What’s Your Personal Moon Price? A New Way to Value the Ultimate Journey

Astronaut on the Moon watching Earth, symbolising the cost and value of lunar travel.

I would pay only what I call my Personal Moon Price — the amount that balances awe with responsibility. If part of that investment can uplift others through education or social impact, the journey is worth it; otherwise, no price could justify leaving Earth behind.

Daily writing prompt
How much would you pay to go to the moon?

Before rockets or price tags, every great journey begins with a question: What is this experience truly worth to me?

The trip to the Moon may cost billions, but its value can’t be printed on a ticket. Here’s how to calculate your own Personal Moon Price — the point where wonder, risk, and conscience meet.

How Much Would You Pay to Go to the Moon?

By Johnbritto Kurusumuthu | Founder, Rise&Inspire

A Repeated Prompt — A Deeper Question

WordPress has asked this before: “How much would you pay to go to the moon?”

But repetition is often a challenge disguised as opportunity.

The question isn’t really about money. It’s about value — the worth we assign to experiences that transcend ordinary life. When the prompt repeats, it demands a deeper, more structured reflection: How can we meaningfully quantify the value of a journey that few in human history have taken?

This time, I’m not chasing metaphors or emotions. I want a framework that’s measurable, ethical, and deeply personal — one that converts the awe of space travel into a disciplined, reflective choice.

So here’s my original contribution to the blogosphere:

The Personal Moon Price (PMP) — a formula that helps anyone calculate what they would truly pay to go to the moon, based on both tangible and moral costs.

The Personal Moon Price (PMP): A New Framework for an Ancient Dream

If you strip away fantasy, a moon journey has five key cost components — four you pay, and one you earn back through shared value.

Formula:

PMP = Market Ticket + Training & Insurance + Opportunity Cost + Externalities − Shared/Multiplier Value

Let’s break this down:

1. Market Ticket — the published or estimated price of a lunar mission seat.

2. Training & Insurance — all pre-flight preparation, health screening, recovery, and life insurance costs.

3. Opportunity Cost — the income, projects, or commitments you must pause or forgo.

4. Externalities — the broader environmental or planetary costs you offset (like carbon footprint or research donations).

5. Shared/Multiplier Value — the portion you redirect to education, social initiatives, or open knowledge. Subtract this from your total, because that’s the value you reinvest in humanity.

This model transforms a speculative question into an actionable one — a blend of economics, ethics, and empathy.

Market Reality: What Does a Moon Ticket Cost?

The current landscape of commercial lunar tourism gives us only broad estimates, but they’re enough to set boundaries.

Orbital seats (for missions to the ISS) are priced between $50–70 million per person.

Lunar seat estimates vary widely, from $100 million for a flyby to $750 million for a full surface landing.

Analysts and market studies suggest a plausible median of around $100–200 millionfor early lunar tourist seats.

These are not speculative numbers; they are derived from private space mission proposals, cost modelling by commercial launch providers, and investor briefings released over the past decade.

If you’re reading this from India, those figures translate into astronomical rupee values — yet they’re grounded in the market realities of 2025.

The Human Equation: The Overview Effect

Astronauts often describe something profound upon seeing Earth from above — a cognitive shift known as the overview effect.

It’s a documented phenomenon that changes how people perceive life, borders, and human purpose.

But there’s also a physical cost.

Microgravity alters blood flow, bone density, and spatial orientation. Re-adaptation can take weeks. Some astronauts report lingering physiological and psychological effects.

Thus, Training & Insurance in the PMP framework aren’t optional costs — they’re part of the lived experience of such a journey.

Compute Your Personal Moon Price (Without a Table)

You don’t need a spreadsheet to estimate your PMP. You just need clarity.

Here’s a step-by-step textual calculator — copy these lines into your journal or notes app, and fill in your own numbers:

Personal Moon Price (PMP) Calculator

1. Market Ticket:

Estimate the likely cost of your lunar seat.

Example: $120,000,000 (≈ ₹10,536,000,000 at ₹87.8/USD).

2. Training & Insurance:

Include physical preparation, safety coverage, and post-mission recovery.

