Missions to the Moon have been numerous and include some of the earliest space missions, conducting exploration of the Moon since 1959.
The first partially successful lunar mission was Luna 1 (January 1959), the first probe to leave Earth and fly past another astronomical body. Soon after that the first Moon landing and the first landing on any extraterrestrial body was performed by Luna 2,[1] which intentionally impacted the Moon on 14 September 1959. The far side of the Moon, which is always facing away from Earth due to tidal locking, was seen for the first time by Luna 3 in (7 October 1959). In 1966, Luna 9 became the first spacecraft to achieve a controlled soft landing,[2] while Luna 10 became the first mission to enter orbit, and in 1968 Zond 5 became the first mission to carry terrestrial lifeforms (tortoises) to close proximity of the Moon through a circumlunar approach.
The first crewed missions to the Moon were pursued by the Soviet Union and the United States, becoming the climax of the Space Race. While the Soviet Union shifted to robotic sample return missions, the American Apollo program proceeded successfully, with Apollo 8 becoming the first crewed mission to enter lunar orbit in December 1968. On 20 July 1969 Apollo 11 landed on the Moon, and Neil Armstrong became the first person to walk on the Moon. At the same time another mission, the robotic sample return mission Luna 15 by the Soviet Union, was in orbit around the Moon, becoming together with Apollo 11 the first ever case of two extraterrestrial missions being conducted at the same time. Until 1972 crewed Apollo missions and until 1976 Soviet uncrewed sample return missions, with the first ever successful extraterrestrial rovers (Lunokhod programme), continued. After that no dedicated lunar missions were conducted until 1990. Since then the following nations and organisations (in chronological order) have visited the Moon, after the Soviet Union and the United States: Japan, the European Space Agency, China, India, Luxembourg, Israel, Italy, South Korea, the United Arab Emirates, Russia, Mexico. In 2018 the far side of the Moon was for the first time landed on by the Chang'e 4 mission at the South Pole–Aitken basin on 3 January 2019 and deployed the Yutu-2 rover. Five years later, China followed with Chang'e 6 sample return mission to the far side whose lander successfully landed in Apollo crater on 1 June 2024 and collected lunar samples.
The Moon has also been visited by five spacecraft not dedicated to studying it; four of these spacecraft have flown past for the purpose of gravity assistance, and a radio telescope, Explorer 49, was placed into selenocentric orbit in order to use the Moon to block interference from terrestrial radio sources.
– Successful | – Failed | |
– Partially successful | ||
1 | Pioneer 0(Able I)[3] | Pioneer 0 | Thor DM-18 Able I | USAF | Orbiter | ||
First attempted launch beyond Earth orbit; failed to orbit due to turbopump gearbox malfunction resulting in first-stage explosion. Reached apogee of 16km (10miles).[4] | |||||||
2 | Luna E-1 No.1 | Luna E-1 No.1 | Luna | OKB-1 | Impactor | ||
Failed to orbit; rocket disintegrated due to excessive vibration.[5] | |||||||
3 | Pioneer 1(Able II) | Pioneer 1 | Thor DM-18 Able I | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Failed to orbit; premature second-stage cutoff due to accelerometer failure. Later known as Pioneer 1. Reached apogee of .[6] | |||||||
4 | Luna E-1 No.2 | Luna E-1 No.2 | Luna | OKB-1 | Impactor | ||
Failed to orbit; carrier rocket exploded due to excessive vibration. | |||||||
5 | Pioneer 2(Able III) | Pioneer 2 | Thor DM-18 Able I | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Failed to orbit; premature second-stage cutoff due to erroneous command by ground controllers; third stage failed to ignite due to broken electrical connection. Reached apogee of .[7] | |||||||
6 | Luna E-1 No.3 | Luna E-1 No.3 | Luna | OKB-1 | Impactor | ||
Failed to orbit; seal failure in hydrogen peroxide pump cooling system resulted in core-stage underperformance. | |||||||
7 | Pioneer 3 | Pioneer 3 | Juno II | NASA | Flyby | ||
Failed to orbit; premature first-stage cutoff. Reached apogee of .[8] | |||||||
8 | Luna 1(E-1 No.4) | Luna 1 | Luna | OKB-1 | Impactor | ||
Carrier rocket guidance problem resulted in failure to impact Moon, flew past in a heliocentric orbit.[9] Closest approach on 4 January.[10] First spacecraft to fly by the Moon. | |||||||
9 | Pioneer 4 | Pioneer 4 | Juno II | NASA | Flyby | ||
Second-stage overperformance resulted in flyby at greater altitude than expected, out of instrument range, with of distance. Closest approach at 22:25 UTC on 4 March. First U.S. spacecraft to leave Earth orbit.[11] | |||||||
10 | E-1A No.1 | E-1A No.1 | Luna | OKB-1 | Impactor | ||
Failed to orbit; guidance system malfunction. | |||||||
11 | Luna 2(E-1A No.2) | Luna 2 | Luna | OKB-1 | Impactor | ||
Successful impact at 21:02 on 14 September 1959. First spacecraft to impact the lunar surface.[12] This made the Soviet Union the 1st country to impact the surface of the Moon. | |||||||
12 | Luna 3(E-2A No.1) | Luna 3 | Luna | OKB-1 | Flyby | ||
Returned the first images of the far side of the Moon.[13] | |||||||
13 | Pioneer P-3Able IVB | Pioneer P-3 | Atlas-D Able | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Failed to orbit;[14] payload fairing disintegrated due to design fault. | |||||||
14 | Luna E-3 No.1 | Luna E-3 No.1 | Luna | OKB-1 | Flyby | ||
Failed to orbit; premature third-stage cutoff.[15] | |||||||
15 | Luna E-3 No.2 | Luna E-3 No.2 | Luna | OKB-1 | Flyby | ||
Failed to orbit; rocket disintegrated ten seconds after launch. | |||||||
16 | Pioneer P-30(Able VA) | Pioneer P-30 | Atlas-D Able | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Failed to orbit; second-stage oxidizer system malfunction resulting in premature cutoff.[16] | |||||||
17 | Pioneer P-31(Able VB) | Pioneer P-31 | Atlas-D Able | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Failed to orbit, exploded 68 seconds after launch, at an altitude of . Second stage ignited while first stage was still attached and burning.[17] | |||||||
18 | Ranger 3(P-34) | Ranger 3 | Atlas LV-3 Agena-B | NASA | Impactor | ||
Ranger 3 lander | Lander | ||||||
Partial launch failure due to guidance problem; attempt to correct using spacecraft's engine resulted in it missing the Moon by .[18] [19] | |||||||
19 | Ranger 4(P-35) | Ranger 4 | Atlas LV-3 Agena-B | NASA | Impactor | ||
Ranger 4 lander | Lander | ||||||
Failed to deploy solar panels, ran out of power ten hours after launch; incidental impact on the far side of the Moon on 26 April. First spacecraft to impact the far side of the Moon.[20] The impact made the United States the 2nd country to impact the surface of the Moon. | |||||||
20 | Ranger 5(P-36) | Ranger 5 | Atlas LV-3 Agena-B | NASA | Impactor | ||
Ranger 5 lander | Lander | ||||||
