It is far too soon to mention retirement, but astute observers of the space industry have noticed SpaceXโ€™s workhorse Falcon 9 rocket is not launching as often as it used to.

The decline is modest so far, and it does not signal any problem at SpaceX or with the Falcon 9. Rather, it is a manifestation of SpaceXโ€™s eagerness to shift focus to the much larger Starship rocket, an enabler of what the company wants to do in space: missions to land on the Moon and Mars, orbital data centers, and next-gen Starlink.

Elon Muskโ€™s SpaceX conducted 165 launches with the Falcon 9 rocket (no Falcon Heavy missions) last year, up from 134 Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy launches in 2024 and 96 Falcon flights in 2023. The company plans โ€œmaybe 140, 145-ishโ€ Falcon launches in 2026, SpaceX president Gwynne Shotwell told Time earlier this year. โ€œThis year weโ€™ll still launch a lot, but not as much,โ€ she said. โ€œAnd then weโ€™ll tail off our launches as Starship is coming online.โ€

Letting off the gas

Weโ€™re beginning to see what the long, slow tail-off will look like. The changes are most apparent at Cape Canaveral, Florida, where SpaceX has launched the lionโ€™s share of its rockets. Until last December, SpaceX launched Falcon 9s with regularity from two pads on Floridaโ€™s Space Coastโ€”one at NASAโ€™s Kennedy Space Center and another a few miles to the south on military property at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.

SpaceX is transitioning the site at Kennedy, known as Launch Complex-39A, to launch Starships. LC-39A is out of the rotation for Falcon 9 launches, although it remains available for occasional flights of the more powerful triple-core Falcon Heavy. SpaceX launched the first Falcon Heavy in a year and a half last week from LC-39A, and a handful more Falcon Heavy flights are on tap later this year.

Activity at SpaceXโ€™s oldest launch site, Space Launch Complex-40 at Cape Canaveral, is also waning. Last month, SpaceX retired one of its two Florida-based seagoing landing platforms from service for future use as a transporter to ferry Starships and Super Heavy boosters from SpaceXโ€™s factory in South Texas to Florida. SpaceX is constructing a second Starship factory at Kennedy Space Center, but officials want to begin Starship flights from Florida before the factory is operational.



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