Sky Pass · One-time

Look up. Further.

Today's sky is free, and always will be. For the other ten thousand days back to June 16, 1995, there's Sky Pass.

Free Forever

The Daily Sky

$0forever

The current photo, told plainly, with one souvenir per day.

  • Today's APOD with full-bleed photo
  • AI-written 3-paragraph plain-English story
  • Extracted 5-color named palette
  • 7-day archive carousel
  • 1 personalized sky receipt PNG / day
  • 1 phone wallpaper (1080×1920) / day
  • Shareable receipt links
Start with today
Sky Pass

One-time payment

The Deep Archive

$1.99once. forever.

Every photo NASA has ever published. Three rare receipt styles. Wallpapers in 4K.

  • Everything in Free
  • Full archive: every APOD since 1995
  • Unlimited receipt downloads
  • Unlimited wallpaper downloads
  • 4K wallpapers (2160×3840)
  • Vintage NASA telegram receipt style
  • Observatory log book receipt style
  • Planetarium ticket stub receipt style
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30-day money-back if the cosmos disappoints.

“The universe doesn’t charge a subscription.
Why should we?”

Reasonable questions

Because the universe doesn't charge a subscription. Pay once, look up forever.

NASA's Astronomy Picture of the Day — a curated photo with an official scientific caption, published every morning since June 16, 1995. Sky Pass unlocks every single one of those days.

No. The story is grounded in NASA's official caption — the model is instructed not to invent numbers or facts that aren't in the source. It rewrites, it doesn't fabricate.

On a thermal printer? Probably not — but it downloads as a beautiful PNG that screenshots well, frames well, and looks alarmingly real on a fridge.

If Sky Pass disappoints, email us within 30 days and we'll refund you. The cost of a stamp will exceed the cost of a refund.

Today in Astronomy 🔭

Photos courtesy of NASA APOD. Awe courtesy of physics.