Solar panels erroneously disengaged from power system, failed hours after launch when batteries were depleted. Missed the Moon as course correction was not completed.[21] | |||||||
21 | Luna E-6 No.2 | Luna E-6 No.2 | Molniya-L | OKB-1 | Lander | ||
Failed to depart Low Earth orbit;[22] guidance system power failure prevented upper-stage ignition.[23] | |||||||
22 | Luna E-6 No.3 | Luna E-6 No.3 | Molniya-L | OKB-1 | Lander | ||
Failed to orbit; guidance failure. | |||||||
23 | Luna 4(E-6 No.4) | Luna 4 | Molniya-L | OKB-1 | Lander | ||
Failed to perform mid-course correction, remained in high Earth orbit until given escape velocity by orbital perturbation.[24] | |||||||
24 | Ranger 6(P-54) | Ranger 6 | Atlas LV-3 Agena-B | NASA | Impactor | ||
Impacted on 2 February 1964, failed to return images due to power system failure.[25] [26] | |||||||
25 | Luna E-6 No.6 | Luna E-6 No.6 | Molniya-M | OKB-1 | Lander | ||
Failed to orbit; third stage underperformed due to oxidiser valve failure. | |||||||
26 | Luna E-6 No.5 | Luna E-6 No.5 | Molniya-M | OKB-1 | Lander | ||
Failed to orbit; power failure caused by broken connection resulted in premature third-stage cutoff. | |||||||
27 | Ranger 7 | Ranger 7 | Atlas LV-3 Agena-B | NASA | Impactor | ||
Impacted on 30 July 1964 at 13:25:48 UTC.[27] | |||||||
28 | Ranger 8 | Ranger 8 | Atlas LV-3 Agena-B | NASA | Impactor | ||
Impacted on 20 February 1965 at 09:57:37 UTC.[28] [29] | |||||||
29 | Kosmos 60(E-6 No.9) | Kosmos 60 | Molniya-L | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Upper stage failed to restart due to guidance system short circuit, Failed to depart low Earth orbit.[30] | |||||||
30 | Ranger 9 | Ranger 9 | Atlas LV-3 Agena-B | NASA | Impactor | ||
Impacted on 24 March 1965 at 14:08:20 UTC.[31] | |||||||
31 | Luna E-6 No.8 | Luna E-6 No.8 | Molniya-L | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Third stage failed to ignite due to loss of oxidiser pressure, failed to orbit. | |||||||
32 | Luna 5(E-6 No.10) | Luna 5 | Molniya-M | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Loss of control after gyroscope malfunction, failed to decelerate for landing and impacted the Moon at 19:10 UTC on 12 May 1965.[32] | |||||||
33 | Luna 6(E-6 No.7) | Luna 6 | Molniya-M | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Engine failed to shut down after performing mid-course correction manoeuvre, flew past the Moon in a heliocentric orbit.[33] | |||||||
34 | Zond 3(3MV-4 No.3) | Zond 3 | Molniya | Lavochkin | Flyby | ||
Flew past the Moon on 20 July 1965 at a distance of .[34] Conducted technology demonstration for future planetary missions. | |||||||
35 | Luna 7(E-6 No.11) | Luna 7 | Molniya | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Attitude control failure shortly before landing prevented controlled descent; impacted the lunar surface 22:08:24 UTC on 7 October 1965.[35] | |||||||
36 | Luna 8(E-6 No.12) | Luna 8 | Molniya | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Landing airbag punctured, resulting in loss of attitude control shortly before planned touchdown, impacted Moon on 6 December 1965 at 21:51:30 UTC.[36] | |||||||
37 | Luna 9(E-6 No.13) | Luna 9 | Molniya-M | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
First spacecraft to land successfully on the Moon. Touchdown on 3 February 1966 at 18:45:30 UTC.[37] Returned data until 6 February at 22:55 UTC.[38] With its soft landing, the Soviet Union became the first country to successfully land on the lunar surface. | |||||||
38 | Kosmos 111(E-6S No.204) | Kosmos 111 | Molniya-M | Lavochkin | Orbiter | ||
Upper stage lost attitude control and failed to ignite; spacecraft never left low Earth orbit.[39] | |||||||
39 | Luna 10(E-6S No.206) | Luna 10 | Molniya-M | Lavochkin | Orbiter | ||
Entered orbit at 18:44 UTC on 3 April 1966, becoming the first spacecraft to orbit the Moon.[40] Continued to return data until 30 May. | |||||||
40 | Surveyor 1 | Surveyor 1 | Atlas LV-3C Centaur-D | NASA | Lander | ||
Landed in Oceanus Procellarum on 2 June 1966 at 06:17:36 UTC. Returned data until loss of power on 13 July.[41] With its soft landing, the United States became the second country to successfully land on the lunar surface. | |||||||
41 | Explorer 33(AIMP-D) | Explorer 33 | Delta E1 | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Magnetospheric probe; rocket imparted greater velocity than had been planned, leaving spacecraft unable to enter orbit. Repurposed for Earth orbit mission which was completed successfully.[42] | |||||||
42 | Lunar Orbiter 1 | Lunar Orbiter 1 | Atlas SLV-3 Agena-D | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Orbital insertion at around 15:36 UTC on 14 August. Deorbited early due to lack of fuel and to avoid communications interference with the next mission, impacted the Moon at 13:30 UTC on 29 October 1966.[43] | |||||||
43 | Luna 11(E-6LF No.101) | Luna 11 | Molniya-M | Lavochkin | Orbiter | ||
Entered orbit on 28 August 1966. Failed to return images; other instruments operated correctly. Conducted gamma ray and X-ray observations to study the composition of the Moon, investigated the lunar gravitational field, the presence of meteorites in the lunar environment and the radiation environment at the Moon. Ceased operation on 1 October 1966 after power was depleted.[44] | |||||||
44 | Surveyor 2 | Surveyor 2 | Atlas LV-3C Centaur-D | NASA | Lander | ||
One thruster failed to ignite during mid-course correction manoeuvre, resulting in loss of control. Impacted the Moon at 03:18 UTC on 23 September 1966.[45] | |||||||
45 | Luna 12(E-6LF No.102) | Luna 12 | Molniya-M | Lavochkin | Orbiter | ||
Entered orbit on 25 October 1966 and returned data until 19 January 1967.[46] Completed photography mission intended for Luna 11. | |||||||
46 | Lunar Orbiter 2 | Lunar Orbiter 2 | Atlas SLV-3 Agena-D | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Entered orbit at about 19:51 UTC on 10 November 1966 to begin photographic mapping mission. Impacted on the far side of the lunar surface following deorbit burn on 11 October 1967 at end of mission.[47] | |||||||
47 | Luna 13(E-6M No.205) | Luna 13 | Molniya-M | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Successfully landed in Oceanus Procellarum at 18:01 UTC on 24 December 1966. Returned images from the surface and studied the lunar soil.[48] Operated until depletion of power at 06:31 UTC on 28 December. | |||||||
48 | Lunar Orbiter 3 | Lunar Orbiter 3 | Atlas SLV-3 Agena-D | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Entered orbit at 21:54 UTC on 8 February 1967. Deorbited at end of mission and impacted the Moon on 9 October 1967.[49] | |||||||
49 | Surveyor 3 | Surveyor 3 | Atlas LV-3C Centaur-D | NASA | Lander | ||
Landed at 00:04 UTC on 20 April 1967 and operated until 3 May.[50] [51] Visited by Apollo 12 astronauts in 1969, with some parts removed for return to Earth.[52] | |||||||
