The Japanese private spaceflight company ispace aims to make history on Thursday (June 5) with its second attempt to land on the moon.
The Resilience lander is currently orbiting the moon as it prepares to land within Mare Frigoris (“Sea of Cold”) in the northern hemisphere. The landing is scheduled for Thursday at 3:17 p.m. EDT (1917 GMT; or 4:17 a.m. Japan Standard Time on Friday, June 6), ispace announced today (June 4). This is seven minutes earlier than previously stated, after engineers fine-tuned orbital calculations.
You’ll be able to watch the landing attempt live via ispace, and Space.com will carry the company’s livestream. Should ispace decide to switch to an alternative landing site, the Resilience landing would shift to different landing dates and times, the company stated on social media.
The moon, as seen from orbit by ispace’s Resilience lunar lander. This is a screenshot from a short video the company posted on X on June 3, 2025. (Image credit: ispace)
Resilience is ispace’s second lunar lander and has been on a long, circuitous route to the moon after launch on Jan. 15 on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. The mission is a follow-up to the failed Hakuto-R Mission 1 landing attempt back in 2023, and is also part of a wider surge in private lunar exploration efforts that have seen a number of recent commercial landing attempts.