ABC News June 7, 2019

Visiting the International Space Station will soon be possible...if you can pay for it

WATCH: International Space Station open for tourists

You don't have to be an astronaut to visit the International Space Station, NASA said on Friday.

But be prepared to pay...a lot.

NASA is enabling private citizens to stay for up to 30 days on the ISS beginning as early as 2020, the agency announced on Friday.

NASA via AFP/Getty Images
The International Space Station photographed by Expedition 56 crew members from a Soyuz spacecraft after undocking, Nov. 4, 2018. NASA said on June 7, 2019, it will open up the International Space Station for tourism and other business ventures as of next year, as it seeks to financially disengage from the orbiting research lab.
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"The agency can accommodate up to two short-duration private astronaut missions per year to the International Space Station. These missions will be privately funded, dedicated commercial spaceflights" and use spacecraft developed with NASA’s Commercial Crew Program, NASA said in a press release on Friday.

NASA won't be operating the flights. The government agency will be contracting them through private companies, such as Boeing and Elon Musk's SpaceX, to transport the deep-pocketed astronauts. Although the actual price of the trips is still unknown, NASA will be charging the companies that transport them about $35,000 per night at the space station.

(MORE: America's 1st woman astronaut to walk in space explains the history of NASA spacesuit sizing)

“NASA realizes that we need help,” Bill Gerstenmaier, NASA's lead space exploration executive, said during a press event on Friday, according to Quartz. “We can’t do this alone. We’re reaching out to the U.S. private sector to see if you can push the economic frontier into space.”