50 | Lunar Orbiter 4 | Lunar Orbiter 4 | Atlas SLV-3 Agena-D | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Entered orbit at 21:54 UTC on 8 May 1967, operated until 17 July. Decayed from orbit, with lunar impact occurring on 6 October 1967.[53] | |||||||
51 | Surveyor 4 | Surveyor 4 | Atlas LV-3C Centaur-D | NASA | Lander | ||
Contact with spacecraft lost at 02:03 UTC on 17 July, two and a half minutes before scheduled landing. NASA determined that the spacecraft may have exploded, otherwise it impacted the Moon.[54] | |||||||
52 | Explorer 35 (AIMP-E) | Explorer 35 (AIMP-E) | Delta E1 | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Magnetospheric probe, studying the Moon and interplanetary space. Deactivated on 27 June 1973.[55] Presumed to have impacted the Moon during the 1970s.[56] | |||||||
53 | Lunar Orbiter 5 | Lunar Orbiter 5 | Atlas SLV-3 Agena-D | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Final mission in the Lunar Orbiter series, entered selenocentric orbit on 5 August at 16:48 UTC and conducted a photographic survey until 18 August. Deorbited and impacted the Moon on 31 January 1968.[57] | |||||||
54 | Surveyor 5 | Surveyor 5 | Atlas SLV-3C Centaur-D | NASA | Lander | ||
Landed in Mare Tranquillitatis at 00:46:44 UTC on 11 September. Last signals received at 04:30 UTC on 17 December 1967.[58] | |||||||
55 | Soyuz 7K-L1 No.4L | Soyuz 7K-L1 No.4L | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Flyby | ||
Technology demonstration for planned crewed missions. Failed to reach orbit after a blocked propellant line caused one of the first-stage engines to not ignite. | |||||||
56 | Surveyor 6 | Surveyor 6 | Atlas SLV-3C Centaur-D | NASA | Lander | ||
Landed in Sinus Medii at 01:01:04 UTC on 10 November. Made brief flight from lunar surface at 10:32 UTC on 17 November, followed by second landing after travelling . Last contact at 19:14 UTC on 14 December.[59] | |||||||
57 | Soyuz 7K-L1 No.5L | Soyuz 7K-L1 No.5L | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Flyby | ||
Technology demonstration for planned crewed missions; unable to achieve orbit after second-stage engine failed to ignite. | |||||||
58 | Surveyor 7 | Surveyor 7 | NASA | Lander | |||
Final Surveyor mission.[60] Landed from Tycho crater at 01:05:36 UTC on 10 January. Operated until 21 February 1968.[61] | |||||||
59 | Luna E-6LS No.112 | Luna E-6LS No.112 | Molniya-M | Lavochkin | Orbiter | ||
Failed to orbit after third stage ran out of fuel. | |||||||
60 | Luna 14(E-6LS No.113) | Luna 14 | Molniya-M | Lavochkin | Orbiter | ||
Tested communications for proposed crewed missions and studied the mass concentration of the Moon. Entered orbit on 10 April at 19:25 UTC.[62] | |||||||
61 | Soyuz 7K-L1 No.7L | Soyuz 7K-L1 No.7L | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Flyby | ||
Technology demonstration for planned crewed missions. Failed to orbit after second-stage engine incorrectly commanded to shut down. Spacecraft was recovered using its prototype launch escape system. | |||||||
62 | Zond 5(7K-L1 No.9L) | Zond 5 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Flyby | ||
Two tortoises and other life forms on board a technology demonstration for planned crewed missions. Made a closest approach of on 18 September, and circled the Moon before returning to Earth. Landed in the Indian Ocean on 21 September at 16:08 UTC, becoming the first Lunar spacecraft to be recovered successfully and carried the first Earth life to travel to and around the Moon.[63] | |||||||
63 | Zond 6(7K-L1 No.12L) | Zond 6 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Flyby | ||
Technology demonstration for planned crewed missions. Carrying turtles, making this the second mission of Earthlings to travel in close proximity of the Moon, the flyby was on 14 November with a closest approach of .[64] Reentered Earth's atmosphere on 17 November; recovery was unsuccessful after parachutes were prematurely jettisoned. | |||||||
64 | Apollo 8 | Apollo 8 | Saturn V | NASA | Crewed orbiter | ||
First crewed mission to the Moon; entered orbit around the Moon with four-minute burn beginning at 09:59:52 UTC on 24 December. Completed ten orbits of the Moon before returning to Earth with an engine burn at 06:10:16 UTC on 25 December. Landed in the Pacific Ocean at 15:51 UTC on 27 December.[65] | |||||||
65 | Soyuz 7K-L1 No.13L | Soyuz 7K-L1 No.13L | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Flyby | ||
Technology demonstration for planned crewed missions. Failed to orbit after one of the four second-stage engines shut down prematurely. Third-stage engine also shut down prematurely. The spacecraft was recovered using its launch escape system.[66] | |||||||
66 | Luna E-8 No.201 | Luna E-8 No.201 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Lunokhod | Rover | ||||||
First launch of the Lunokhod rover. Launch vehicle disintegrated 51 seconds after launch and exploded.[67] | |||||||
67 | Soyuz 7K-L1S No.3 | Soyuz 7K-L1S No.3 | N1 | OKB-1 | Orbiter | ||
First launch of N1 rocket; intended to orbit the Moon and return to Earth. First stage prematurely shut down 70 seconds after launch; launch vehicle crashed from launch site. Spacecraft landed some from the launch pad after successfully using its launch escape system. | |||||||
68 | Apollo 10 | Apollo 10 | Saturn V | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Lunar Module Snoopy | Orbiter | ||||||
Dress rehearsal for Apollo 11. Lunar Module with two astronauts on board descended to a distance of above the lunar surface.[68] | |||||||
69 | Luna E-8-5 No.402 | Luna E-8-5 No.402 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Luna E-8-5 No.402 return craft | Sample Return | ||||||
Intended to land on the Moon and return lunar soil sample. Did not reach Earth orbit after fourth stage failed to ignite. | |||||||
70 | Soyuz 7K-L1S No.5 | Soyuz 7K-L1S No.5 | N1 | OKB-1 | Orbiter | ||
Intended to orbit the Moon and return to Earth. All first-stage engines shut down 10 seconds after launch; launch vehicle crashed and exploded on the launch pad. Spacecraft landed safely from the launch site after using launch escape sequence. | |||||||
71 | Luna 15(E-8-5 No.401) | Luna 15 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Luna 15 return craft | Sample Return | ||||||
Reached lunar orbit at 10:00 UTC on 17 July. Descent retro-rocket burn started at 15:47 UTC on 21 July. Contact lost three minutes after de-orbit burn; probably crashed on the Moon. | |||||||
72 | Apollo 11 | Apollo 11 | Saturn V | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Lunar Module Eagle | Lander/Launch Vehicle | ||||||
First crewed landing on the Moon. The Lunar Module Eagle landed at 20:17 UTC on 20 July 1969. | |||||||
73 | Zond 7(7K-L1 No.11L) | Zond 7 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Flyby | ||
