Updated
Updated · Ars Technica · May 6
SpaceX reduces Falcon 9 launches as Starship operations expand
Updated
Updated · Ars Technica · May 6

SpaceX reduces Falcon 9 launches as Starship operations expand

12 articles · Updated · Ars Technica · May 6
  • President Gwynne Shotwell said 2026 Falcon launches may fall to about 140-145 from 165 last year, with the clearest slowdown at Cape Canaveral, Florida.
  • Kennedy Space Center's LC-39A is being shifted out of regular Falcon 9 use for Starship, though it remains available for occasional Falcon Heavy missions.
  • SpaceX has also retired one Florida drone ship for transporting Starships and Super Heavy boosters, as it seeks Florida Starship flights before a second Kennedy factory opens.
As Starship's failures delay NASA's Moon mission, can SpaceX still build its ambitious data centers in orbit?
Why is SpaceX sidelining its profitable Falcon 9 for the high-risk Starship before it's even fully proven?
Is SpaceX's pivot to Starship more about building an AI empire in space than just human exploration?

SpaceX's 2026 Launch Transition: Falcon 9's 170 Missions and Starship's Path to Operational Dominance

Overview

In 2026, SpaceX strategically shifted its operations by retiring the Atlantic droneship JRTI and consolidating Falcon 9 recoveries onto ASOG, increasing land-based booster landings at Cape Canaveral and causing more sonic booms locally. This reallocation supports Starship development, with LC-39A modified for Starship launches and new landing infrastructure established. Despite regulatory delays and technical challenges limiting Starship's flight cadence, Falcon 9 maintained a high launch rate, while Falcon Heavy's role narrowed to specialized missions. Starship's superior payload capacity and cost advantages are driving a projected transition to dominance by 2027-2028, accelerating deep space missions and disrupting the launch market, prompting global competitors to innovate amid evolving geopolitical and national security concerns.

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