura made history as the first Indian space tourist aboard Blue Origin’s New Shepard

In May 2024, Indian entrepreneur Gopi Thotakura made history as the first Indian space tourist aboard Blue Origin’s New Shepard, proving that the “democratisation of space” is finally moving beyond the drawing board. If you’re looking to follow in his footsteps, here is who is currently leading the commercial charge:

Virgin Galactic: The Suborbital Glide

Richard Branson’s venture offers a 90-minute “edge of space” experience. You’ll reach an altitude of roughly 80 km, experience several minutes of weightlessness, and see the Earth’s curvature against the black void before gliding back to a runway landing.

Price Tag: $600,000 per seat.

Richard Branson’s venture offers a 90-minute “edge of space” experience.

Blue Origin: The Quick Vertical Blast

Jeff Bezos’s New Shepard rocket is the go-to for a classic vertical liftoff. The automated capsule shoots 100 km up (crossing the Kármán line), gives you a “killer view” through the largest windows ever flown in space, and parachutes back to the desert.

Price Tag: Estimated between $250,000 and $300,000.

SpaceX: The Orbital Heavyweight

Elon Musk isn’t interested in “skimming” the atmosphere. SpaceX focuses on true orbital missions. Whether it’s an all-civilian crew circling the Earth for days (like the Inspiration4 mission) or private trips to the Moon’s vicinity, this is the “Big Leagues” of tourism.

Price Tag: Approximately $55 million (for ISS trips) to $220 million for private orbital charters.

NS-22 Astronauts Mario Ferreira and Coby Cotton float weightless. Credit: Blue Origin

Axiom Space: The Orbital Concierge

Axiom acts as the ultimate travel agent for the International Space Station (ISS). They handle everything from training to the custom-designed lunar spacesuits they’re building for NASA.

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