Technology demonstration for planned crewed missions. Carried four turtles in a lunar flyby on 10 August, with a closest approach of ; returned to Earth and landed in Kazakhstan at 18:13 UTC on 14 August. | |||||||
74 | Kosmos 300(E-8-5 No.403) | Kosmos 300 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Kosmos 300 return craft | Sample return | ||||||
Third attempt at lunar sample return. After reaching low Earth orbit, the fourth-stage engine failed to fire for trans-lunar injection due to oxidiser leak. Spacecraft re-entered Earth's atmosphere about 4 days after launch. | |||||||
75 | Kosmos 305(E-8-5 No.404) | Kosmos 305 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Kosmos 305 return craft | Sample Return | ||||||
Fourth attempt at lunar sample return. After reaching low Earth orbit, the fourth-stage engine failed to fire for trans-lunar injection due to control system malfunction. Spacecraft re-entered Earth's atmosphere within one orbit after launch. | |||||||
76 | Apollo 12 | Apollo 12 | Saturn V | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Lunar Module Intrepid | Lander/Launch Vehicle | ||||||
Second crewed lunar landing. | |||||||
77 | Luna E-8-5 No.405 | Luna E-8-5 No.405 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Luna E-8-5 No.405 return craft | Sample return | ||||||
Failed to orbit | |||||||
78 | Apollo 13 | Apollo 13 | Saturn V | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Lunar Module Aquarius | Saturn V | NASA | Rescue mission | ||||
Lunar landing aborted following Service Module oxygen tank explosion en route to the Moon; flew past the Moon (free-return trajectory) and returned the crew safely to Earth. | |||||||
79 | Luna 16(E-8-5 No.406) | Luna 16 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Luna 16 return craft | Sample return | ||||||
First robotic sampling mission. | |||||||
80 | Zond 8(7K-L1 No.14L) | Zond 8 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Flyby | ||
Technology demonstration for planned crewed missions; returned to Earth successfully. | |||||||
81 | Luna 17(E-8 No.203) | Luna 17 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Lunokhod 1 | Rover | ||||||
Luna 17 deployed Lunokhod 1. | |||||||
82 | Apollo 14 | Apollo 14 | Saturn V | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Lunar Module Antares | Lander/Launch Vehicle | ||||||
Third crewed lunar landing. | |||||||
83 | Apollo 15 | Apollo 15 | Saturn V | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Lunar Module Falcon | Lander/Launch Vehicle | ||||||
Lunar Roving Vehicle | Rover | ||||||
Fourth crewed lunar landing, and first to use the Lunar Roving Vehicle. | |||||||
84 | PFS-1 | PFS-1 | Saturn V | NASA | Orbiter | ||
PFS-1 was deployed from Apollo 15. | |||||||
85 | Luna 18(E-8-5 No.407) | Luna 18 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Luna 18 return craft | Sample return | ||||||
Failed during descent to lunar surface. | |||||||
86 | Luna 19(E-8LS No.202) | Luna 19 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Orbiter | ||
Entered an orbit around the Moon on 2 October 1971 after two midcourse corrections on 29 September and 1 October. | |||||||
87 | Luna 20(E-8-5 No.408) | Luna 20 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Luna 20 return craft | Sample return | ||||||
Luna 20 soft landed on the Moon in a mountainous area known as the Terra Apollonius (or Apollonius highlands) near Mare Fecunditatis (Sea of Fertility), 120 km from where Luna 16 had landed. | |||||||
88 | Apollo 16 | Apollo 16 | Saturn V | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Lunar Module Orion | Lander/Launch Vehicle | ||||||
Lunar Roving Vehicle | Rover | ||||||
5th crewed lunar landing. | |||||||
89 | PFS-2 | PFS-2 | Saturn V | NASA | Orbiter | ||
PFS-2 deployed from Apollo 16. | |||||||
90 | Soyuz 7K-LOK No.1 | Soyuz 7K-LOK No.1 | N1 | OKB-1 | Orbiter | ||
Failed to orbit; intended to orbit the Moon and return to Earth. | |||||||
91 | Apollo 17 | Apollo 17 | Saturn V | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Lunar Module Challenger | Lander/Launch Vehicle | ||||||
Lunar Roving Vehicle | Rover | ||||||
Sixth and last crewed lunar landing and last use of the Lunar Roving Vehicle; the orbiting command module included five mice. | |||||||
92 | Luna 21(E-8 No.204) | Luna 21 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Lunokhod 2 | Rover | ||||||
Deployed Lunokhod 2. | |||||||
93 | Explorer 49(RAE-B) | Explorer 49 | Delta 1913 | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Radio astronomy spacecraft, operated in selenocentric orbit to avoid interference from terrestrial radio sources. | |||||||
94 | Mariner 10 | Mariner 10 | Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1A | NASA | Flyby | ||
Interplanetary spacecraft, mapped lunar north pole to test cameras. | |||||||
95 | Luna 22(E-8LS No.206) | Luna 22 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Orbiter | ||
Inserted into a circular lunar orbit on 2 June 1974 | |||||||
96 | Luna 23(E-8-5M No.410) | Luna 23 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Luna 23 return craft | Sample Return | ||||||
Tipped over upon landing, precluding any sample return attempt. Functioned for three days on surface. | |||||||
97 | Luna E-8-5M No.412 | Luna E-8-5M No.412 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Luna E-8-5M No.412 return craft | Sample Return | ||||||
Failed to orbit. | |||||||
98 | Luna 24(E-8-5M No.413) | Luna 24 | Proton-K/D | Lavochkin | Lander | ||
Luna 24 return craft | Sample Return | ||||||
Entered orbit on 11 August 1976 and landed in Mare Crisium at 16:36 UTC on 18 August. Sample capsule launched at 05:25 UTC on 19 August and recovered hours later.[69] Returned of lunar regolith.[70] Final mission to the Moon from the Soviet Union. | |||||||
99 | ISEE-3(ICE/Explorer 59) | ISEE-3 | Delta 2914 | NASA | Flyby | ||
Five flybys in 1982 and 1983 en route to comet 21P/Giacobini–Zinner. | |||||||
100 | Hiten(MUSES-A) | Hiten | Mu-3S-II | ISAS | Orbiter | ||
Hagoromo | Mu-3S-II | ISAS | Orbiter | ||||
Designed for flyby, placed into selenocentric orbit during extended mission after failure of Hagoromo. Deorbited and impacted in USGS quadrangle LQ27 on 10 April 1993.[71] Hagoromo was deployed from Hiten. The impact made Japan the 3rd country to impact the surface of the Moon. | |||||||
101 | Geotail | Geotail | Delta II 6925 | ISAS/NASA | Flyby | ||
Series of flybys to regulate high Earth orbit. | |||||||
102 | WIND | WIND | Delta II 7925-10 | NASA | Flyby | ||
Made two flybys on 1 December 1994 and 27 December 1994 to reach the Earth–Sun L1 Lagrangian point. | |||||||
103 | Clementine(DSPSE) | Clementine | Titan II (23)G Star-37FM | USAF/NASA | Orbiter | ||
Completed Lunar objectives successfully; failed following departure from selenocentric orbit. | |||||||
104 | HGS-1 | HGS-1 | Proton-K/DM3 | Hughes | Flyby | ||
Communications satellite; made two flybys in May and June 1998 en route to geosynchronous orbit after delivery into wrong orbit. | |||||||
