NASA cleared a towering moon rocket for launch readiness in March 2026 at Kennedy Space Center in Florida after a series of technical repairs and inspections. The 322-foot Space Launch System will roll to the launch pad within days, allowing a launch attempt for the Artemis II mission as early as April 1. The flight will carry four astronauts on a journey around the moon, marking humanity’s first crewed lunar mission in more than half a century. Earlier plans for a launch this year were delayed after hydrogen fuel leaks and other mechanical issues caused repeated schedule changes. Engineers repaired the leaks at the pad in February, but an additional helium flow problem forced the rocket back to the Vehicle Assembly Building. Officials said the technical interference delayed the mission but provided an opportunity to strengthen safety checks before flight.

NASA leaders emphasized that Artemis II remains a major test flight with inherent uncertainty. Because the Space Launch System has flown only once before without a crew, experts say the mission does not yet operate on a stable launch cadence. Recently appointed administrator Jared Isaacman also announced a strategic overhaul of the Artemis program designed to shorten long gaps between lunar missions and reduce operational risks. The new plan includes an additional orbital test flight before future landings. A recent audit warned that NASA must prepare emergency rescue options because landing attempts near the moon’s south pole present difficult terrain. Safety planners estimate a mission risk threshold of roughly one loss of crew in forty lunar operations. Meanwhile, contractors are working rapidly to accelerate development of lunar landing systems before potential missions later in the decade.