Example: $10,000,000 (≈ ₹878,000,000).

3. Opportunity Cost:

Calculate what you would lose in income or unfinished projects during preparation and travel.

Example: $5,000,000 (≈ ₹439,000,000).

4. Externalities:

Allocate funds to offset environmental and planetary impacts.

Example: $1,000,000 (≈ ₹87,800,000).

5. Shared/Multiplier Value:

Decide what portion of this experience’s cost you’ll dedicate to social benefit — scholarships, research funds, or public science outreach.

Example: $40,000,000 (≈ ₹3,512,000,000).

Now Apply the Formula:

PMP = (Market Ticket + Training + Opportunity + Externalities) − Shared Value

Worked Example:

PMP = (120M + 10M + 5M + 1M) − 40M

$96,000,000 → roughly ₹8,420,800,000, or ₹842 crore.

That’s your personal moon price — not NASA’s, not SpaceX’s — yours.

The Ethical Cap: Why I Wouldn’t Pay More Than My Own PMP

Even if I had the means, I’d impose a self-limit.

I call this my social-impact cap:

If the sum I spend on a private experience could instead transform lives on Earth, the experience must include a proportional public return.

So if I ever buy a seat to the moon, at least 30–50% of that investment would be dedicated to social uplift — scholarships, rural innovation labs, open educational resources, or climate resilience funds.

Otherwise, the moon trip becomes an indulgence without meaning.

That principle keeps awe tethered to responsibility. It’s what makes the Personal Moon Price more than a number — it’s a moral contract.

Translating the Price into Perspective

₹842 crore — that’s the cost of roughly:

✔️ 150 well-equipped rural schools,

✔️ or solar electrification for 10,000 homes,

✔️ or a perpetual scholarship fund for underprivileged STEM students in India.

So, the true question is not how much I would pay to go to the moon —

but how much of that price am I willing to redirect to keep Earth thriving while I dream of the stars?

Why This Approach Is New

Every year, thousands of blogs answer this prompt. Most ask if the trip is “worth it.”

Few attempt to quantify worth in both rupees and responsibility.

This post offers something distinct:

A reproducible economic model for pricing experience.

moral lens that reframes personal ambition as shared uplift.

reader-interactive calculator that encourages participation and reflection.

That is the Rise&Inspire way — to elevate imagination with structure, and inspiration with accountability.

Key Takeaway

The true cost of a journey to the moon isn’t measured in dollars or rupees, but in how much of that investment you return to Earth.

If you can align your dreams with your values — if your ascent uplifts others — then the price you pay becomes not a purchase, but a pledge.

Resources for Further Reading

Research on astronaut psychology and the overview effect.

Commercial spaceflight cost studies and orbital tourism reports.

Market data on exchange rates and global space economy trends.

Final Reflection for Readers

Before you close this post, ask yourself:

If you had a ticket to the moon, how would you make that journey count for someone who can never leave Earth?

That — not the ticket price — is the question that defines the worth of the voyage.

Explore more reflections at Rise & Inspire — insights on faith, law, technology, and the architecture of purposeful living.

© 2025 Rise & Inspire. All Rights Reserved.

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5 Comments

  1. great post – “opportunity cost” is the aspect that comes to mind first (it really would be a once in a lifetime opportunity), but I do worry about the cost to the environment, and all the other ways that money could be spent… I would love the chance to see the world from a new perspective, but I don’t think I could justify the expense or risk, no matter how rich I was! Regards, Linda xx

    1. Thank you so much, Linda — I really appreciate your thoughtful reflection. 🌍✨
      You’ve captured exactly why “opportunity cost” sits at the heart of the Personal Moon Price idea. The dream of seeing Earth from that perspective is undeniably powerful, yet the moral and environmental weight of such a journey can’t be ignored.
      What I find inspiring is that even thinking through this trade-off — what we’d gain, what we’d give up, and how we might redirect some of that value back to the planet — already makes the dream more meaningful. It turns wonder into responsibility.
      I completely agree: sometimes the richest view of Earth is the one we find through awareness, not altitude.
      Warm regards,
      Johnbritto 🌕

  2. Great read, my friend. 🙂

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