Abstract
In the coming years, a series of precision experiments with muons will push
the sensitivity to new physics up to 4 orders of magnitude beyond the direct
reach of the Large Hadron Collider, with the possibility to find evidence
for new physics in the near future. Starting with the Fermilab Muon g-2
experiment, which aims to resolve a 3.7 sigma discrepancy between theory and
previous measurements, I will move on to cover two experiments currently
under construction that will look for rare muon decays: Mu2e and Mu3e.