Live · 24/7 · Boca Chica, TX

Watch Starbase right now

Live cameras pointed at the launch pad, the build site, and the Boca Chica corridor. When a static fire kicks off or the road closes, you'll see it here first.

↓ Open the cams

Four angles on Starbase

All streams are operated by LabPadre, the South Padre–based crew that has run 24/7 cams on Starbase since 2020. Click any cam to load the live feed. If a stream shows offline, the camera is down for maintenance — try another angle.

Live
LabPadre · Featured stream

LabPadre Main Feed

The headline 24/7 stream. Whichever angle is most active right now — pad, ship, booster, or watchparty — runs here. Best single cam to leave open.

Live
LabPadre · Pad Cam

Pad Cam

Tight on the orbital launch mount and the chopsticks tower. The cam to watch when a static fire or wet dress rehearsal is on the calendar.

Live
LabPadre · Starbase Live

Starbase Live (Wide)

Wide-angle on the full Starbase site — pad, build site, road, and the gulf horizon. Best context view when something's moving on Highway 4.

Live
LabPadre · Rover Cam

Rover Cam

The mobile angle — operators move this view based on what's interesting that day. Great when a Starship is rolling between the build site and the pad.

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About these streams

Gulf to Orbit doesn't operate these cameras — LabPadre does. They're an independent operation that has been running cameras on Boca Chica longer than almost anyone, and their 24/7 streams are the de facto reference feed for the SpaceX-watching community. We embed them here because they're the best public window into Starbase, and because pairing them with our viewing guides, lodging picks, and launch alerts gives you the full picture in one place.

If you watch enough to want a tip jar moment, subscribe to LabPadre on YouTube — it's the right way to support the people doing the work.

How to read the pad

Venting

White plumes from the tank farm

Cryogenic propellant boil-off. Normal during loading and detanking. Heavy venting plus a rocket on the pad usually means a wet dress rehearsal or static fire is queued.

Road closure

Highway 4 lights flashing red

Cameron County has closed the road. Closures precede static fires, ship moves, and launches. Cross-reference with the official county closure list before assuming.

Static fire

Brief flame, big steam cloud, cleared pad

Engines fire for a few seconds with the rocket bolted down. Usually within the last week or two before a launch attempt. The cloud lingers; the actual fire is over fast.

Stack & destack

Crane and chopsticks moving the ship

The booster gets craned onto the orbital mount, then the ship is stacked on top using the tower's chopstick arms. Watching this fully assembled is one of the best Rover Cam moments.

FTS arming

Personnel clearing the pad in earnest

When the crew arms the flight termination system, you'll see the last ground vehicles and people leave. After that, only the rocket and the cameras stay.

T-zero

Steam wall, then hold-down release

A massive water deluge fires under the booster the moment engines light. The hold-down clamps release a few seconds later. Lift-off is fast — slow-motion replays come out within hours.

Watching from afar? Plan to come down.

Never miss a launch window.

The Dispatch lands before every Starship attempt. Free. Short. No spam.