Voyager Technologies Selected by NASA for Seventh Private Astronaut Mission

Written by: William Day

TL;DR / Executive Summary

  • Voyager Technologies has been selected by NASA to operate the seventh Private Astronaut Mission to the International Space Station
  • The mission, designated VOYG-1, is part of NASA’s strategy to hand low-Earth orbit operations to commercial operators
  • Voyager will use the mission to test life-support systems and crew protocols that future lunar missions will depend on
  • The award strengthens Voyager’s broader lunar ambitions, including its investment in Max Space’s expandable habitat technology

Voyager Technologies (NYSE: VOYG) has signed an order with NASA for the seventh Private Astronaut Mission to the International Space Station, launching no earlier than 2028.

“This award reflects decades of partnership with NASA and validates our belief that the infrastructure being built in low-Earth orbit today is the launchpad for humanity’s future in deep space,” said Dylan Taylor, Chairman & CEO, Voyager. “From the International Space Station’s first commercial airlock to the seventh private astronaut mission, Voyager is committed to making American human spaceflight stronger, more capable, and more sustainable at every step of the journey.”

The seventh private astronaut mission, called VOYG-1, supports NASA’s strategy to transition low-Earth orbit operations to the private sector, establishing a sustainable framework where commercial partners deliver safe, reliable and cost-effective human spaceflight services that extend the agency’s legacy of exploration.

This mission is the next evolution of Voyager’s human spaceflight portfolio, serving as the bridge to commercial space stations and future deep-space platforms. It stress-tests and refines the life-support technologies, crew operations protocols and integrated systems architectures that lunar surface missions will require.

The mission also reinforces the momentum behind Voyager’s broader strategic lunar initiative and its multi-million-dollar investment in Max Space, whose expandable habitat technology launches compactly and deploys to up to 20 times its stowed volume at its destination. That architecture – designed to maximize livable volume, reduce surface deployment costs and support long-duration habitation – addresses a central infrastructure challenge of sustained lunar presence.

Crewed mission execution experience built on the International Space Station, next-generation expandable habitats and commercial station development represent Voyager’s position that the moon is an operational domain, not a temporary destination. The company unites proven International Space Station mission management heritage and Starlab commercial station development with private astronaut flight execution into one seamless capability to support NASA and future commercial customers to manage complex, crewed, long-duration missions.

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