105 | Lunar Prospector(Discovery 3) | Lunar Prospector | Athena II | NASA | Orbiter | ||
The mission ended on July 31, 1999 | |||||||
106 | Nozomi(PLANET-B) | Nozomi | M-V | ISAS | Flyby | ||
Two flybys en route to Mars. |
Colour key:
– Successful | – Failed | |
– Partially successful | ||
– Operational |
107 | WMAP | WMAP | Delta II 7425-10 | NASA | Flyby | ||
Flyby on 30 July 2001 to reach the Earth–Sun L2 Lagrangian point. | |||||||
108 | SMART-1 | SMART-1 | Ariane 5G | ESA | Orbiter | ||
Impacted Moon in USGS quadrangle LQ26 at end of mission on 3 September 2006. The impact made the ESA member states collectively the 4th to impact the surface of the Moon. | |||||||
109 | STEREO | STEREO A | Delta II 7925-10L | NASA | Flyby | ||
STEREO B | |||||||
Both component spacecraft entered heliocentric orbit on 15 December 2006. | |||||||
110 | ARTEMIS | ARTEMIS P1 | Delta II 7925 | NASA | Orbiter | ||
ARTEMIS P2 | Orbiter | ||||||
Two THEMIS spacecraft moved to selenocentric orbit for extended mission; entered orbit July 2011. | |||||||
111 | SELENE | Kaguya | H-IIA 2022 | JAXA | Orbiter | ||
Okina | Orbiter | ||||||
Ouna | Orbiter | ||||||
Deployed Okina and Ouna satellites. Kaguya and Okina impacted the Moon at end of mission.[72] Ouna completed operations on 29 June 2009[73] but remains in selenocentric orbit. | |||||||
112 | Chang'e 1 | Chang'e 1 | Long March 3A | CNSA | Orbiter | ||
Impacted Moon in USGS quadrangle LQ21 on 1 March 2009, at end of mission. The impact made China the 6th country to impact the surface of the Moon. | |||||||
113 | Chandrayaan-1 | Chandrayaan-1 | 22 October 2008 | PSLV-XL C11 | ISRO | Orbiter | |
Moon Impact Probe | Impactor | ||||||
Succeeded through mission. Orbit lasted 312 days, short of intended 2 years; However mission achieved most of its intended objectives. Terminated in 2009, remains in selenocentric orbit; discovered water ice on the Moon.[74] Moon Impact Probe was deployed from the orbiter. It successfully impacted Moon's Shackleton Crater in the USGS quadrangle LQ30 at 20:31 on 14 November 2008 releasing underground debris that could be analyzed by the orbiter for presence of water/ice. With this mission, India became the 4th nation to impact the lunar surface and 5th as an agency. | |||||||
114 | LRO & LCROSS | Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter | Atlas V 401 | NASA | Orbiter | ||
LCROSS | Atlas V 401 | NASA | Impactor | ||||
LCROSS observed impact of Centaur upper stage that launched it and LRO, then impacted itself. Impacts in USGS quadrangle LQ30. LRO entered orbit on June 23, 2009. | |||||||
115 | Chang'e 2 | Chang'e 2 | Long March 3C | CNSA | Orbiter | ||
Following completion of six month Lunar mission, departed selenocentric orbit for Earth–Sun L2 Lagrangian point[75] and subsequently flew by asteroid 4179 Toutatis for a close encounter with the asteroid at a distance of 3.2 kilometers and a relative velocity of 10.73 km/s.[76] [77] | |||||||
116 | GRAIL | Ebb(GRAIL-A) | [78] [79] | Delta II 7920H | NASA | Orbiter | |
Flow(GRAIL-B) | Orbiter | ||||||
Impacted the Moon in USGS quadrangle LQ01 on 17 December 2012 at end of mission.[80] | |||||||
117 | LADEE | LADEE | Minotaur V | NASA | Orbiter | ||
Mission ended on 18 April 2014, when the spacecraft's controllers intentionally crashed LADEE into the far side of the Moon. | |||||||
118 | Chang'e 3 | Chang'e 3 | Long March 3B | CNSA | Lander | ||
Yutu | Long March 3B | CNSA | Rover | ||||
Entered orbit on 6 December 2013 with landing at 13:12 UTC on 14 December. Yutu rover was deployed from Chang'e 3. With its soft landing, China became the third country to successfully land on the lunar surface. | |||||||
119 | Chang'e 5-T1 | Chang'e 5-T1 | Long March 3C | CNSA | Orbiter | ||
Chang'e 5-T1 Return Capsule | Long March 3C | CNSA | Orbiter | ||||
Manfred Memorial Moon Mission | Long March 3C | LuxSpace | Flyby / Impactor (post mission) | ||||
Demonstration of re-entry capsule for Chang'e 5 sample-return mission at lunar return velocity. Orbiter may still be in lunar orbit. Manfred Memorial Moon Mission attached to third stage of CZ-3C used to launch Chang'e 5-T1. Impacted the Moon on 4 March 2022. The impact made Luxembourg the 8th country to impact the surface of the Moon. | |||||||
120 | TESS | TESS | Falcon 9 Full Thrust | NASA | Flyby | ||
Flyby on 17 May 2018 to designated high Earth orbit.[81] | |||||||
121 | Queqiao | Queqiao relay satellite | Long March 4C | CNSA | Relay Satellite | ||
Longjiang-1 | Long March 4C | CNSA | Orbiter | ||||
Longjiang-2 | Long March 4C | CNSA | Orbiter | ||||
Launched on the same rocket as Queqiao. Longjiang-1 never entered Moon orbit,[82] while Longjiang-2 operated in lunar orbit until 31 July 2019, when it impacted the lunar surface.[83] Queqiao entered designated Earth–Moon orbit on 14 June in preparation of Chang'e 4 far-side lunar lander in December 2018. | |||||||
122 | Chang'e 4 | Chang'e 4 | Long March 3B | CNSA | Lander | ||
Yutu-2 | Rover | ||||||
First spacecraft to soft land on the far side of the Moon (South Pole–Aitken basin). Landed 3 January 2019 and deployed the Yutu-2 rover.[84] [85] Cottonseeds sprouted in the lander in a biological experiment, the first plants to sprout on the Moon.[86] | |||||||
123 | Beresheet | Beresheet | Falcon 9 | SpaceIL | Lander | ||
First Israeli and first privately funded lunar lander mission. Technology demonstration. Instrumentation included a magnetometer and laser retroreflector.[87] [88] Spacecraft crashed into the lunar surface after main engine failure during descent from lunar orbit phase.[89] The impact made Israel the 7th country to impact the surface of the Moon. | |||||||
124 | Chandrayaan-2 | Chandrayaan-2 Orbiter | LVM3 | ISRO | Orbiter | ||
Vikram | LVM3 | ISRO | Lander | ||||
Pragyan | Rover | ||||||
Entered orbit on 20 August 2019. Lander separated from orbiter but crashed during a landing attempt on 6 September 2019, attributed to a software glitch. Both lander and rover were lost. Orbiter remained operational.[90] | |||||||
125 | Chang'e 5 | Chang'e 5 Orbiter | 23 November 2020 | Long March 5 | CNSA | Orbiter | |
Chang'e 5 Lander | 23 November 2020 | Long March 5 | CNSA | Lander | |||
Chang'e 5 Ascender | Launch Vehicle | ||||||
Chang'e 5 Returner | Sample Return | ||||||
First lunar sample return mission from China, which returned 1.731 kg (61.1 oz) of lunar samples on 16 December 2020. The orbiter received a mission extension and is currently in a distant retrograde orbit (DRO) of the Moon.[91] | |||||||
126 | CAPSTONE | ⚀ CAPSTONE | 28 June 2022[92] | Electron | NASA | Orbiter | |
Lunar orbiting CubeSat that will test and verify the calculated orbital stability planned for the Gateway space station. | |||||||
127 | Danuri | Danuri | 4 August 2022 | Falcon 9 | KARI | Orbiter[93] [94] | |
