Los Angeles CA (SPX) Mar 09, 2026
NASA says it has finally found the "back to basics" recipe to get Americans back on the Moon by 2028. A new intermediate mission, standardized hardware, a faster launch cadence: on paper, the Artemis overhaul looks like a sober course correction after years of drift. Look a little closer, though, and the same changes read like a managed soft-landing for a program that is structurally broken and quietly slipping toward a 2029 first landing at best.
A new sequence: add one mission, move the goal
The core shift is simple enough:- Artemis II remains a roughly 10-day crewed lunar flyby, now targeting early April 2026 after the Space Launch System (SLS) and Orion were rolled back to the Vehicle Assembly Building to resolve an upper-stage helium flow issue and other pad-discovered faults
- Artemis III, once billed as the first crewed landing in more than half a century, is downgraded to a low-Earth orbit (LEO) test flight to rendezvous and dock with one or more commercial human landers rather than attempt a landing itself
- Artemis IV inherits the flag-planting role, now advertised as the first lunar south-pole landing in "early 2028," with NASA dangling the possibility of two landings that year if everything goes right.
This new ladder is being sold as Apollo-style incrementalism: each flight builds directly on the last, with fewer "firsts" stacked on any single mission. It is a sharp contrast to the previous plan, where Artemis III was expected to debut a new lander design, new mission profile, and new surface ops in one audacious leap.
Safety panel forced NASA's hand
The trigger was NASA's own Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel (ASAP), which concluded that the original Artemis III plan was "high risk" and unlikely to be achievable on the advertised timeline. In blunt language, the panel questioned both Starship HLS's readiness and the wisdom of attempting a first-ever landing of a tall, unproven vehicle on a rough, dimly lit polar site "within the next few years."ASAP's concerns highlight several pressure points:
- Starship-class landers have yet to demonstrate the kind of flawless orbital refueling, deep-space operations, and precision landing performance that a human lunar mission demands
- Programmatic and technical risks have continued to emerge and affect the overall Artemis III schedule, making the mission's original goals increasingly unrealistic
- Earlier talk about ending SLS and Orion after just a handful of flights introduced uncertainty about how later missions and any long-term base would be supported.
The panel's bottom line: Artemis III, as previously conceived, tried to do too much, too soon. NASA's solution is to keep most of the public schedule ambition while quietly stretching the ladder between "first crewed flyby" and "first landing."
Standardization and the death of SLS Block-1B
Alongside the mission reshuffle, NASA is making a major hardware call: SLS will stay in its current Block-1 configuration for longer, and the once-planned Block-1B and Block-2 upgrades - along with Boeing's Exploration Upper Stage and the troubled Mobile Launcher 2 project - are being cut back or effectively scrapped.Headquarters argues that swapping configurations mid-campaign would be "needlessly complicated" and inconsistent with the step-by-step buildup they say they want. That's not wrong; constantly changing vehicles does add risk. But it also neatly sidesteps a multibillion-dollar overrun and schedule fiasco tied to the upper-stage upgrades and new launcher tower.
In place of bigger rockets, NASA is promising a faster cadence:
- Artemis II in 2026
- Artemis III LEO test in 2027
- Artemis IV landing in early 2028, with the possibility of Artemis V later that same year.
This "one big rocket, many similar flights" formula deliberately echoes the 1960s, when NASA was flying something every few months instead of every few years.
The cost of another "test"
No official lifecycle cost number accompanied the announcement, but the financial context is well-known:- NASA's Inspector General has previously pegged Artemis-related spending through FY2025 at roughly 93 billion USD
- Each SLS/Orion launch is estimated at about 4 billion USD, and Artemis as a whole runs into several billion per year when you add landers, Gateway work, and ground systems.
The new plan adds:
- One extra SLS/Orion crewed flight - Artemis III - that would not have existed as a stand-alone LEO test under the old architecture
- Additional lander operations, integration, and risk-reduction work to make that docking mission meaningful.
It subtracts or trims:
- The SLS Block-1B/2 upgrade path and much of the Mobile Launcher 2 scope, which had already swollen into a multibillion-dollar problem.
Net, that likely means several extra billions in the late-2020s, pushing the total cost to a first landing into the low triple-digit billions, offset by a few billion in avoided upgrade spending. It's not a doubling, but it is more money for a program already known for budget bloat.
2028 on paper, 2029 in reality
On the official timeline, nothing has slipped: NASA still insists the first landing will be in 2028, just on a different mission. Artemis II flies in 2026, Artemis III in 2027, Artemis IV plants the flag in early 2028, and after that the agency plans at least one landing per year.But every element in that chain has already shown a tendency to drift:
- Artemis I launched years later than originally promised
- Artemis II has now been delayed again by pad-discovered hardware issues, despite earlier targets around early 2026, and only recently emerged from the VAB with its helium problem fixed
- Starship-class HLS development has slipped, and even with the extra LEO test, NASA's own advisers doubt a safe polar landing profile can be ready "within the next few years."
If you assume even a single year of further slippage at any one of those steps, Artemis IV's "early 2028" landing naturally slides into a mid- or late-2029 window. That happens to line up with the 60th anniversary of Apollo 11 in July 2029, a date rich in symbolism but also a reminder of how long the "return to the Moon" has already been kicking around.
Course correction or managed failure?
So which is it: an honest course correction, or a controlled crash of expectations?There is genuine engineering logic to the new sequence. A LEO lander test before a polar landing is a sensible risk-reduction measure. Standardizing SLS hardware and flying more frequently should, in theory, improve reliability and preserve skills.
At the same time, the overhaul:
- Pushes the true first-landing attempt further into the future while preserving the political talking point of "a 2028 landing." - Locks in at least one more very expensive SLS flight and a new mission for commercial landers without resolving the fundamental schedule and cost pressures
- Moves the entire program a little closer to the point where a serious failure or budget shock could prompt leaders to claim success after a flyby or single landing and quietly dial down ambitions.
The Artemis overhaul is therefore best understood as both things at once. It is a necessary safety-driven correction to an over-ambitious plan - and a way to postpone the moment of truth for a fragile, overextended program that now has one more mission to survive before it can deliver the headline everyone is waiting for.
Related Links
Humans In Space at Artemis
Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
Lunar Dreams and more


NASA says it has finally found the 'back to basics' recipe to get Americans back on the Moon by 2028. A new intermediate mission, standardized hardware, a faster launch cadence: on paper, the Artemis overhaul looks like a sober course correction after years of drift. Look a little closer, though, and the same changes read like a managed soft-landing for a program that is structurally broken and