Title 51 › Subtitle Subtitle V— Programs Targeting Commercial Opportunities › Chapter 509— COMMERCIAL SPACE LAUNCH ACTIVITIES › § 50906
Anyone can apply to the Secretary of Transportation for an experimental permit, in the form the Secretary requires. As long as public health and safety, property safety, and U.S. national security and foreign policy are protected, the Secretary must issue the permit in writing within 120 days if the applicant meets the rules. If no decision is made within 90 days, the Secretary must tell the applicant what issue is delaying the decision and what action is needed. If the Secretary misses the deadline, the Secretary must notify two congressional committees within 15 days. The Secretary may create safety-approval procedures and may use the authority in section 50905(b)(2)(C) to help the commercial spaceflight industry. Permits may only be for reusable suborbital rockets or reusable launch vehicles used on suborbital flights or reentry for three purposes: research and development, showing compliance while seeking a license, or crew training using that vehicle design. Permits can allow unlimited launches and reentries for a specific vehicle or design and must say what minor changes are allowed without ending the permit. Permits cannot be transferred. A permit can exist even if a license is issued, and a permit holder may not carry people or property for hire. For purposes of sections 50907, 50908, 50909, 50910, 50912, 50914, 50917, 50918, 50919, and 50923, a permit counts as a license, the holder as a licensee, the vehicle as licensed, and issuing a permit counts as licensing.
Full Legal Text
National and Commercial Space Programs — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
51 U.S.C. § 50906
Title 51 — National and Commercial Space Programs
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60