Lunar Orbiter by the Korea Aerospace Research Institute (KARI) of South Korea. The orbiter, its science payload and ground control infrastructure are technology demonstrators. The orbiter will also be tasked with surveying lunar resources such as water ice, uranium, helium-3, silicon, and aluminium, and produce a topographic map to help select future lunar landing sites. | |||||||
128 | Artemis 1 | Artemis 1 Orion MPCV CM-002 | 16 November 2022[95] | SLS Block 1 | NASA | Orbiter | |
⚀ LunaH-Map | 16 November 2022 | SLS Block 1 | NASA | Orbiter | |||
⚀ Lunar IceCube | Orbiter | ||||||
⚀ CubeSat for Solar Particles | Flyby | ||||||
⚀ Near-Earth Asteroid Scout | Flyby | ||||||
⚀ OMOTENASHI | JAXA | Lander | |||||
⚀ ArgoMoon | 16 November 2022 | SLS Block 1 | ASI | Flybys | |||
⚀ EQUULEUS | JAXA | Flybys | |||||
⚀ LunIR | 16 November 2022 | SLS Block 1 | Lockheed Martin | Flyby | |||
⚀ BioSentinel | 16 November 2022 | SLS Block 1 | NASA | Flyby | |||
⚀ Team Miles | 16 November 2022 | SLS Block 1 | Fluid & Reason | Flyby | |||
Uncrewed test of Orion spacecraft in lunar flyby and lunar Distant retrograde orbit. | |||||||
129 | Hakuto-R Mission 1 | Hakuto-R | 11 December 2022 | Falcon 9 Block 5 | ispace | Lander | |
SORA-Q | Tomy/JAXA/Dodai | Rover | |||||
Rashid | UAESA/MBRSC | Rover | |||||
⚀ Lunar Flashlight | NASA | Orbiter | |||||
Lunar lander technology demonstration.[96] Contact lost during final stage of landing and deemed a failure. Cause of failure determined to be a software bug associated with the altitude estimation system.,[97] Emirates Lunar Mission Rashid was a small rover demonstration. The impact made the United Arab Emirates the 9th country to impact the surface of the Moon. Lunar Flashlight initially scheduled to be launched on the Artemis 1 mission, moved to a Falcon 9 Block 5 after not making it for the payload integration deadline. NASA announced later that it would not make its planned orbit or monthly flybys due to thruster issues.[98] [99] | |||||||
130 | Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer | Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer | 14 April 2023 | Ariane 5 ECA | ESA | Flyby | |
Will fly by the Moon in August 2024 en route to Ganymede. | |||||||
131 | Chandrayaan-3 | Chandrayaan-3 | 14 July 2023 | LVM3 | ISRO | Orbiter | |
Vikram lander | lander | Lander | |||||
Pragyan rover | Rover | ||||||
Launched on 14 July 2023, Orbit insertion on 5 August 2023, Lander separated from propulsion module on 17 August 2023, landed on 23 August 2023, 12:32 UTC and deployed the Pragyan rover. With its soft landing, India became the fourth country to successfully land on the lunar surface. Later during extended operations, the Propulsion Module returned to Earth's orbit. | |||||||
132 | Luna 25 | Luna 25 | 10 August 2023 | Soyuz-2.1b/Fregat | Roscosmos | Lander | |
Launched on 10 August 2023, Orbital insertion on 16 August 2023, failed orbital maneuver on 19 August 2023 set the spacecraft on the crash course with the Moon's surface. Loss of communication was confirmed by Roscosmos on 20 August 2023. The impact made Russia the 10th country to impact the lunar surface. | |||||||
133 | SLIM | SLIM | 6 September 2023 | H-IIA | JAXA | Lander | |
LEV-1 | Hopper | ||||||
LEV-2 (Sora-Q) | Tomy / JAXA / Doshisha University | Rover | |||||
Launched alongside XRISM as a co-passenger on 7 September 2023. Performed lunar swing-by, followed by lunar orbital insertion on 25 December 2023. SLIM landed intact and within 100 m of its target on 19 January 2024, 15:20 UTC, which met JAXA's criteria for a successful landing.[100] However, it had landed with incorrect attitude to orient solar panels towards the Sun, which led to temporary power loss until the Sun was in the right position. LEV-1 and LEV-2 were successfully deployed and landed separately from SLIM shortly before its own landing. LEV-1 conducted six hops on lunar surface. With its soft landing, Japan became the fifth country to successfully land on the lunar surface. | |||||||
134 | Peregrine Mission One | Peregrine | 8 January 2024 | Vulcan Centaur VC2 | Astrobotic Technology | Lander | |
Colmena × 5 | UNAM | Rovers | |||||
⚀ Iris | CMU | Rover | |||||
Part of CLPS. Peregrine lander's reaction thrusters' leak deemed the spacecraft uncontrollable for landing and it decayed in the Earth's atmosphere 10 days later. | |||||||
135 | IM-1 | Nova-C Odysseus | 14 February 2024 | Falcon 9 B5 | Intuitive Machines | Lander | |
⚀ EagleCam | 14 February 2024 | Falcon 9 B5 | ERAU | Deployable camera | |||
First Nova-C mission. First private spacecraft to soft land on the Moon. Payloads successfully delivered for NASA CLPS and for private customers. Though it landed successfully, one of the lander's legs broke upon landing and it tilted up on other side, 18° due to landing on a slope, but the lander survived and payloads are functioning as expected.[101] EagleCam was not ejected prior to landing. It was later ejected on the 28th of February but minimal data was obtained.[102] [103] | |||||||
136 | DRO A/B | DRO-A | 13 March 2024 | Long March 2C | CAS | Relay Satellite | |
DRO-B | Relay Satellite | ||||||
Yuanzheng 1S upper stage failed to deliver spacecrafts into correct orbit. The satellites were intended to test Distant retrograde orbit.[104] Tracking data appears to show China is attempting to salvage spacecraft and they appear to have succeeded in reaching their desired orbit.[105] [106] | |||||||
137 | Queqiao-2 | Queqiao-2 | 20 March 2024 | Long March 8 | CNSA | Relay Satellite | |
Tiandu-1 | Deep Space Exploration Laboratory (DSEL, Tiandu Lab)[107] | Orbiter | |||||
Tiandu-2 | Orbiter | ||||||
Relay satellite to support future missions of the Chinese Lunar Exploration Program targeting south pole region.[108] Tiandu satellites are launched with them to test communications for future lunar satellite constellation technologies.[109] | |||||||
138 | Chang'e 6 | Chang'e 6 Orbiter | 3 May 2024[110] | Long March 5 | CNSA | Orbiter | |
Chang'e 6 Lander | 3 May 2024 | Long March 5 | CNSA | Lander | |||
Chang'e 6 Ascender | Launch Vehicle | ||||||
Chang'e 6 Returner | Sample Return | ||||||
Jinchan[111] | Rover | ||||||
⚀ ICUBE-Q[112] | 3 May 2024 | Long March 5 | SUPARCO[113] | Orbiter | |||
First spacecraft to have collected lunar samples from the far side of the Moon (Apollo crater, South Pole–Aitken basin).[114] ICUBE-Q is Pakistan's first lunar mission. Lander carries international payloads from ESA, France, Italy, and Sweden. It also carried a mini rover to conduct infrared spectroscopy of lunar surface.[115] |
Captionstyle: | text-align:left; |
This is a list of 138 missions (including failed ones) to the Moon. It includes Flybys, Impact probes, orbiters, landers, rovers and crewed missions.
This is a list of major milestones achieved by country. Recorded is the first spacecraft from each respective country to accomplish each milestone, regardless of mission type or intended outcome. For example, Beresheet was not intended to be an impactor, but achieved that milestone incidentally.
