Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from Tallwire.

      What's Hot

      Nvidia Surges Past $5 Trillion Valuation as AI Boom Accelerates

      May 12, 2026

      Australia Moves To Force Big Tech To Pay For News Or Face New Tax

      May 12, 2026

      Humanoid Robots Set To Handle Airport Baggage In Japan Trial

      May 12, 2026
      Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
      • Tech
      • AI
      • Get In Touch
      Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn
      TallwireTallwire
      • Tech

        Rivian Spinoff Bets Big on Software-Driven E-Bikes to Redefine Urban Mobility

        May 11, 2026

        Musk’s SpaceX Stock Strategy Keeps Retail Investors on the Outside as Valuations Soar

        May 9, 2026

        ALS Brain Implant Breakthrough Restores Patient Speech and Raises Bigger Questions

        May 8, 2026

        Supreme Court Signals Skepticism Toward Limits on Police Phone Searches

        May 8, 2026

        Russia Tightens Grip on Internet as Wartime Controls Expand

        May 7, 2026
      • AI

        Nvidia Surges Past $5 Trillion Valuation as AI Boom Accelerates

        May 12, 2026

        Humanoid Robots Set To Handle Airport Baggage In Japan Trial

        May 12, 2026

        Meta Shares Slide As AI Spending Surge And Youth Backlash Raise Investor Concerns

        May 12, 2026

        AI’s Soft Seduction Could Quietly Undermine Humanity, Professor Warns

        May 12, 2026

        Lawmakers Rebuke Meta Over Restrictions on Legal Ads for Social Media Addiction Claims

        May 12, 2026
      • Security

        Meta Signals Possible Exit From New Mexico Over Child Safety Mandate Dispute

        May 12, 2026

        Rogue AI Coding Agent Wipes Company Database In Seconds

        May 11, 2026

        Disneyland Expands Facial Recognition Use Amid Growing Privacy Concerns

        May 11, 2026

        AI Chatbots Raise Alarm Over Potential Biological Weapons Guidance

        May 10, 2026

        China-Based Entities Could Face Sweeping Restrictions Over AI Theft Concerns

        May 9, 2026
      • Health

        Lawmakers Rebuke Meta Over Restrictions on Legal Ads for Social Media Addiction Claims

        May 12, 2026

        AI’s Soft Seduction Could Quietly Undermine Humanity, Professor Warns

        May 12, 2026

        AI Outperforms Doctors In Emergency Diagnosis Study, Raising Promise And Caution

        May 11, 2026

        Parents Lead Growing Revolt Against Classroom Technology Overreach

        May 10, 2026

        OpenAI’s Strategic Reset And A.I.’s Growing Role In Medicine Spark Debate Over Tech’s Future

        May 10, 2026
      • Science

        AI Outperforms Doctors In Emergency Diagnosis Study, Raising Promise And Caution

        May 11, 2026

        AI Chatbots Raise Alarm Over Potential Biological Weapons Guidance

        May 10, 2026

        OpenAI’s Strategic Reset And A.I.’s Growing Role In Medicine Spark Debate Over Tech’s Future

        May 10, 2026

        ALS Brain Implant Breakthrough Restores Patient Speech and Raises Bigger Questions

        May 8, 2026

        Meta Eyes Space-Based Solar Power To Fuel Expanding Data Center Demand

        May 8, 2026
      • Tech

        Musk Frames AI Fight as Battle for Humanity’s Future

        May 10, 2026

        Musk Calls Early OpenAI Funding A “Mistake” As Legal Clash With Altman Escalates

        May 10, 2026

        Musk’s SpaceX Stock Strategy Keeps Retail Investors on the Outside as Valuations Soar

        May 9, 2026

        Ex-Twitter CEO’s AI Startup Hits $2 Billion Valuation After Fresh Funding Round

        May 9, 2026

        California Billionaire Tax Fight Draws Silicon Valley Heavyweights Into Political Crossfire

        May 7, 2026
      TallwireTallwire
      Home»Tech»Honda’s Jump From Cars to Rockets Stuns the Industry
      Tech

      Honda’s Jump From Cars to Rockets Stuns the Industry

      Updated:February 21, 20264 Mins Read
      Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
      Honda’s Jump From Cars to Rockets Stuns the Industry
      Honda’s Jump From Cars to Rockets Stuns the Industry
      Share
      Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

      Japanese automaker Honda has stunned the tech world by successfully launching and landing a 20-foot reusable rocket in June 2025, signaling that the company is serious about expanding beyond cars, motorcycles, and lawn mowers into space exploration. The company’s research arm, Honda R&D, carried out the test at its Taiki facility in Hokkaido — sending the rocket roughly 890 feet into the air, then returning it safely to ground within 37 cm of its target landing point. Honda executives say the move isn’t just a publicity stunt: the plan is to deploy satellites potentially critical for vehicle connectivity and autonomy, and to leverage decades of hydrogen/fuel-cell and robotics research toward future lunar energy systems and avatar robots for off-Earth operations. While Honda has yet to commit to commercial launches, their aggressive six-year push could make them a credible rival in the growing global space race in the early 2030s.

      Sources: The Verge, Honda

      Key Takeaways

      – Honda successfully executed a test rocket launch and vertical landing, demonstrating reusable-rocket technology that reached about 271 meters before landing with precision.

      – The rocket program reflects Honda’s ambition to diversify beyond traditional vehicles — envisioning satellite deployment to support connectivity and autonomy, plus future applications like lunar energy systems and space robotics.

      – While the initiative is still in its early, experimental phase and no commercial timeline is fixed, Honda aims to achieve suborbital launch capability by 2029 and potentially begin full-scale operations in the early 2030s.

