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September 2024: four civilians stepped into the void of space for the first time in history. Jared Isaacman and Sarah Gillis, aboard SpaceX’s Dragon capsule, each spent twelve minutes floating 1,400 kilometres above Earth — higher than any human since Apollo. This is not science fiction — this is space tourism in 2026. A sector now offering a dizzying range of experiences: from weightlessness in a plane starting at €7,500, to 18-day orbital missions at $55 million. A complete state of play for an industry rewriting the frontiers of travel.

1. Axiom Space: Orbital Missions to the ISS

View of Earth from orbit as observed by astronauts on Axiom Space missions aboard the ISS
Photo by NASA on Unsplash

The undisputed leader of private orbital tourism

From $55 million 14 to 18 days in orbit 15 weeks of training SpaceX Dragon capsule

Axiom Space is today the world’s leading provider of private human spaceflight services. Its missions take crews of four to the ISS for two to three weeks, during which passengers conduct 20 to 50 scientific experiments in microgravity. According to Sacra, the company charges approximately $55 million per seat.

Mission Ax-4, launched in June 2025, transported astronauts from India, Poland and Hungary on the first human space missions sponsored by those nations in over forty years. It lasted 18 days — the longest Axiom mission to date. NASA awarded Axiom new private flight missions in 2026, with an Ax-5 launch planned no earlier than January 2027.

What the trip includes

  • 15 weeks of intensive training in Houston (ISS systems, emergency procedures)
  • Transport in SpaceX Crew Dragon from Kennedy Space Center
  • 14 to 18 days aboard the ISS, in the American segment
  • Participation in 20–50 microgravity research experiments
  • Panoramic view of Earth from low orbit
Pixidia tip: Axiom flights must be planned months or even years in advance, due to coordination required with NASA to secure ISS docking slots. If you have the means, start the process now — the waiting list is real.
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2. SpaceX Polaris Dawn: The First Private Spacewalk in History

SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket launch — same operator that placed Polaris Dawn and its four private astronauts into orbit
Photo by SpaceX on Unsplash

12 September 2024: humanity crosses a new threshold

1,400 km altitude (record since Apollo) 5-day mission 12 min outside the capsule 4 private astronauts

The Polaris Dawn mission, launched 10 September 2024, remains the most historic moment of modern space tourism. Jared Isaacman and mission specialist Sarah Gillis each spent twelve minutes outside the Crew Dragon capsule. It was the first commercial EVA in history, performed in spacesuits developed entirely by SpaceX.

According to Astronomy Magazine, this mission set the record for the most people simultaneously in the vacuum of space. Gillis, at 30, became the youngest person to complete an EVA.

What this mission foreshadows

  • Private spacewalks for ultra-wealthy tourists from the late 2020s
  • Polaris 3: first crewed flight of Starship, the largest rocket ever built
  • Validation of commercial EVA suits for future Axiom Station missions
  • Survival technologies tested on civilians (not professional astronauts)
Pixidia tip: The Polaris programme is not open to general public booking — it is personally funded by Jared Isaacman for hundreds of millions of dollars. But its technological advances will directly benefit future Axiom Station customers, expected 2027–2028.

3. Virgin Galactic Delta: Return to Suborbital Flight in 2026

The pioneer returning with an improved spacecraft

From $600,000 ~90 minutes total flight 6 passengers per flight Spaceport America, New Mexico

Virgin Galactic ceased flights of its VSS Unity spacecraft in June 2024 to focus on developing the Delta-class, a new generation capable of flying up to eight times per month with six passengers. According to SpaceNews, test flights are scheduled for Q3 2026, with private commercial flights beginning in autumn 2026.

CEO Colglazier stated that the ticket price will be « higher than our last published price of $600,000 ». The company — with approximately 675 customers on its waiting list — plans to reopen bookings in Q1 2026.

The three-day training

  • Day 1: classroom work (flight physics, procedures)
  • Day 2: flight simulators and centrifuge training
  • Day 3: final preparation and suborbital flight to the Kármán line
Pixidia tip: The waiting list already has 675 people. When the next booking window opens, act fast — the first flights should sell out within hours.

