Blue Origin's towering New Glenn rocket is getting a revamp.
Following a successful launch from Florida earlier in November, Jeff Bezos' space technology company announced plans to upgrade the 322-foot rocket ahead of its third-ever spaceflight. The updates would be focused on improving things like New Glenn's engines to increase its power and adding more reusable components to enable more frequent launches of the spacecraft.
Blue Origin has launched New Glenn just two times so far from Cape Canaveral, Florida, with its maiden flight occurring in January 2025.
"These enhancements will immediately benefit customers already manifested on New Glenn to fly to destinations including low-Earth orbit, the moon, and beyond," Blue Origin said in a Thursday, Nov. 20, news release.
What's more, Blue Origin also announced plans for a bigger, more powerful variant of its New Glenn rocket. The spacecraft would add a second launch vehicle for Blue Origin's orbital missions as the company increasingly looks to compete with billionaire Elon Musk's SpaceX – whose fleet of Falcon rockets dominates the commercial space industry.
Here's everything to know about Blue Origin's upcoming plans for New Glenn after the rocket's second mission.
Blue Origin announces bigger New Glenn, other upgrades to rocket
Among the upgrades Blue Origin is planning for New Glenn are "higher-performing" engines on both stages of the rocket: the first-stage booster that provides that initial burst of thrust at liftoff, as well as the upper-stage that flies in orbit.
Blue Origin is also integrating more reusable components into the design "to support increased flight rates," the company said.
But perhaps the biggest news Blue Origin shared has to do with its plans for an even larger version of New Glenn.
"The next chapter in New Glenn's roadmap is a new super-heavy class rocket," Blue Origin said in a statement.
It's unclear just how tall the new vehicle would stand when fully stacked, but Blue Origin CEO Dave Limp shared a post on social media site X showing digital renderings of the spacecraft dwarfing NASA's retired Saturn V rocket. Standing 363-feet tall, the three-stage heavy-lift launch vehicle was pivotal in the U.S. space agency's historic Apollo lunar missions of the 1960s and 1970s that launched from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
The new rocket will be called New Glenn 9x4, a reference to its nine engines that will power its first stage and four engines on its second stage. That is an increase of two engines for each stage compared to New Glenn's current design.
When is the next New Glenn rocket launch?
Blue Origin has not announced a target date for the third launch of its New Glenn rocket, named for NASA astronaut John Glenn, the first American to orbit Earth.
The company has also not specified when it expects the larger rocket variant to make its debut, Reuters reported.
But when both rockets are active, Blue Origin envisions that the two New Glenn variants "will serve the market concurrently, giving customers more launch options for their missions, including mega-constellations, lunar and deep space exploration, and national security imperatives such as Golden Dome."
New Glenn launches for 2nd time on NASA ESCAPADE mission to Mars
The New Glenn rocket last got off the ground Nov. 13 from Launch Complex 36 at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Base in Florida. The site is one that Blue Origin invested $1 billion to rebuild.
The launch, a mission Blue Origin referred to as NG-2, also helped propel twin NASA ESCAPADE satellites on a journey to Mars. When the spacecraft reach Martian orbit, they are due to spend about a year orbiting the red planet to take simultaneous observations of solar winds and space weather.
The mission comes as NASA prepares to send astronauts back to the surface of the moon – potentially during President Donald Trump's second term – ahead of the first human expeditions to Mars.
The recent mission also saw Blue Origin complete a major first: landing New Glenn's first stage booster on the deck of a drone ship, named Jacklyn in honor of Bezos' late mother, several hundred miles offshore in the Atlantic. The maneuver was one Blue Origin failed to complete in New Glenn's debut voyage on Jan. 16, 2025.
Booster returns to Florida on drone ship Jacklyn
The booster, nicknamed Never Tell Me the Odds, then floated into port in recent days so that Blue Origin could prepare it for another future mission.
Once offloaded at Port Canaveral, Blue Origin guided the 188-foot-tall booster to the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, making the company the only one besides SpaceX to return a space-flown booster through the gates. The historic moment was one attended by Bezos, the Amazon mogul who founded Blue Origin in 2000.
Contributing: Brooke Edwards, Florida Today; Jennifer Sangalang, USA TODAY Network; Reuters
Eric Lagatta is the Space Connect reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Reach him at elagatta@gannett.com
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Even bigger New Glenn is on the way. When could Blue Origin launch rocket?
Reporting by Eric Lagatta, USA TODAY / USA TODAY
USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect

USA TODAY National
TechCrunch
Ars Technica Science
Space.com
NewsNation
Tech Times
Raw Story
People Top Story
Bustle Relationships
Press of Alantic City Business
CNN Politics
RadarOnline
The Hill Politics