SpaceX Starship

Starship
Starship ignition during launch on its fifth flight
FunctionSuper heavy-lift launch vehicle
Manufacturer
Country of origin
  • United States
Project costAt least US$5 billion
Cost per launch$100 million (expendable)
Size
Height
  • Block 1: 121.3 m (398 ft)
  • Block 2: 124.4 m (408 ft)
Diameter9 m (30 ft)
Mass5,000 t (11,000,000 lb)
Stages2
Capacity
Payload to LEO
Mass
  • Block 1: 50–100 t (110,000–220,000 lb)
  • Block 2: 100–150 t (220,000–330,000 lb)
  • Block 3: 200 t (440,000 lb)
  • Block 3 Expendable: 400 t (880,000 lb)
Volume1,000 m3 (35,000 cu ft)
Associated rockets
Comparable
Launch history
StatusIn Development
Launch sites
Total launches
9
  • Block 1: 6
  • Block 2: 3
  • Block 3: 0
Success(es)
4
  • Block 1: 4
  • Block 2: 0
  • Block 3: 0
Failure(s)
5
First flight20 April 2023 (2023-04-20)
Last flight27 May 2025 (2025-05-27)
Stage info
First stage – Super Heavy
Height71 m (233 ft)
Diameter9 m (30 ft)
Empty mass275 t (606,000 lb)
Gross mass3,675 t (8,102,000 lb)
Propellant mass3,400 t (7,500,000 lb)
Powered by33 × Raptor engines
Maximum thrust89.5 MN (20,100,000 lbf)
Specific impulseSL: 327 s (3.21 km/s)
PropellantCH4 / LOX
Second stage – Starship
Height
  • Block 1: 50.3 m (165 ft)
  • Block 2: 52.1 m (171 ft)
Diameter9 m (30 ft)
Empty mass
  • Block 1: ~100 t (220,000 lb)
  • Block 2: 85 t (187,000 lb)
Gross mass
  • Block 1: ~1,300 t (2,900,000 lb)
  • Block 2: 1,585 t (3,494,000 lb)
Propellant mass
  • Block 1: 1,200 t (2,600,000 lb)
  • Block 2: 1,500 t (3,300,000 lb)
Powered by3 × Raptor engines
3 × Raptor vacuum engines
Maximum thrust12,300 kN (2,800,000 lbf)
Specific impulseSL: 327 s (3.21 km/s)
vac: 380 s (3.7 km/s)
PropellantCH4 / LOX

Starship is a two-stage fully reusable super heavy-lift launch vehicle under development by American aerospace company SpaceX. On 20 April 2023, with the first Flight Test, Starship became the heaviest vehicle ever to fly. SpaceX has developed Starship with the intention of lowering launch costs using economies of scale. SpaceX aims to achieve this by reusing both rocket stages by catching them with the launch and integration tower, increasing payload mass to orbit, increasing launch frequency, mass-manufacturing the rockets and adapting it to a wide range of space missions. Starship is the latest project in SpaceX's reusable launch system development program and plan to colonize Mars.

Starship's two stages are the Super Heavy booster and the Starship spacecraft. Both stages are equipped with Raptor engines, the first flown and mass-produced full-flow staged combustion cycle engines, which burn liquid methane (natural gas) and liquid oxygen.

As of 2025, Starship is in development with an iterative and incremental approach, involving test flights of prototype vehicles. As a successor to SpaceX's Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy rockets, Starship is intended to perform a wide range of space missions. For missions to further destinations, such as geosynchronous orbit, the Moon, and Mars, Starship will rely on orbital propellant refilling; a ship-to-ship propellant transfer demonstration is expected to occur in 2025. SpaceX also plans other versions of the Starship spacecraft, such as cargo (deploying SpaceX's second-generation Starlink satellite constellation) and human spaceflight (the Human Landing System variant is intended to land astronauts on the Moon as part of the Artemis program, starting in 2027).