Planned Falcon 9 activity is prominent in the near term, and the spacex launch manifest lists multiple Starlink missions from both coasts, according to the Launch Schedule and RocketLaunch.org.
The Launch Schedule lists a Feb. 14/15 Falcon 9 flight for Starlink 17-13 with liftoff at 5:59:59 p.m. PST and 0159:59 UTC, carrying 25 Starlink V2 Mini Optimized satellites and using first stage booster B1081 on its 22nd flight, with a landing on the drone ship Of Course I Still Love You.
RocketLaunch.org also catalogues that mission, reporting booster B1081 on its 22nd flight and noting a batch figure of 24 satellites and a launch success status, illustrating a numerical discrepancy between the two sources.
The Launch Schedule shows additional Falcon 9 missions clustered through Feb. 22, including Starlink 6-103 from SLC-40 with a midnight EST window opening at 0500 UTC carrying 29 satellites and booster 1090 targeting a landing on A Shortfall of Gravitas, and Starlink 10-36 from SLC-40 at 2200 UTC with 29 satellites and booster 1077 aiming for Just Read the Instructions.
The schedule adds Starlink 17-25 from SLC-4E with 25 satellites and booster B1063 on its 31st flight, plus Starlink 6-104 from SLC-40 with booster 1067 on its 33rd flight and a series of schedule moves and delays noted for that mission, as reported by the Launch Schedule.
Other Upcoming Missions And Broader Manifest
Outside SpaceX, the Launch Schedule lists a Feb. 18 Firefly Alpha return to flight named Stairway to Seven from SLC-2 Vandenberg, carrying a company test demo payload and exercising Block 2 systems that will appear on Alpha Flight 8.
Blue Origin plans a late February New Glenn flight to carry AST SpaceMobile’s BlueBird 7 satellite, and NASA’s Space Launch System is listed for Artemis 2 as the first crewed Orion flight with Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen on a lunar flyby and Pacific splashdown, with a NET March 6/7 launch time reported.
United Launch Alliance entries include an Atlas 5 Starliner-1 mission NET April 2026 described as an uncrewed cargo flight to the International Space Station, and a Vulcan Centaur Dream Chaser 1 mission NET Q4 2026 listed as the Dream Chaser’s first flight to space after multiple delays, according to the Launch Schedule.
Isar Aerospace’s Spectrum Onward and Upward second test flight and several United States Space Force Space Development Agency Tranche missions appear on RocketLaunch.org, and Dragon CRS-2 SpX-34 is listed NET May 2026 as a commercial resupply flight in that source.