      In-Depth

      In a development few would have predicted, Honda — long pigeonholed in the public’s mind as a maker of cars, motorcycles, lawnmowers, and small engines — has quietly and ambitiously stepped into the space industry. On June 17, 2025, Honda R&D launched a 6.3-meter prototype rocket from its Taiki facility in Hokkaido. The liquid-propellant rocket reached approximately 271.4 meters before descending. After a 56.6-second flight, the rocket landed on its retractable legs, returning within 37 centimeters of its target touchdown point. This marked the first time Honda successfully demonstrated both launch and controlled landing — a critical milestone on the path to reusable rockets.

      That rocket, though modest in size and carrying no payload, represents a far larger strategic initiative for Honda. The company envisions leveraging satellite deployment — launching its own communication and data satellites — to support next-generation mobility products. Think globally connected cars, scooters, drones, and even aircraft, all communicating through Honda-backed satellite networks. That connectivity would support advanced autonomous functions, worldwide fleet management, and perhaps even global energy systems or remote-robotic operations.

      Executive leadership — including a former Formula One team director now heading space strategy — frames this not as a vanity project but as a logical evolution. After all, Honda already manufactures everything that moves on land, sea, and air. Space, they argue, is simply the next frontier. Behind the scenes, they’re repurposing decades of R&D in fuel cells, robotics (backed by legacy of the ASIMO humanoid project), and autonomous systems — now retooled for lunar energy systems and space robotics (e.g. avatar bots for remote operation). The company has floated ideas such as a lunar base powered by hydrogen fuel cells, using ice from the Moon’s south pole for water, oxygen, and hydrogen — an ambitious vision that shifts Honda from consumer mobility to interplanetary infrastructure.

      That said, Honda remains circumspect. The company hasn’t announced a full-size, payload-ready rocket, nor committed to a timetable for commercialization. Officials stress that current efforts are part of “fundamental research,” with a stated goal of reaching suborbital flight capability by 2029. Even then, achieving orbital launches capable of placing satellites or cargo into orbit would require further breakthroughs, heavier manufacturing capacity, and likely a substantial capital commitment. Competitors are already well-established — industry heavyweights such as SpaceX, Blue Origin, and government-backed aerospace firms have years of experience, infrastructure, and funding on their side.

      Still, Honda’s entry into the space game shifts the competitive landscape. As many global automakers and industrial conglomerates increasingly hedge into aerospace and satellite technology, having a legacy manufacturer like Honda join the fray could spark real competition. Between its deep engineering capacity, manufacturing scale, and growing ambition, Honda could become a wild-card contender — especially if it successfully scales up from small test rockets to commercial, repeatable launch operations.

      For now, what matters is the proof of concept: a rocket took off and landed, built by one of the world’s most trusted names in manufacturing. That alone signals a broader redefinition of what companies like Honda, once boxed into sedans and lawnmowers, can become. The early stages are promising — and if Honda follows through, the company might not just build cars anymore.

      Robotics
      Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
      Previous ArticleHomeowners Downgrade from “Smart Homes” to Analog “Dumb Homes” for Peace and Privacy
      Next Article House Overhauls Kids Online Safety Bill — Critics Say It’s Been “Poison-Pilled”

      Related Posts

      Humanoid Robots Set To Handle Airport Baggage In Japan Trial

      May 12, 2026

      San Francisco Debuts Public Robot Fighting Arena

      May 11, 2026

      Rivian Spinoff Bets Big on Software-Driven E-Bikes to Redefine Urban Mobility

      May 11, 2026

      Musk’s SpaceX Stock Strategy Keeps Retail Investors on the Outside as Valuations Soar

      May 9, 2026
      Add A Comment
      Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

      Editors Picks

      Rivian Spinoff Bets Big on Software-Driven E-Bikes to Redefine Urban Mobility

      May 11, 2026

      Musk’s SpaceX Stock Strategy Keeps Retail Investors on the Outside as Valuations Soar

      May 9, 2026

      ALS Brain Implant Breakthrough Restores Patient Speech and Raises Bigger Questions

      May 8, 2026

      Supreme Court Signals Skepticism Toward Limits on Police Phone Searches

      May 8, 2026
      Popular Topics
      Taiwan Tech Sundar Pichai spotlight Tesla Cybertruck Stocks SpaceX Series A Satya Nadella Startup Viral Space Samsung Tim Cook trending Tesla Software starlink Series B UAE Tech Satellite
      Major Tech Companies
      • Apple News
      • Google News
      • Meta News
      • Microsoft News
      • Amazon News
      • Samsung News
      • Nvidia News
      • OpenAI News
      • Tesla News
      • AMD News
      • Anthropic News
      • Elbit News
      AI & Emerging Tech
      • AI Regulation News
      • AI Safety News
      • AI Adoption
      • Quantum Computing News
      • Robotics News
      Key People
      • Sam Altman News
      • Jensen Huang News
      • Elon Musk News
      • Mark Zuckerberg News
      • Sundar Pichai News
      • Tim Cook News
      • Satya Nadella News
      • Mustafa Suleyman News
      Global Tech & Policy
      • Israel Tech News
      • India Tech News
      • Taiwan Tech News
      • UAE Tech News
      Startups & Emerging Tech
      • Series A News
      • Series B News
      • Startup News
      Tallwire
      Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn Threads Instagram RSS
      • Tech
      • Entertainment
      • Business
      • Government
      • Academia
      • Transportation
      • Legal
      • Press Kit
      © 2026 Tallwire. Optimized by ARMOUR Digital Marketing Agency.

      Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.