Published on : 02 Apr 2026
Breaking: NASA’s Artemis II lifted off from Kennedy Space Center last night β sending four astronauts toward the Moon for the first time in 53 years. The crew is airborne and heading to the Moon right now. Here’s why KSC is the world’s most electrifying travel destination today, and your complete guide to visiting the Space Coast before splashdown on April 10.
Published: April 2, 2026 Mission Status: β LAUNCHED β En Route to the Moon Launch Time: April 1, 2026 at 6:35 PM EDT Splashdown Date: April 10, 2026 β Pacific Ocean Crew: Reid Wiseman Β· Victor Glover Β· Christina Koch Β· Jeremy Hansen π¨π¦ KSC Visitor Complex: Open daily β general admission available NOW Tier-1 Impact: Affects US, UK, Canada, Australia travelers planning Florida trips
Artemis II is the first crewed lunar mission since Apollo 17 in December 1972. Four astronauts β commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, mission specialist Christina Koch, and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen β lifted off from Launch Pad 39B at Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Wednesday evening, April 1, 2026.
The crew is now in high Earth orbit. Tonight, a critical engine burn called the Trans-Lunar Injection (TLI) will push the spacecraft out of Earth orbit and onto a four-day coast toward the Moon. If all goes to plan, the Orion capsule will loop around the far side of the Moon on a “free return” trajectory β using lunar gravity to bend its path back toward Earth β and set a new all-time human distance record of 252,000 miles from our planet.
Splashdown in the Pacific Ocean is scheduled for April 10.
For travelers already in Florida β or considering a trip in the next eight days β the Kennedy Space Center is more alive right now than at any point in the past five decades.
The Brevard County Sheriff’s Office anticipated 400,000 visitors for the April 1 launch alone. Every KSC Visitor Complex launch viewing package sold out entirely. Port Canaveral’s Jetty Park day passes sold out. Playalinda Beach closed for safety. Space View Park in Titusville filled up hours before liftoff, with spectators lining every stretch of the Indian River with lawn chairs, coolers, and cameras.
That crowd is now dispersing. General admission to the Visitor Complex is fully available today. The launch-day chaos is gone. What remains is a fully energized, globally spotlit destination with a live mission still unfolding overhead.
This is the ideal window to visit.
The Mission is Live. Artemis II does not splash down until April 10. Real-time mission updates, burn confirmations, and crew communications are playing throughout the Visitor Complex every day until splashdown. The atmosphere inside KSC right now is not a retrospective exhibit. It is a live mission being tracked in real time β overhead, right now.
Key Experiences Available Today:
β Artemis Experience β A never-before-seen exhibit on the bottom floor of the Space Shuttle Atlantis building. Walk through crew personal artifacts, mission story panels, and the Axiom Space lunar spacesuit selected by NASA for the Artemis III Moon landing
β Space Shuttle Atlantis Exhibit β One of the most remarkable aerospace exhibits on Earth. The orbiter hangs at 43.21 degrees, payload bay doors open, exactly as it appeared returning from orbit
β VAB Exterior Projection β The crew’s official Artemis II mission insignia is projected across the Vehicle Assembly Building exterior β the largest building by volume in the United States and visible from miles away
β Bus Tour to Launch Pad 39B β The pad from which the SLS rocket launched last night is accessible on the standard bus tour route. Staff are describing the launch in real time to every group that passes through
β Rocket Garden β 8 historical rockets displayed outdoors in the original launch configuration, spanning the Mercury through Saturn eras
β Heroes & Legends Attraction β US Astronaut Hall of Fame, featuring the four Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, and Shuttle eras
Reid Wiseman β Commander πΊπΈ US Navy test pilot and NASA veteran. Led the ISS Expedition 41 mission in 2014. Commander of the first crewed lunar mission in 53 years.
Victor Glover β Pilot πΊπΈ First Black astronaut to live aboard the ISS. US Navy pilot and decorated aviator. Now the first Black astronaut to travel to the Moon.
