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Starship

SpaceX's fully reusable super heavy-lift launch system — the largest and most powerful rocket ever flown, designed to carry humans to the Moon and Mars.

121 m
Height (Stacked)
100–150 t
Payload to LEO
33
Raptor Engines (Booster)
~74 MN
Liftoff Thrust

Overview

Starship is a two-stage, fully reusable super heavy-lift launch system under development by SpaceX. The complete vehicle consists of the Super Heavy first-stage booster (powered by 33 Raptor engines) and the Starship upper stage/spacecraft (powered by 6 Raptor engines). When fully stacked, it stands approximately 121 metres tall and produces roughly 74 meganewtons (16.7 million pounds-force) of thrust at liftoff — nearly twice the thrust of the Saturn V that carried Apollo astronauts to the Moon.

Starship is designed to be fully reusable — both stages returning to the launch site for rapid turnaround and re-flight. If SpaceX achieves this goal at scale, it would reduce per-kilogram launch costs by an order of magnitude or more compared to current expendable and partially reusable vehicles, fundamentally changing the economics of space transportation.

Specifications

ParameterSuper Heavy (Booster)Starship (Upper Stage)
Height~71 m~50 m
Diameter9 m9 m
Engines33 × Raptor 2 (sea-level)3 × Raptor (SL) + 3 × Raptor Vacuum
PropellantLiquid methane / LOXLiquid methane / LOX
Thrust (SL)~74 MN (16.7 Mlbf)~14.7 MN (combined)
ConstructionStainless steel (301/304L)Stainless steel (301/304L)
Recovery methodPropulsive return, "chopstick" catch by launch towerPropulsive belly-flop landing

Payload Capacity

Starship's payload capacity depends heavily on the mission profile and whether the vehicle is expended or recovered. In fully reusable mode, SpaceX targets 100–150 tonnes to LEO. In an expendable upper-stage configuration (unlikely to be used routinely), theoretical capacity could exceed 200 tonnes. For comparison, Falcon 9 carries 22.8 tonnes to LEO and Falcon Heavy carries 63.8 tonnes.

The payload bay is approximately 8 metres in internal diameter and roughly 17 metres tall in its cargo configuration — large enough to carry entire space station modules, large space telescopes, or massive batches of next-generation Starlink V2 satellites (potentially 40–60 per flight).

Test Flight Programme

Starship's development has followed SpaceX's iterative "test, fail, fix, fly again" philosophy, with a rapid series of integrated flight tests (IFTs) from the Starbase facility in Boca Chica, Texas:

Testing has continued through 2025 and into 2026, with flights progressively validating reusability, orbital operations, payload deployment and thermal protection systems. SpaceX's goal is to reach a high flight rate with rapid booster and Ship reuse.

Mission Roadmap

Starship is central to several major programmes:

📍 Track on Orbital Radar
Starship test vehicles and any objects deployed during test flights are catalogued and trackable on Orbital Radar. Follow upcoming launch events via the Live Events panel on the tracker.
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