NASA TV Live
NASA Television is our official free-to-air broadcast network for live events and original content, including launches, spacewalks, mission events, the latest news briefings, and videos showcasing our missions. You can access NASA TV through your local provider, as well as through third-party distribution platforms such as Apple TV, Roku, Hulu, Pluto TV, DirectTV, DISH Network, Google Fiber, and Amazon Fire TV.
Public Channel of NASA TV
Upcoming Events
All times listed are in U.S. Eastern, which equates to UTC-4 between March and November.
Television broadcasts are carried on NASA TV’s Public and Media channels, unless noted otherwise.
Audio streams are not carried on NASA TV and will be available on this page or via a link.
Editor’s Note: As part of its ongoing web and television modernization efforts, NASA is shifting its digital focus to its on-demand streaming service, NASA+, which has already gained four times more viewership than the agency’s traditional cable channel. To streamline how it brings the latest aeronautics, human spaceflight, science, and technology news to the universe, the agency also is preparing to phase out NASA Television, its over-the-air broadcast, in late August.
Tuesday, Aug. 13
11:30 a.m.—ISS Expedition 71 in-flight event for WBAL-TV, Baltimore, with NASA flight engineer Jeanette Epps. Stream on NASA TV and the NASA TV Media Channel
Wednesday, August 14
11:25 a.m. – ISS Expedition 71 in-flight interview with ABC Radio News and NASA flight engineers Matt Dominick and Tracy Dyson. Stream on NASA TV and the NASA TV Media Channel
Wednesday, August 21
10:30 a.m. – ISS Expedition 71 in-flight educational event with the Most Pure Heart Catholic School, Aviation Post 8 and the Whitson Elementary School in Topeka, Kansas with NASA flight engineers Matt Dominick and Tracy Dyson. Stream on NASA TV and the NASA TV Media Channel
The Universe at Your Fingertips
As part of its ongoing web and television modernization efforts, NASA is shifting its digital focus to its on-demand streaming service, NASA+. The transition from cable TV to streaming is part of a larger effort to ensure the agency's content is more accessible, discoverable, and secure for the public.
Learn More about The Universe at Your Fingertips![](https://www.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/pia07872large.jpg?w=1920)