We don't grid random pixels. Our founding parcels sit where humanity is actually most likely to settle — confirmed water ice, near-continuous solar power, and the flattest, safest ground. That makes the "work the land" commitment credible and the resource memo real.
The lunar south pole — confirmed water ice in permanently-shadowed craters, with "peaks of eternal light" for near-continuous solar power. NASA's Artemis destination, mapped to the metre by LRO.
Shallow subsurface water ice, flat and landing-safe, mid-latitude — a long-favoured candidate for the first human landings on Mars. Superb HiRISE and MOLA coverage.
South-pole crater rim beside permanently-shadowed water ice and near-continuous sunlight. The single most coveted address for an actual lunar base.
Site of confirmed pit/skylight candidates leading to lava tubes — natural radiation shelter for habitats. Calm, well-imaged basalt plains.
The largest lunar mare, rich in thorium and rare-element "KREEP" geology — the resource memo writes itself.
A famous pit and a field of volcanic domes — striking to map and a leading lava-tube settlement candidate.
Shallow subsurface ice under flat, landing-safe plains. The pragmatic first-settlement choice — water you can reach and ground you can land on.
Confirmed buried glaciers in dramatic fretted terrain of mesas and valleys — photogenic to map and rich in accessible ice.
The largest canyon in the solar system — spectacular terrain, deeper air pressure, and layered geology. The trophy view of Mars.
The deepest basin — the highest surface air pressure on the planet, which matters for any future habitation. Vast and well-mapped.
Survey a parcel in any frontier → Why these regions? Read the Mars guide
The model is the same wherever humanity goes next: document a good-faith claim, publish it, maintain it. It's built to extend outward — to the Moon's ice-rich poles, the metal of the asteroids, and the distant outer moons.



Illustrative imagery. Spaceclaims opens documented homestead claims on the Moon and Mars today; no legal title is conveyed and recognition is not guaranteed.
No conveyance of legal title. The 1967 Outer Space Treaty (Art. II) bars national appropriation of celestial bodies, and no sovereign, court, or land registry currently has jurisdiction to grant or enforce private title to land on the Moon, Mars, or any celestial body. Spaceclaims does not and cannot convey legal ownership or any presently-enforceable property right.
What you purchase. A claim-documentation and registry service — the preparation, notarization support, public publication, opposition-period adjudication, and continuous-possession recordkeeping of a good-faith homestead claim — together with a collectible certificate. It is a record of your claim and intent, not a title.
Not an investment; not a security. Your payment is not an investment of money in a common enterprise and carries no expectation of profit from our efforts. We make no representation as to resale value, appreciation, or return. The claim is not offered as a security and is not registered with the SEC, any state regulator, the Brazilian CVM, or any other authority.
No guarantee of recognition; no sovereignty; not legal advice. We model the process on frameworks in which documented good-faith possession was sometimes later recognized, but we do not guarantee any authority will ever recognize your claim. No Spaceclaims claim asserts national sovereignty. Nothing here is legal, tax, or financial advice.