United States | Pioneer 4, 1959 | Lunar Orbiter 1, 1966 | Ranger 4, 1962 | Surveyor 1, 1966 | LRV (Apollo 15), 1971 | Apollo 11, 1969 † | Apollo 8, 1968 † | Apollo 11, 1969 † |
Soviet Union | Luna 1, 1959 † | Luna 10, 1966 † | Luna 2, 1959 † | Luna 9, 1966 † | Lunokhod 1, 1970 † | Luna 16, 1970 | — | — |
China | Chang'e 5-T1, 2014 | Chang'e 1, 2007 | Chang'e 1, 2009 | Chang'e 3, 2013 | Yutu, 2013 | Chang'e 5, 2020 | — | — |
India | Chandrayaan 3, 2023 | Chandrayaan 1, 2008 | MIP, 2008 | Chandrayaan 3, 2023 | Pragyan, 2023 | — | — | — |
Japan | Hiten, 1990 | Hiten, 1993 | Hiten, 1993 | SLIM, 2024 | LEV-1, 2024 | — | — | — |
Israel | — | Beresheet, 2019 | Beresheet, 2019 | Beresheet, 2019 | — | — | — | — |
Russia | — | Luna 25, 2023 | Luna 25, 2023 | Luna 25, 2023 | — | — | — | — |
ESA | — | SMART-1, 2003 | SMART-1, 2006 | — | — | — | — | — |
Luxembourg | 4M, 2014 | — | 4M, 2022 | — | — | — | — | — |
South Korea | — | Danuri, 2022 | — | — | — | — | — | — |
Italy | ArgoMoon, 2022 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — |
UAE | — | — | Rashid, 2023 | — | Rashid, 2023 | — | — | — |
Pakistan | ICUBE-Q, 2024 | ICUBE-Q, 2024 | — | — | — | — | — | — |
Mexico | — | — | — | — | Colmena, 2024 | — | — | — |
+Analysis of numbers of lunar missions | Country/Agency | Agency or company | Successful | Partial failure | Failure | Success rate | Operational | Total | Total for country |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
USSR | Lavochkin | 16 | 2 | 22 | 40% | - | 40 | 58 | |
Energia | 2 | - | 16 | 11.11% | - | 18 | |||
United States | NASA | 37 | 2 | 14 | 67.27% | 4 | 55 | 57 | |
USAF | 1 | - | 1 | 50% | - | 2 | |||
China | CNSA | 10 | - | - | 100% | 8 | 10 | 10 | |
Japan | ISAS | 2 | - | 2 | 50% | - | 4 | 8 | |
JAXA | 2 | - | 1 | 66.6% | 1 | 4 | |||
India | ISRO | 2 | 1 | - | 83.26% | 2 | 3 | 3 | |
Various member states | ESA | 1 | - | - | 100% | - | 1 | 1 | |
Luxembourg | LuxSpace | 1 | - | - | 100% | - | 1 | 1 | |
South Korea | KARI | 1 | - | - | 100% | 1 | 1 | 1 | |
United States (private company) | Lockheed Martin | 1 | - | - | 100% | - | 1 | 1 | |
United States (private company) | Fluid & Reason | 1 | - | - | 100% | - | 1 | 1 | |
United States (private company) | Astrobotic Technology | - | - | 1 | 0% | - | 1 | 1 | |
United States (private company) | Intuitive Machines | 1 | - | - | 100% | 1 | 1 | 1 | |
United States (private university) | ERAU | - | - | 1 | 0% | - | 1 | 1 | |
Italy | ASI | 1 | - | - | 100% | - | 1 | 1 | |
Israel | SpaceIL | - | - | 1 | 0% | - | 1 | 1 | |
Russia | Roscosmos | - | - | 1 | 0% | - | 1 | 1 | |
UAE | UAESA | - | - | 1 | 0% | - | 1 | 1 | |
Japan (private company) | ispace | - | - | 1 | 0% | - | 1 | 1 | |
IST / SUPARCO | 1 | - | - | 100% | 1 | 1 | 1 |
There are several future lunar missions planned or proposed by various nations and organisations.
Mission | Spacecraft | Launch date | Carrier rocket | Operator | Mission type |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
IM-2 | Nova-C | December 2024[116] | Falcon 9 B5 | Intuitive Machines | Lander |
Khon1 | Relay Satellite | ||||
μNova | Hopper | ||||
MAPP | Lunar Outpost Nokia | Rover | |||
AstroAnt[117] | MIT | Rover | |||
Yaoki[118] | Dymon | Rover | |||
Second Nova-C. Payloads delivery for NASA's CLPS and for private customers.[119] MAPP and μNova will test a new Nokia lunar communication system. | |||||
SHERPA-ES mission[120] | SHERPA-ES | December 2024 | Falcon 9 B5 | Spaceflight Industries | Gravity Assist |
Lunar Trailblazer | NASA | Orbiter | |||
Lunar flyby towards geostationary orbit, payload delivery. | |||||
Hakuto-R Mission 2 | Hakuto-R | 2024[121] | Falcon 9 B5 | ispace | Lander |
Ispace rover | Ispace Europe | Rover | |||
Rover for collecting lunar resources and other commercial payloads. | |||||
Blue Ghost M1 | Blue Ghost Lander | 2024 | Falcon 9 B5 | Firefly Aerospace | Lander |
Lunar lander, carrying NASA-sponsored experiments and commercial payloads to Mare Crisium.[122] [123] | |||||
IM-3 | Nova-C | October 2025[124] | Falcon 9 B5 | Intuitive Machines | Lander |
Khon2 | Relay Satellite | ||||
CADRE x3 | NASA | Rovers | |||
Lunar Vertex | NASA Lunar Outpost | Rover | |||
Third Nova-C. Payloads delivery for NASA's CLPS and for private customers. Lunar Vertex mission. | |||||
Starship Demo mission | Starship HLS | 2025[125] | Starship | SpaceX | Lander |
Uncrewed demo mission of Starship HLS. | |||||
DESTINY+ | DESTINY+ | 2025[126] | Epsilon S | JAXA | Flyby |
Lunar flyby toward asteroid 3200 Phaethon. | |||||
Griffin Mission 1[127] | Griffin lander | 2025[128] | Falcon Heavy | Astrobotic Technology | Lander |
Lunar Polar Exploration Mission | LUPEX lander | 2026[129] | H3 | ISRO | Lander |
LUPEX rover | JAXA | Rover | |||
Lander and rover, part of Chandrayaan programme.[130] | |||||
Artemis 3 Starship HLS delivery | Starship HLS | 2026 | Starship | SpaceX | Lander |
Delivery of Starship HLS for Artemis 3 mission. | |||||
TBD (CLPS Lander)[131] | Moon to Mars Initiative: Trailblazer (Roo-ver)[132] | 2026 | TBD | Australian Space Agency | Rover |
APEX 1.0 | APEX 1.0 | 2026[133] | TBD | ispace U.S. Draper | Lander |
Lunar Relay Satellite 1[134] | ispace U.S. Blue Canyon Technologies | Relay Satellite | |||
Lunar Relay Satellite 2 | Relay Satellite | ||||
Lunar lander. ispace Mission 3, and mission CP-12 of the CLPS program. | |||||
Blue Ghost M2[135] | Blue Ghost lander | 2026 | TBD | Firefly Aerospace | Lander |
Elytra orbital vehicle | Orbiter | ||||
Second mission of Firefly Aerospace, part of CLPS, includes 2 stage variant of blue ghost. | |||||
Lunar Pathfinder | Lunar Pathfinder | 2026 | TBD | ESA | Relay Satellite |
Lunar communications satellite to support future lunar missions. | |||||
Chang'e 7 | Chang'e 7 Orbiter | 2026[136] | Long March 5 | CNSA | Orbiter |
Chang'e 7 Lander | Lander | ||||
Chang'e 7 Rover | Rover | ||||
Chang'e 7 Hopper | Hopper | ||||
Payloads include an orbiter, south pole lander, rover, and a mini flying probe to look for the presence of water-ice. | |||||
Starship cargo mission | Starship HLS | 2026 | Starship | SpaceX | Lander |
First SpaceX lunar cargo mission, yet to be announced by SpaceX itself. | |||||
FLEX[137] | FLEX | 2026 | Starship | Astrolab | Rover |
