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NASA has redefined Artemis III as a low-Earth-orbit rendezvous and docking demonstration no earlier than late 2027, after concluding both commercial human landing systems are not yet ready for a lunar descent.
The change, announced in congressional testimony and reflected in NASA mission updates in May 2026, responds to development setbacks at SpaceX (Starship HLS) and Blue Origin (Blue Moon). SpaceX has struggled to demonstrate reliable Starship orbital performance and the critical on-orbit refuelling needed for a lunar sortie, while Blue Originās Mark 1 Blue Moon completed thermal-vacuum testing but faces integration questions following a recent New Glenn anomaly.
The slip converts Artemis III from a surface landing to an in-orbit interoperability test of Orion and one or both commercial landers; it preserves a still-ambitious goal of a crewed lunar landing in 2028 but raises doubts that the schedule can be met.
Congressional budget pressures and prior Government Accountability Office findings on schedule risk add financial and programmatic uncertainty for NASA and its international partners.
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š°ļø The Story So Far: An Evolving Timeline
Wednesday, May 6, 2026 11:58 UTC
Artemis III pushed to late 2027 amid lander delays
Friday, May 1, 2026 17:57 UTC
Artemis III reworked to late 2027 orbital test








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