SpaceX is going to the Moon this year!
An expended Falcon 9, left to drift in high orbit for half a decade, will hit somewhere on the far side on 4th March. While many things have been deliberately sent to the Moon, others (including the final boosters used to send the first things there) have been allowed to crash there, this may be the first thing that we tracked to just drift that way.
Of course, countless other abandoned high-orbit things probably got there first, but until we have a closer look at any suspiciously fresh craters for tell-tale wreckage, we won't know about them. And even when they do, it'll be probably not linkable to any given mission.
From the size and more immediate observational(/radar) history of the Falcon, we'll probably have a reasonable idea where to look (if a current lunar-surveyor doesn't catch it in more immediate action/aftermath), but bear in mind that there's still a lot of doubt about where some of the Apollo hardware (from a number of the various trans-lunar boosters to the six LEM ascent-stages that were not needed any more) actually fell. (Or at least that was the case when I last mapped everything left on the Moon for an uncompleted project of my own. Maybe some of the latest radar-mappers have spotted metallic signatures in likely spots.)