×

US startup Lunar Outpost raises $30 million to speed moon rover development

By Thomson Reuters May 7, 2026 | 8:06 AM

By Joey Roulette

WASHINGTON, May 7 (Reuters) – U.S. startup Lunar Outpost closed a $30 million funding round this week that will speed development of a new moon rover, its CEO said, as investor interest in lunar ventures grows.

The company’s ​Series B funding, launched a month ago, was led by Industrious Ventures. ‌Type One Ventures, Eniac Ventures and Promus Ventures also participated.

Denver-based Lunar Outpost has been developing a Lunar Terrain Vehicle named Eagle. It is competing with two other startups – Astrolab and Intuitive Machines – to become the primary ride for NASA astronauts on the lunar surface during Artemis missions. Future contracts ‌under ​the NASA program could be worth billions of dollars.

But NASA ⁠administrator Jared Isaacman jolted the ⁠agency with changes intended to accelerate the development of a long-term human presence on the lunar surface. NASA in March asked the companies for simpler rover designs that could be deployed more quickly, and it is expected to pick a ​design this month.

Lunar Outpost’s answer to NASA’s need for speed is a smaller rover named Pegasus, which it revealed on Thursday.

The $30 million in fresh capital will help ⁠speed up Pegasus’ development with a launch targeted ⁠in 2027. The bigger Eagle rover, which was targeting a 2028 ​launch, would be pushed to a later phase with its launch around 2030.

“In response to ​NASA saying, ‘Hey, we want to get this done and we want ‌to get it done now,’ we decided to open a quick fundraise,” CEO Justin Cyrus told Reuters. He said the funding round was oversubscribed, drawing interest worth $90 million but closing at $30 million for now to stay focused on speeding up its lunar efforts.

“One ⁠thing that’s been a constraint so far for companies looking to operate in cislunar space has been capital. That no longer exists,” Cyrus said, attributing the investor interest to NASA’s ⁠push for more moon missions. ‌Cislunar refers to the space between the Earth and the ⁠moon.

The company declined to provide its valuation.

NASA’s revised plan for ​Artemis, which ‌was created during President Donald Trump’s first term, involves putting infrastructure, ​centered on ⁠a moon base, and vehicles on the moon’s surface. The agency will send regular astronaut missions in a decade-long strategy costing more than $30 billion.

NASA’s second Artemis mission launched in April, sending four astronauts around the moon and back as one of a few precursor missions to the first crewed moon landing since 1972.

(Reporting by Joey Roulette; Editing by Cynthia ​Osterman and Muralikumar Anantharaman)