Christina Koch β Mission Specialist πΊπΈ Holds the record for the longest single spaceflight by a woman. Now the first woman to travel to the vicinity of the Moon. Ever.
Jeremy Hansen β Mission Specialist π¨π¦ Canadian Space Agency astronaut and former fighter pilot from London, Ontario. Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney confirmed this makes Canada only the second nation on Earth to send an astronaut on a lunar mission.
For UK, Australian, and US travelers: this crew represents the full Tier-1 alliance in one spacecraft β the most internationally resonant human spaceflight since the Apollo-Soyuz mission in 1975.
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| β April 1 | Launch β 6:35 PM EDT, Kennedy Space Center, Florida |
| β³ April 2 (TODAY) | Trans-Lunar Injection burn β crew breaks free of Earth orbit |
| β³ April 3β4 | Four-day coast to the Moon begins |
| β³ April 5β6 | Lunar flyby β crew passes around the far side of the Moon |
| β³ April 7β9 | Return coast to Earth |
| β³ April 10 | Splashdown β Pacific Ocean |
Every single day between now and April 10 is an active chapter of the most historic human spaceflight since Apollo 17. KSC is the only place on Earth where you can experience that mission atmosphere in person.
Located in Merritt Island, Florida β 45 minutes east of Orlando. Budget a full day minimum. The Atlantis exhibit alone runs 2β3 hours. Buy tickets online in advance; day-of availability exists but lines move slowly.
General Admission: Adults ~$75 | Children (3β11) ~$65 | Under 3 free Hours: Typically 9 AM β 6 PM ET | Check KSC website for April mission-period hours Parking: Free on-site
The legendary public viewing park directly across the Indian River from the launch pads. Live NASA audio feed. U.S. Spacewalk of Fame. Unobstructed sightline to Pad 39B. No crowds today β launch day is over, and this park is as peaceful as it ever gets.
27 miles of undeveloped Atlantic barrier island beach running directly adjacent to Kennedy Space Center property. Playalinda Beach β closed during yesterday’s launch β reopens today. One of the most pristine stretches of coastline on Florida’s East Coast.
Florida’s second-busiest cruise port doubles as a full leisure destination. Restaurants, fishing piers, Jetty Park, and a permanent front-row seat for future launches. Strong accommodation base for travelers who want to stay closer to KSC than Orlando.
Nearest Airports:
Road: KSC sits on State Road 405/528 off Florida’s Turnpike and I-95. Rental car is the most practical option β public transit does not serve the Visitor Complex.
Rideshare: Uber and Lyft operate from Orlando and Cocoa Beach to KSC. Surge pricing applies during peak periods. Budget extra or book in advance.
Hotels: Cocoa Beach (20 minutes from KSC) and Titusville (15 minutes) are the closest accommodation hubs. Orlando offers far more hotel inventory at a wider price range but adds drive time.
Bring to KSC:
Photography:
What to Skip:
The mission atmosphere at KSC is a temporary phenomenon. Once Orion splashes down in the Pacific on April 10, the immediate post-launch energy dissipates. Exhibit updates slow. Mission commentary on the bus tours shifts from present-tense to past-tense.
Right now, the crew is literally overhead. Burn confirmations are being announced. The TLI engine fire tonight is a live event. Visitors walking through the Atlantis exhibit this afternoon are doing so while four astronauts are physically in transit to the Moon.
That is an unrepeatable experience. The window is eight days. It closes April 10.
Artemis II launched last night. The crew is heading to the Moon. Kennedy Space Center is the most electrifying travel destination on Earth right now β and that status lasts exactly eight more days. Launch-day crowds are gone. General admission is open. The mission is live. If you are in Florida or can reach Orlando before April 10, there is no better reason to make the drive to the Space Coast.
The Moon hasn’t had human visitors in 53 years. For the next 8 days, four of them are on their way there. KSC is where you feel that.
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Posted By : Vinay
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