Hey guys, longtime lurker making an account here to contribute to this discussion. I believe there are two things in particular that confuse many people about the Oberth effect: The Oberth effect, like many things in physics, can be understood and explained in multiple equivalent ways. The Oberth effect is often confounded with gravity assists, which also tend to exploit the Oberth effect. I am not going to say anything here that hasn't been said before by others in this thread, I am just trying to distill the facts to help those who still struggle understand this concept. The important thing to see is that the Oberth effect is just the astronautical term for something that, on the face of it, has nothing to do with orbital mechanics. For any particle with mass m and velocity v, the non-relativistic kinetic energy can be given as E = (1/2) m v^2. As the particle is accelerated, the kinetic energy increases at a rate of dE/dv = mv = p, which is the momentum of the particle. Accelerating your car from 100 km/h to 120 km/h takes 22% more energy than from 80 to 100. The same is true for rockets. From a kinematic point of view, this is everything you need to know to understand the Oberth effect. Note that this has nothing to do with orbital mechanics, gravitational drag or what have you. Another way to look at it is that energy is a force F applied along a distance s. For a fixed burn time t and force (thrust) F, the distance s along which the force is applied is longer if the craft moves faster, which increases the energy. This is the exact same physical effect, just explained differently. Hermann Oberth famously recognised that this simple kinematic fact had implications for rocket-propelled spaceships (sci-fi in his day), hence the name. A spacecraft in an elliptical orbit moves fastest at periapsis, which means that the same delta-v applied at periapsis results in a higher increase in kinetic energy than if the burn had been performed at any other point. Kinetic energy at one point in the orbit corresponds to potential energy, i.e. altitude, at the opposite side, hence why burning at periapsis increases your apoapsis. This is also true vice versa, i.e. burning at apoapsis increases your periapsis. However, the potential energy increase in the first case is higher - this, in a nutshell, is the Oberth effect. At a more "microscopic" level, the higher kinetic energy can be described by the rocket exhaust obtaining less of the total energy, leaving more to the rocket. But this isn't necessary to understand the Oberth effect. All you need to know is that rocket engines apply velocity-independent thrust to the spacecraft.