EO-14369
Ensuring American Space Superiority
- Signed
- Dec 18, 2025
- Published
- Dec 23, 2025
Federal Register: 2025-23845
Source: Federal Register.
Sets U.S. Space Policy: Moon, Mars, Defense, and Commercial Goals
What it does
This order directs federal agencies to pursue a broad national space agenda with specific deadlines: returning Americans to the Moon by 2028, establishing a lunar outpost by 2030, deploying nuclear reactors in space and on the Moon by 2030, and attracting at least $50 billion in new private investment in space markets by 2028. It directs NASA and the Department of Commerce to overhaul their space acquisition processes to favor commercial solutions, and instructs the national security apparatus to develop a space defense strategy covering threats from low-Earth orbit through cislunar space. It also revokes a 2021 executive order on the National Space Council and removes language guaranteeing that space traffic management data be provided free of charge.
Who benefits
Private commercial space companies (launch providers, satellite operators, space tourism firms) who gain preferred contractor status and streamlined acquisition pathways. Defense contractors developing next-generation missile defense and space security systems. Workers in aerospace manufacturing, launch facilities, and related supply chains. Spectrum-dependent industries such as satellite broadband providers. Allied nations whose space security cooperation with the U.S. would be formalized and expanded. Future lunar resource extraction ventures that would benefit from an established U.S. presence and infrastructure standards.
Who is affected
Federal civil servants and contractors at NASA and the Department of Commerce whose roles may be eliminated or restructured through the directed workforce reviews. Existing NASA program teams on projects flagged as over budget or behind schedule, which could face cancellation or restructuring. International partners in current civil space cooperation arrangements that NASA is directed to modify or terminate if misaligned with the new priorities. Users of space traffic management data who currently receive it free of charge, as the order removes that guarantee. Academic and scientific research communities whose programs may be deprioritized in favor of near-term mission objectives. Taxpayers who would fund the significant increase in space spending implied by the order's timelines.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the order provides the executive branch with a coherent, deadline-driven space strategy that the U.S. has historically lacked, and that the Commander-in-Chief and foreign affairs powers give the president broad authority to direct agencies toward national security and economic competitiveness goals in space. They contend that prioritizing commercial solutions and streamlining acquisition processes would reduce the cost overruns and schedule delays that have plagued government space programs, and that establishing American standards and infrastructure in cislunar space now is essential to preventing adversaries from filling that vacuum.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the order sets ambitious deadlines — Moon by 2028, lunar outpost by 2030, space nuclear reactors by 2030 — without identifying new funding, and that the order itself acknowledges implementation is "subject to the availability of appropriations," meaning Congress, not the president, controls whether these goals are achievable. They contend that directing NASA to modify or terminate international cooperation arrangements could damage long-standing scientific partnerships and that removing the free-of-charge guarantee for space traffic data could impose new costs on smaller satellite operators, potentially concentrating the commercial space market among well-capitalized firms.
Constitutional basis
Executive orders rest on constitutional authority or statutory delegation. This summary describes the legal grounding cited or implied by the order.
The order rests on the Article II Vesting Clause and the Take Care Clause (Art. II, §1 and §3), which grant the president authority to direct executive branch agencies in implementing federal law. It also draws on the Commander-in-Chief Clause (Art. II, §2, cl. 1) for its national security and missile defense directives, and on the president's foreign affairs powers, including the Reception Clause (Art. II, §3), for directing the State Department on ally and partner space security cooperation. Statutory authority derives from the National Aeronautics and Space Act (51 U.S.C. §20111), the Space Policy Directives framework, and existing agency acquisition statutes including Other Transactions Authority.