Concepts for a Falcon Heavy launch vehicle using three
Falcon 1 core boosters, with an approximate payload-to-LEO capacity of two tons, were initially discussed as early as 2003. The concept for three core booster stages of the company's then as-yet-unflown
Falcon 9 was referred to in 2005 as the
Falcon 9 Heavy. SpaceX unveiled the plan for the Falcon Heavy to the public at a
Washington, D.C., news conference in April 2011, with an initial test flight expected in 2013. A number of factors delayed the planned maiden flight to 2018, including two anomalies with Falcon 9 launch vehicles, which required all engineering resources to be dedicated to failure analysis, halting flight operations for many months. The integration and structural challenges of combining three Falcon 9 cores were more difficult than expected. In July 2017, Elon Musk said, "It actually ended up being way harder to do Falcon Heavy than we thought. ... We were pretty naive about that". The initial test flight for the first Falcon Heavy lifted off on February 6, 2018, at 20:45 UTC, carrying its dummy payload,
Elon Musk's personal Tesla Roadster, beyond Mars orbit.
Conception and funding Musk first mentioned Falcon Heavy in a September 2005 news update, referring to a customer request from 18 months prior. Various solutions using the planned
Falcon 5 (which was never flown) had been explored, but the only cost-effective, reliable iteration was one that used a 9-engine first stage—the Falcon 9. The Falcon Heavy was developed using
private capital with Musk stating that the cost was more than US$500 million. No government financing was provided for its development.
Design and development , three versions of
Falcon 9 v1.1, three versions of
Falcon 9 v1.2 (Full Thrust), three versions of
Falcon 9 Block 5, Falcon Heavy and Falcon Heavy Block 5 The Falcon Heavy design is based on
Falcon 9's fuselage and engines. By 2008, SpaceX had been aiming for the first launch of Falcon 9 in 2009, while "Falcon 9 Heavy would be in a couple of years". Speaking at the 2008
Mars Society Conference, Musk also indicated that he expected a hydrogen-fueled upper stage would follow two to three years later (which would have been around 2013). By April 2011, the capabilities and performance of the Falcon 9 vehicle were better understood, SpaceX having completed two successful demonstration missions to
low Earth orbit (LEO), one of which included
reignition of the second-stage engine. At a press conference at the
National Press Club in Washington, D.C., on April 5, 2011, Musk stated that Falcon Heavy would "carry more payload to orbit or
escape velocity than any vehicle in history, apart from the
Saturn V Moon rocket ... and Soviet
Energia rocket". In 2015, SpaceX announced a number of changes to the Falcon Heavy rocket, worked in parallel to the
upgrade of the Falcon 9 v1.1 launch vehicle. In December 2016, SpaceX released a photo showing the Falcon Heavy interstage at the company headquarters in
Hawthorne, California.
Testing By May 2013, a new, partly underground test stand was being built at the
SpaceX Rocket Development and Test Facility in
McGregor, Texas, specifically to test the triple cores and twenty-seven rocket engines of the Falcon Heavy. By May 2017, SpaceX conducted the first static fire test of flight-design Falcon Heavy center core at the McGregor facility. In July 2017, Musk discussed publicly the challenges of testing a complex launch vehicle like the three-core Falcon Heavy, indicating that a large extent of the new design "is really impossible to test on the ground" and could not be effectively tested independent of actual
flight tests. The first Falcon Heavy static fire test was conducted on January 24, 2018. SpaceX refurbished
Launch Complex 4E at
Vandenberg AFB to accommodate Falcon 9 and Heavy. The first launch from the
Cape Canaveral, Florida
east coast launch complex was planned for late 2013 or 2014. Due partly to the failure of
SpaceX CRS-7 in June 2015, SpaceX rescheduled the maiden Falcon Heavy flight in September 2015 to occur no earlier than April 2016. The flight was to be launched from the refurbished
Kennedy Space Center Launch Complex 39A. The flight was postponed again to late 2016, early 2017, summer 2017, late 2017 and finally to February 2018. At a July 2017 meeting of the International Space Station Research and Development meeting in
Washington, D.C., Musk downplayed expectations for the success of the maiden flight: There's a real good chance the vehicle won't make it to orbit ... I hope it makes it far enough away from the pad that it does not cause pad damage. I would consider even that a win, to be honest. He released pictures in the following days. However, due to the
U.S. government partial shutdown that began on January 20, 2018, the testing and launch were further delayed. The static fire test was conducted on January 24, 2018. Musk confirmed via
Twitter that the test "was good" and later announced the rocket would be launched on February 6, 2018. On February 6, 2018, after a delay of over two hours due to high winds, Falcon Heavy lifted off at 20:45 UTC. However, only one of the three engines on the center booster that were intended to restart ignited during descent, causing the booster to be destroyed upon impacting the ocean at a speed of over . Initially, Elon Musk tweeted that the Roadster had overshot its planned
heliocentric orbit, and would reach the
asteroid belt. Later, observations by telescopes showed that the Roadster would only slightly exceed the orbit of Mars at
aphelion.
Later flights specifications on the launch pad in June 2019 A year after the successful demo flight, SpaceX had signed five commercial contracts worth US$500–750 million, meaning that it had managed to cover the development cost of the rocket. The second flight, and first commercial one, occurred on April 11, 2019, launching
Arabsat-6A, with all three boosters landing successfully for the first time. The third flight occurred on June 25, 2019, launching the
STP-2 (U.S. Department of Defense Space Test Program) payload. and the second of which being USSF-67, which was launched 11 weeks after USSF-44.
ViaSat selected the Falcon Heavy in late 2018 for the launch of its
ViaSat-3 satellite which was scheduled to launch in the 2020–2022 timeframe; however it would not launch until May 1, 2023. On October 13, 2023, Falcon Heavy embarked on its 8th flight carrying NASA's
Psyche probe to the asteroid
16 Psyche. This mission only had the side boosters return to Earth with the center core expended, a decision made to create more tolerable margins for the mission. Following the announcement of NASA's
Artemis program of returning humans to the Moon, the Falcon Heavy rocket has been mentioned several times as an alternative to the expensive
Space Launch System (SLS) program, but NASA decided to exclusively use SLS to launch the
Orion capsule. Falcon Heavy was contracted to transport the
Dragon XL spacecraft to the
Lunar Gateway. It was also selected to launch the first two elements of the Lunar Gateway, the
Power and Propulsion Element (PPE), and the
Habitation and Logistics Outpost (HALO). However, in March 2026, NASA announced it would pause development of Gateway and reallocate hardware toward a
lunar surface base. Falcon Heavy will launch
Astrobotic Technology's Griffin lander as part of the Artemis Program's
Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) initiative. On October 14, 2024, Falcon Heavy transported NASA's
Europa Clipper into space to explore Jupiter's moon
Europa. == Design ==