For the 1st time ever, 8 spacecraft are docked to the International Space Station
By Elizabeth Howell published 13 hours ago
It's the first time all the spacecraft docking ports on the current configuration of the ISS have been occupied.

An illustration of the eight visiting spacecraft docked at the International Space Station as of Dec. 1, 2025. (Image credit: NASA)
The space station is feeling like a lot of us in the wake of Thanksgiving very, very full.
All eight docking ports for spacecraft on the current configuration of the International Space Station (ISS) are fully occupied for the first time in the complex's history, NASA officials said in a statement on Monday (Dec. 1). (Construction of the ISS began in 1998, but the complex didn't have that many ports in the beginning.)
The ISS is so full up that controllers had to temporarily move aside a robotic spacecraft to make room for an astronaut taxi last week. NASA astronaut Chris Williams and Sergey Kud-Sverchkov and Sergei Mikaev of the Russian space agency Roscosmos arrived aboard Russia's Soyuz MS-28 spacecraft, which docked at the Russian Rassvet module on Thanksgiving Day (Nov. 28), for an expected eight-month mission.
Before the Soyuz crew got there, Mission Control at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston used the ISS' robotic Canadarm2 to move Northrop Grumman's Cygnus-23 cargo spacecraft, "to provide appropriate clearance" for the incoming crewed spacecraft, NASA officials stated. Cygnus-23 was then reinstalled at the Earth-facing port of the station's Unity module. (That's spacecraft No. 2 of eight, for those of you keeping track.)
There's another Soyuz vehicle at the ISS as well Soyuz MS-27, which is installed at the Russian Prichal module. But its orbital stay is coming to and end: Soyuz MS-27 is scheduled to depart the ISS with NASA's Jonny Kim and Roscosmos cosmonauts Sergey Ryzhikov and Alexey Zubritsky on Dec. 8, for a landing soon thereafter in Kazakhstan.
More:
https://www.space.com/space-exploration/international-space-station/for-the-1st-time-ever-8-spacecraft-are-docked-to-the-international-space-station