President Donald Trump unveiled a budget blueprint calling for a 23 percent reduction in NASA's funding for fiscal year 2027, shortly after the agency launched its first crewed lunar mission in over 50 years. The proposal requests $18.8 billion, down $5.6 billion from the prior year, prioritizing Moon landings and a lunar base. Congress rejected a similar cut last year.
The White House released the fiscal year 2027 budget outline on Friday, emphasizing fiscal discipline and focus on human Moon missions before the end of Trump's term. NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman defended the plan, stating it sustains American leadership in deep space exploration and accelerates innovations for public benefit. The Artemis program would receive $8.5 billion for commercial landers, spacesuits, rovers, habitats, and transportation systems, alongside funding for more frequent robotic lunar landers produced commercially. Plans include shifting from the Space Launch System and Orion to cost-effective commercial alternatives like SpaceX's Starship once ready, with a new procurement starting in 2027 for missions beyond Artemis V. NASA would also fund commercial production of lunar rocket propellant from surface resources, though overall space technology funding faces a $297 million cut from this year, targeting what the administration deems frivolous projects. Science programs bear the brunt, with a proposed $3.4 billion reduction—nearly half of last year's allocation—and cancellation of over 40 low-priority missions, including Mars Sample Return already axed due to costs. The International Space Station funding drops by $1.1 billion, aligning with a 2030 retirement, despite some lawmakers pushing for extension to 2032. Education programs face elimination. The Planetary Society labeled the cuts draconian, noting Congress overwhelmingly rejected similar proposals last year with bipartisan support. As in the past, the blueprint kicks off a multi-month process where Congress will craft and reconcile appropriations bills before October 1.