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SpaceX Plans to Send ‘Thousands’ to the Moon and Mars In 10 Years, Musk Claims

Forbes Published Jul 9, 2026 Reviewed Jul 9, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
SpaceX will send humans to the Moon and Mars in the next five years.
5 years · SpaceX
Elon Musk, CEO
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Citation-ready fact
SpaceX will send the first humans to Mars in the next five years.
5 years · SpaceX
Elon Musk, CEO
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SpaceX will launch its first AI satellites next year, and at large scale in the next two years.
1 year · SpaceX2 years · SpaceX
Elon Musk, CEO
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Elon Musk would receive 1 billion SpaceX shares if the company reaches a market cap of $7.5 trillion and builds a colony on Mars with at least 1 million inhabitants.
1000000000 shares · Elon Musk7500000000000 USD · SpaceXat least 1000000 inhabitants · Mars colony
company’s S-1 filing, filing
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SpaceX will transport up to tens of thousands of people to a base on the Moon in the next ten years.
Elon Musk, CEO
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SpaceX will land an astronaut on the Moon in the next two to three years.
Elon Musk, CEO
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Elon Musk has repeated predictions about humans reaching Mars in the next ten years at least 19 times.
at least 19 times · Elon Musk
New York Times review, review
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In 2017, Elon Musk announced plans for SpaceX to fly private citizens around the moon by 2018.
2018 year · SpaceX
Elon Musk, CEO
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Elon Musk’s net worth is $934 billion.
934000000000 USD · Elon Musk
We
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SpaceX Elon Musk predicted SpaceX would send humans back to the Moon and Mars in the next five years and build permanent cities on the lunar surface in the next ten years—offering wildly optimistic targets for space travel in a recent interview with Texas Gov. Greg Abbott.

In the interview with Abbott, who was guest hosting Sean Hannity’s talk radio show on Wednesday, Musk said he hoped to transport up to “tens of thousands” of people to a base on the Moon in the next ten years—what he admitted was a “pretty outrageous number given that you know, there's only about a dozen or so people that have been to the Moon so far.”

He said the company hoped to land an astronaut on the Moon in the next two to three years, then “expand rapidly from there,” up to the point that “any member of the public who wants to go to the moon, can go to the Moon and Mars.”

Musk said the company’s eventual goal was to build a “full blown, self-sustaining city on the Moon, like an actual metropolis,” where people could move permanently or visit on vacation.

It will be much harder to transport people to the red planet, Musk said, due to the amount of time it takes to reach the planet, but the SpaceX CEO still predicted the company would send the first humans there in the next five years, before “hopefully” sending thousands in the next ten to twelve years.

Musk also made promises about expanding data centers in space, another one of his company’s stated goals, claiming SpaceX would be launching its first “AI satellites” next year, before doing so at a “large scale” in the next two years.

Musk has a long history of failed predictions, including multiple overly-optimistic promises about sending humans back to the Moon or setting up a colony on Mars. He has been predicting humans would reach Mars in the next ten years as early as 2011, repeating similar claims at least 19 times in interviews and on social media over the years, a New York Times review found. In 2017, he announced plans for SpaceX to begin flying private citizens around the moon by 2018—a trip that never happened.

1 billion. That’s how many SpaceX shares Musk would receive if the company reaches a market cap of $7.5 trillion and builds a colony on Mars with at least 1 million inhabitants, according to the company’s S-1 filing. Analysts have already cast doubt on the lucrative pay package, with one previously telling Forbes the cost of maintaining a Mars colony could eat into the company’s profits from its Starlink internet satellites.

We value Musk’s current net worth at $934 billion, making him the wealthiest person in the world. He briefly became the world’s first trillionaire after SpaceX’s initial public offering, but the company’s falling share price has brought Musk’s fortune below that mark in recent weeks.

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