The International Space Station is scheduled for deorbit in 2030-2031 after more than three decades of operation. In its place, a new generation of commercially owned and operated space stations is emerging. Four programs are competing to establish the next era of human presence in low Earth orbit: Vast Haven-1, Axiom Station, Orbital Reef, and Starlab. This page compares every contender by approach, timeline, capacity, funding, and technical readiness. The LEO station market is projected to exceed $10 billion annually by 2035.
The ISS has been continuously inhabited since November 2000, making it the longest-serving crewed orbital platform in history. NASA extended operations to 2030 and awarded SpaceX an $843 million contract to build the US Deorbit Vehicle for controlled re-entry in 2031. The transition to commercial stations must happen before ISS retirement.
Four distinct approaches to building the next generation of orbital habitats. Each program differs in architecture, timeline, funding model, and target market. Vast is pursuing speed with a single-launch station, Axiom is leveraging ISS heritage, Orbital Reef is building for scale, and Starlab is innovating with inflatable structures.
| Station | Developer | Target Launch | Crew | Volume | Funding |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vast Haven-1 | Vast | 2026 | Up to 4 | ~160 m3 | $400M+ raised |
| Axiom Station | Axiom Space | 2026 (first module to ISS) | Up to 6-8 | ~500 m3 (full config) | $550M+ raised |
| Orbital Reef | Blue Origin + Sierra Space | 2028-2029 | Up to 10 | ~830 m3 (full build) | $130M NASA CLD award |
| Starlab | Voyager Space + Airbus | 2028 | Up to 4 | ~340 m3 | $160M NASA CLD award |
Approach: Single-launch monolithic station. Launch Vehicle: SpaceX Falcon 9. Status: In development, targeting first launch.
Approach: ISS module-first, then free-flying. Launch Vehicle: SpaceX Falcon 9 / Starship. Status: Axiom-1/2/3 crew missions completed.
Approach: Multi-module assembled station. Launch Vehicle: New Glenn + Dream Chaser. Status: Design and development phase.
Approach: Inflatable habitat module. Launch Vehicle: Starship. Status: Design and development phase.
The commercial LEO station market extends far beyond government astronaut missions. Revenue will come from multiple streams including research, manufacturing, tourism, media, and national space program access.
NASA's CLD program follows the proven model of Commercial Cargo (COTS) and Commercial Crew (CCtCap): provide milestone-based funding to private companies, then purchase services once operational. The goal is to ensure continuous US human presence in LEO after ISS retirement while reducing NASA's cost by 50% or more compared to owning and operating a station.
The commercial space station race is the most consequential transition in human spaceflight since the end of the Space Shuttle program. Vast has the most aggressive timeline with Haven-1 targeting 2026 launch, while Axiom has the most flight heritage from its ISS missions. Orbital Reef has the largest planned capacity but the longest timeline. The critical risk is the gap between ISS deorbit (2031) and commercial station readiness -- if no commercial station is fully operational by then, there could be a period without continuous US human presence in LEO for the first time since 2000. The market dynamics favor 2-3 surviving stations rather than a winner-take-all outcome, as different customers (NASA, international agencies, commercial researchers, tourists) have different requirements. Starship availability is the wild card -- its massive payload capacity could enable larger, cheaper stations that shift the economics of the entire sector.