4. Weightlessness in a Plane: Real Microgravity Without Leaving the Atmosphere

SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launch at sunset — the same technology enabling private space missions like Polaris Dawn
Photo by Tom Strecker on Unsplash

Zero-G Corp (USA) and Air Zero G (Europe): 7.5 minutes of true weightlessness

€7,500 (EU) / $8,200 (USA) ~2h flight, 15 parabolas Airbus A310 / Boeing G-Force One 7.5 minutes at zero gravity

Parabolic flights are the most authentic weightlessness experience accessible without going to space. The aircraft performs parabolic arc manoeuvres: it climbs at 45° subjecting passengers to 1.8 G, then dives to create seconds of total weightlessness. Each parabola offers approximately 30 seconds of zero gravity. Over 15 parabolas, you accumulate 7.5 minutes in microgravity — the same as Alan Shepard on America’s first space flight.

In Europe, Air Zero G operates a modified Airbus A310 from Bordeaux-Mérignac, in partnership with CNES. It is the same aircraft that trains professional ESA astronauts. August 2026 flights are already full according to Air Zero G’s booking page. Price: €7,500 per person (VAT included).

In the USA, Zero-G Corporation operates the G-Force One (modified Boeing 727) from multiple cities (Cape Canaveral, Las Vegas, San Francisco). Price: from $8,200. Flights are temporarily suspended for maintenance at time of publication.

Additional parabolas

  • Several parabolas at 1/6 G (lunar gravity) — simulating walking on the Moon
  • Several parabolas at 1/3 G (Martian gravity)
  • Then 15 parabolas of total weightlessness (0 G)
Pixidia tip: For Air Zero G Europe, join the waiting list even if 2026 flights show as « full ». Cancellations are frequent. For Zero-G Corp USA, the cheapest slots are on weekdays, off-season, from cities like Fort Lauderdale or Las Vegas.

5. Blue Origin New Shepard: Suspended Until 2028

98 passengers transported, but a forced pause

~$150,000–300,000 10-minute flight Van Horn, Texas Suspended 2 years (Jan. 2026)

Since its first crewed flight in 2021, Blue Origin’s New Shepard has transported 98 people beyond the Kármán Line (100 km), including celebrities such as Katy Perry, William Shatner and journalist Gayle King. The flight lasts ten minutes: a few minutes of propulsion, then approximately 4 minutes of weightlessness with six large windows overlooking the curvature of the Earth.

Bad news: on 30 January 2026, Blue Origin announced the suspension of tourist flights for at least two years, to concentrate resources on Blue Moon landers for NASA’s Artemis lunar programme. A return of the tourism programme is possible from 2028.

Pixidia tip: If Blue Origin was your Plan A for a suborbital experience, Virgin Galactic Delta takes over in autumn 2026, at a higher price but with a comparable experience — and arguably better views from the SpaceShipTwo Delta’s large windows.

6. Stratospheric Balloons: World View at $50,000 and Zephalto at $132,000

Seeing the curvature of the Earth without a rocket

$50,000 (World View) / $132,000 (Zephalto) 6 to 12 hours of flight 25–32 km altitude (stratosphere) Accessible to almost all adults

World View Enterprises offers a 5-day experience including the stratospheric flight from iconic sites: Grand Canyon, Great Barrier Reef, Serengeti, Northern Lights in Norway, Amazon, Pyramids of Giza. The Explorer capsule accommodates 8 passengers and 2 crew members for a gentle climb to 32 km. More than 1,000 reservations have already been recorded at $50,000.

Zephalto, the French startup in partnership with CNES, takes the concept to ultimate luxury: gourmet meal with a Michelin-starred chef at 25 km altitude, in a six-passenger capsule. The price starts at $132,000 and commercial flights are in development from France.

Advantages of stratospheric balloons

  • Medically accessible to almost all adults (slow ascent, no G-forces)
  • 6 to 12 hour flight (vs 10 min suborbital) — more time to contemplate
  • View of the curvature of the Earth and the darkness of space
  • Reduced environmental footprint (zero emissions, recycled balloons)
Pixidia tip: If you have a budget between $50,000 and $130,000, stratospheric balloons are the most contemplative « edge of space » experience available. No weightlessness, but unrivalled views and duration.

7. Vast Space Haven-1: The First Independent Commercial Space Station

The International Space Station (ISS) in orbit above Earth — the model Vast Space's Haven-1 aims to succeed as the first private commercial station
Photo by NASA on Unsplash

The orbital hotel arrives in 2027

~$50–80M estimated Launch planned early 2027 4 people per mission 30 days in orbit

Haven-1, built by startup Vast Space, will be the first independent commercial space station in history. Scheduled to launch aboard a Falcon 9 in early 2027, it will inaugurate paid visits approximately one month after entering orbit. The first Vast-1 mission will take four astronauts for thirty days in a station deliberately designed to look like science fiction.

