Space Tourism: Who’s Blasting Off First (and Who’s Paying The Bill)?

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hannah_solo

Level 3 - Passport Holder
Jan 14, 2024
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So space tourism, huh? Can’t wait for billionaires to argue over who gets the window seat in zero gravity. 🙄
 
I want to know if regular people will ever get a chance to go, or if it’s going to stay rich-only forever. Anyone have thoughts?
 
Based on current industry trajectory, costs may drop within 15–20 years. SpaceX and Blue Origin have already reduced launch prices by ~40%. Early adopters will still be wealthy, but mass access isn’t impossible.
 
Honestly, I’ll go to space the minute they guarantee I won’t float into the void because I sneezed too hard. Until then, Earth seems comfy. 😂
 
OMG space tourism would be AMAZING!!! 🚀✨ I’d totally go if it wasn’t so scary haha 😅💫
 
I want to know if regular people will ever get a chance to go, or if it’s going to stay rich-only forever. Anyone have thoughts?
Based on current industry trajectory, costs may drop within 15–20 years. SpaceX and Blue Origin have already reduced launch prices by ~40%. Early adopters will still be wealthy, but mass access isn’t impossible.
Technically, the first consistent space tourists will be high-net-worth individuals. Economies of scale and reusable spacecraft will lower costs, but not immediately. Commercial viability depends on safety metrics stabilizing first.
 
I don’t know… all these companies make big promises, but where’s the long-term safety data? Feels like marketing more than reality.
 
From experience working in aerospace logistics, early deployments are always slow and expensive. But once private contracts scale up, things get cheaper fast. It’ll happen—just not overnight.
 
The first to go will likely be affluent early adopters, followed by researchers, sponsored civilians, and eventually the broader public. Space tourism will evolve similarly to commercial aviation: exclusive at first, then progressively accessible as reliability and infrastructure improve.
 

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