The history-making Falcon 9 first stage will never fly again, Elon Musk said during a press call this evening. "I think we’ll probably keep this one on the ground," he said, "just [because] it’s kind of unique, it’s the first one we’ve brought back."

The plan, Musk said, is to take the booster from Landing Zone 1 to SpaceX's other site at Cape Canaveral, Launch Complex 39A. There, the company will perform a static fire test — where the rocket is held down and the engines are fired at full thrust — on the launchpad to confirm that the rocket's systems are still in good shape. After that, the company will find out whether this particular rocket could fly again. But SpaceX won't try to fly a landed Falcon 9 again until "sometime next year," according to Musk.

Monday's historic launch and landing was a big first step toward making rockets reusable. But it’s only a step, because this booster — which could be reused — won’t be.

Blue Origin shouldn't be compared to SpaceX Not all vertical launches are alike

For more from The Verge Video team, check out our Space playlist on YouTube, which includes NASA's astronaut application and What liquid water on Mars really means. Make sure to subscribe to The Verge's YouTube channel and check out our archives to see what made us fall in love with space exploration all over again.