<p>India and the rest of the world is waiting with bated breath for Chandrayaan-3, ISRO's Moon mission, to land on the lunar surface.</p><p>Chandrayaan-3, as its name suggests, is the third iteration of the India space agency's lunar missions, with the first having been launched in 2008.</p><p>In light of Chandrayaan-3's much-anticipated milestone, we take a look at how much each of the Chandrayaan missions cost.</p>.Chandrayaan-3 all set for Automatic Landing Sequence, says ISRO.<p>Chandrayaan 1 was launched on October 22, 2008: it was India’s first attempt to reach the Moon and had a budget of Rs 386 crore. It was also known as India’s budget mission to the Moon. It was one of major milestones in India's space programme. </p>.<p><br>The follow-up mission, Chandrayaan-2, saw a considerable <a href="https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/tamil-nadu/Chandrayaan-1-mission-completed-in-cost-effective-manner-says-top-official/article15461165.ece">leap</a> in terms of the budget allocation. It had a budget of a whopping Rs 978 crore, nearly three times that of the first mission. However, on September 6, 2019, the Chandrayaan-2 lander malfunctioned due to a software glitch, resulting in ISRO losing communication with it.</p><p><br>For the Chandrayaan-3 mission, ISRO had a budget of around just Rs 613 crore ($74 million) for the mission. <br><br>In total, nearly Rs 2,000 crore has been spent by India on its ambitious missions to reach the moon, but even the cumulative figure is far below that of other space agencies: for perspective, NASA is on track to spend a whopping $93 billion for its Artemis moon missions.</p>
<p>India and the rest of the world is waiting with bated breath for Chandrayaan-3, ISRO's Moon mission, to land on the lunar surface.</p><p>Chandrayaan-3, as its name suggests, is the third iteration of the India space agency's lunar missions, with the first having been launched in 2008.</p><p>In light of Chandrayaan-3's much-anticipated milestone, we take a look at how much each of the Chandrayaan missions cost.</p>.Chandrayaan-3 all set for Automatic Landing Sequence, says ISRO.<p>Chandrayaan 1 was launched on October 22, 2008: it was India’s first attempt to reach the Moon and had a budget of Rs 386 crore. It was also known as India’s budget mission to the Moon. It was one of major milestones in India's space programme. </p>.<p><br>The follow-up mission, Chandrayaan-2, saw a considerable <a href="https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/tamil-nadu/Chandrayaan-1-mission-completed-in-cost-effective-manner-says-top-official/article15461165.ece">leap</a> in terms of the budget allocation. It had a budget of a whopping Rs 978 crore, nearly three times that of the first mission. However, on September 6, 2019, the Chandrayaan-2 lander malfunctioned due to a software glitch, resulting in ISRO losing communication with it.</p><p><br>For the Chandrayaan-3 mission, ISRO had a budget of around just Rs 613 crore ($74 million) for the mission. <br><br>In total, nearly Rs 2,000 crore has been spent by India on its ambitious missions to reach the moon, but even the cumulative figure is far below that of other space agencies: for perspective, NASA is on track to spend a whopping $93 billion for its Artemis moon missions.</p>