Large Lunar rover, can accommodate cargo and 2 astronauts. | |||||
Astrobotic mission 3[138] | TBA | 2026 | Falcon Heavy | Astrobotic | Lander |
⚀ LunaGrid-Lite CubeRover | Rover | ||||
Lunaris Platform[139] | Deployable platform | ||||
Third lunar mission by Astrobotic, will land at lunar south pole. LunaGrid-Lite mission. | |||||
Canadian lunar rover mission | Canadensys Lunar Rover | 2026 | TBD | Canadensys CSA | Rover |
First Canadian lunar rover. Will fly as part of NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload Services initiative.[140] | |||||
ZeusX | ZeusX service module | Q4 2027 | TBD | Qosmosys | Orbiter |
ZeusX lunar lander | Lander | ||||
LIBER | Rover | ||||
First lunar landing attempt for Singapore, lander can carry up to 800 kg to lunar surface. | |||||
Luna 26 | Luna 26 | 2027[141] | Soyuz-2.1b / Fregat | Roscosmos | Orbiter |
Orbiter, part of the Luna-Glob programme.[142] Will scout for Luna 27 landing site. | |||||
PPE and HALO[143] | PPE | 2027[144] | Falcon Heavy | NASA Northrop Grumman | Space station assembly |
HALO | |||||
First two Lunar Gateway modules. | |||||
Luna 27 | Luna 27 | 2028 | Angara A5 / Fregat | Roscosmos | Lander |
Lander, part of Luna-Glob programme. | |||||
Luna 27 (Backup) | Luna 27 | 2028 | Angara A5 / Fregat | Roscosmos | Lander |
Backup for Luna 27, will launch a few months after Luna 27. | |||||
Chang'e 8 | Chang'e 8 Orbiter | 2028[145] | CNSA | Orbiter | |
Chang'e 8 Lander | Lander | ||||
Chang'e 8 Rover | Rover | ||||
Chang'e 8 Robot | Hopper | ||||
South pole lander.[146] Testing technology for using local resources and manufacturing with 3D printing.[147] | |||||
SpaceX GLS-1[148] | Dragon XL | 2028 | Falcon Heavy | SpaceX | Resupply vehicle |
First resupply mission to Lunar Gateway. | |||||
Uncrewed Blue Moon Demo mission | Blue Moon HLS | 2028 | New Glenn | Blue Origin | Lander |
Cislunar Transporter | 2028 | New Glenn | Lockheed Martin | Transfer vehicle | |
Demo mission of Blue Moon lander system in preparation for crewed landing in 2029. | |||||
Artemis 4 Starship HLS delivery | Starship HLS | 2028 | Starship | SpaceX | Lander |
Delivery of Starship HLS for Artemis 4 mission. | |||||
Artemis 5 Blue Moon HLS delivery | Blue Moon HLS | 2029 | New Glenn | Blue Origin | Lander |
Cislunar Transporter | 2029 | New Glenn | Lockheed Martin | Transfer vehicle | |
Delivery of Blue Moon HLS for Artemis 5 mission. | |||||
Argonaut M1 | Argonaut Lander | 2031[149] | Ariane 64 | ESA | Lander |
Robotic Lander system. Will act as resupply vehicle for future Moonbase.[150] | |||||
Lunar Voyage 3[151] [152] | Mapp | TBA | TBA | Lunar Outpost | Rover |
First fully commercial mission of Lunar Outpost MAPP program. |
Agency or company | Name | Spacecraft | Launch date | Launch vehicle | width=50% | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
NASA CSA | Artemis 2 | Orion | September 2025 | SLS Block 1 | Crewed test of the Orion spacecraft on a free-return trajectory around the Moon. | |
NASA | Artemis 3 | Orion, Starship HLS | September 2026 | SLS Block 1 | Deliver the "first woman and next man" to the Moon. | |
NASA | Artemis 4 | Orion, Starship HLS | September 2028 | SLS Block 1B | First flight of Block 1B configuration. Deliver Lunar I-Hab and conduct second Artemis crewed lunar landing. | |
NASA | Artemis 5 | Orion, Blue Moon HLS | March 2030[153] | SLS Block 1B | Crewed Gateway and Surface expedition. Delivery of ESPRIT and Lunar Terrain Vehicle. | |
CNSA | Chinese crewed lunar mission | Mengzhou, Lanyue | ~2030[154] | Long March 10 | Two launches of the LM-10 to put a pair of astronauts on the Moon for a 6-hour stay. | |
NASA | Artemis 6 | Orion, TBD | March 2031[155] | SLS Block 1B | Lunar landing with delivery of Crew and Science Airlock module. |
The following robotic space probe missions have been proposed but their full funding is unclear:
Agency or company | Mission | Name of spacecraft | Proposed launch | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
GEC | ⚀ Doge-1[156] | TBA | 12U CubeSat, the mission is being paid for entirely with the cryptocurrency Dogecoin. First Canadian lunar mission. | ||
SpaceIL | Beresheet 2[157] | Orbiter | 2025 | One orbiter, Two landers. | |
Lander 1 | |||||
Lander 2 | |||||
Airvantis | Garatéa-L | 2025[158] | Proposed lunar CubeSat, Partnership between UKSA and ESA. | ||
OHB IAI | LSAS lander | 2025 | proposed commercial lander, will rideshare with a Geostationary satellite. | ||
Parsec | Parsec lunar satellites | 2025 | Parsec lunar communication constellation.[159] | ||
Turkish Space Agency | AYAP-1 | 2026 | Turkey will perform a hard landing on the Moon. | ||
ESA | Lunar Meteoroid Impact Observer | 2026 | Proposed CubeSat to observe asteroid impacts on Far side of Moon. | ||
ISRO | Chandrayaan-4 | 2028 | Proposed Sample-return mission, part of Chandrayaan programme. | ||
Australian Space Agency | Lunar Trailblazer | 2026 | Under study for possible rover mission | ||
Delft University of Technology | Lunar zebro | 2026 | Small swarming rover, radiation measurements | ||
CNSA Roscosmos | ILRS 1-5 | 2026 - 2035 | 5 crucial missions planned for comprehensive establishment of ILRS to complete the in-orbit and surface facilities | ||
Turkish Space Agency | AYAP-2 | Lander | 2028 | Soft landing mission | |
Rover | |||||
Roscosmos | Luna 28 | 2030[160] | Proposed Sample-return mission, part of Luna-Glob program, may include small rover. | ||
Roscosmos | Luna 29 | Luna 29 Lander | 2030s | Proposed Sample-return mission, part of Luna-Glob program, Will include Luna-Grunt rover. | |
Luna-Grunt rover | |||||
KARI | Phase 2 of the Korean lunar exploration program | 2030[161] | Lander and rover | ||
Roscosmos | Zeus | 2030 | Nuclear Propelled Space Tug, might deliver payloads to the moon | ||
NASA | BOLAS | TBD | 2 tethered CubeSats on a very low lunar orbit.[162] | ||
Magellan Aerospace | Autonomous Impactor for Lunar Exploration | TBD | Impactor for LEAP | ||
NASA | Lunar Crater Radio Telescope | TBD | Radio telescope made by 4 rovers | ||
LiftPort Group | Lunar space elevator | TBD | Creating a reusable, replaceable and expandable Lunar elevator to open up the resources present on the Moon | ||
ESC Aerospace | LVICE² | TBD | Measuring the concentration of micrometeorites[163] |