Skip to main content

Musk says SpaceX could send Starship mission to Mars as soon as 2024

Elon Musk has laid out his vision for the future of the SpaceX Starship and its planned mission to Mars, including sharing that he believes the first uncrewed mission to Mars could happen as soon as 2024.

Musk discussed the plans for the Starship in a talk given at the 2020 Mars Society Virtual Conference, first highlighted by space.com. When asked about the timeline for future progress on getting the Starship into orbit, Musk shared his expectations that it could reach orbit as soon as next year.

“We’re obviously venturing into unknown territory so it’s not as though I have all these secret dates and I’m just keeping them from people,” Musk said with a laugh. “These are just guesses. I’d say I’m 80 to 90% confident we will reach orbit with Starship next year — I think probably 50 or 60% that we’ll be able to bring the ship and booster back. That’s more of a dicey situation. We’ll probably lose a few ships before we really get the atmospheric return and landing right.”

Musk has been typically sanguine about losing ships in testing, as a number of Starship prototypes have been destroyed in pressure tests over the last several years. But each failed test brings the company closer to its goal.

“We’ll probably be doing high volume flights in 2022,” Musk said. “So a couple of years from now. I’m trying to make sure that our rate of innovations increases, and that it doesn’t decrease.”

As for reaching Mars, Musk postulated that, based on an accelerating rate of innovation, SpaceX could send an uncrewed mission to Mars in maybe four years. He mentioned the timeline of Earth is at its closest to Mars every 26 months, when spaceships can be launched into what’s called a Hohmann transfer orbit to carry them to Mars in the most efficient way possible.

There was a window this summer, which was why three missions were launched to Mars — the NASA Perseverance mission, the UAE Hope mission, and the China Tianwen-1 mission.

Musk estimated that SpaceX may be ready to send a Starship to Mars in, not the next window, but the one after that, in approximately four years time. “I think we’ve got a fighting chance of making that second transfer window,” he said.

Editors' Recommendations

Georgina Torbet
Georgina is the Digital Trends space writer, covering human space exploration, planetary science, and cosmology. She…
Take a high-speed ride on SpaceX’s emergency escape chute
A view from inside Crew Dragon's emergency escape chute.

SpaceX has put a Crew Dragon on Pad 40 at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida for the first time. This means that going forward, SpaceX will have two pads to choose from when sending astronauts to space.

Up to now, crews launching on SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spacecraft lift off from Pad 39A at Kennedy, but having another launch site available gives NASA and SpaceX greater flexibility when planning missions by easing pressure on teams if scheduling issues and traffic conflicts arise.

Read more
SpaceX shares awesome rocket imagery from Starship flight
A view of Earth captured from SpaceX's Starship spacecraft.

SpaceX’s third Starship test flight last Thursday was its best yet, far exceeding the first two missions, which took place last year and ended in huge fireballs just a few minutes in.

This time, the Starship -- comprising the first-stage Super Heavy booster and upper-stage Starship spacecraft -- kept on flying, with both parts reaching their destination points before breaking up on descent.

Read more
Watch SpaceX’s Starship burn brightly as it hurtles toward Earth
SpaceX's Starship reentering Earth's atmosphere.

SpaceX surprised a lot of people on Thursday morning when its mighty Starship rocket managed not to blow up seconds after liftoff.

The Starship -- comprising the first-stage Super Heavy booster and upper-stage Starship spacecraft -- enjoyed its most successful test flight yet following two short-lived missions in April and November last year.

Read more