Vast Space roadmap

  • 2027: Haven-1 launch and first 30-day missions
  • 2028: First Haven-2 modules (permanent, larger station)
  • 2030: Haven-2 operational with permanent crew
Pixidia tip: NASA awarded Vast new private missions to the ISS in 2026, alongside Axiom. This means two private operators will now compete for the same market — which could drive prices down in the medium term.
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Summary: All experiences compared

ExperienceTypePriceDuration2026 Availability
Axiom Space (Ax-5)Orbital ISS~$55–70M18 daysLaunch Jan. 2027
SpaceX Polaris 3Orbital / EVANot disclosed~5 daysTo be confirmed
Virgin Galactic DeltaSuborbital> $600,000~90 minAutumn 2026
Blue Origin New ShepardSuborbital~$150,000–300,000~11 min❌ Suspended 2 years
Zero-G CorporationPlane weightlessness~$8,200~2h (15 parabolas)Maintenance (TBD)
Air Zero G (Europe)Plane weightlessness€7,500~3h (15 parabolas)Full Aug. 2026
World ViewStrat. balloon$50,0005 days (6–12h flight)Commercial underway
Vast Space Haven-1Orbital station~$50–80M (est.)30 days2027
ZephaltoLuxury strat. balloon~$132,000~6hIn development

Practical information for planning your space adventure

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Frequently asked questions about space tourism

Do you need to be in perfect health for space tourism?

Companies generally accept passengers between 18 and 75 years old, some having flown people in their 80s. Orbital flights (Axiom) require a thorough multi-week medical evaluation, similar to professional astronauts. Suborbital flights (Virgin Galactic) require one day of medical evaluation, and parabolic weightlessness flights (Air Zero G, Zero-G Corp) are accessible to almost everyone, with the same constraints as a commercial flight. Disqualifying conditions for all flights: severe hypertension, serious heart conditions, pregnancy.

How long does training last before an orbital flight?

For an orbital flight with Axiom Space, clients spend approximately 15 weeks at Axiom’s facilities in Houston learning ISS systems, emergency procedures and microgravity life protocols. For a Virgin Galactic suborbital flight, training lasts three days: one day in a classroom, one day in simulators, and one final preparation day before the flight. For parabolic weightlessness flights, no prior training is required — a few-hour briefing session suffices.

Are parabolic weightlessness flights really safe?

Yes. Zero-G Corporation is subject to the same Part 121 safety standards as commercial airlines like Delta or Southwest. With over 850 flights and 22,000 passengers without a major accident over 20 years, the safety record is impeccable. Air Zero G in Europe is certified by the European Aviation Safety Agency and uses the same protocols as during ESA astronaut training. Common side effects are limited to nausea (prevented by appropriate medication).

What is the difference between a suborbital and an orbital flight?

A suborbital flight (Blue Origin, Virgin Galactic) climbs above the Kármán Line at 100 km but does not orbit the Earth: it follows an arc trajectory and falls back. Weightlessness lasts approximately 4 to 5 minutes. An orbital flight (Axiom Space, SpaceX) reaches sufficient altitude to orbit the Earth at several km/s, enabling weeks of continuous microgravity. The cost difference is proportional: from $600,000 for suborbital to over $55 million for orbital.

Can a private tourist perform a spacewalk (EVA)?

The first private spacewalk in history was performed during Polaris Dawn in September 2024 by Jared Isaacman and Sarah Gillis. For now, EVAs for private tourists require near-professional-level funding and training. Private spacewalks accessible to ultra-wealthy tourists are expected in the second half of the 2020s, notably via Axiom Station once operational (2027–2028). The price of a mission including an EVA would most likely exceed $100 million.

How much time passes between booking and the space flight?

The lead time varies considerably depending on the experience. For an Axiom orbital flight: generally 1 to 3 years between booking and launch. For Virgin Galactic: the current waiting list of 675 people suggests a delay of 2 to 5 years. For parabolic weightlessness flights (Air Zero G, Zero-G Corp): between a few weeks and a few months, depending on availability. For stratospheric balloons (World View): probably 1 to 2 years as the fleet deploys.

When will space tourism become accessible to the general public?

Analysts estimate that suborbital flights could drop to around $100,000 per person by 2030 as flight frequency increases and technology matures. Orbital flights will likely remain in the tens of millions until the late 2030s. Parabolic weightlessness flights (€7,500–$8,200) and stratospheric balloons ($50,000) are already the most accessible options today. Mass-market orbital hotels remain in science fiction territory for now — perhaps after 2035.

Sources

Research conducted on 25 March 2026

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