The following is a timeline of important events in the history of private spaceflight, including important technical as well as legislative and political advances. Though the industry has its origins in the early 1960s, soon after the beginning of the Space Age, private companies did not begin conducting launches into space until the 1980s, and it was not until the 21st century that multiple companies began privately developing and operating launch vehicles and spacecraft in earnest.
10 July 1962 – Telstar 1, the first satellite to be used commercially, is launched on the first commercially sponsored space launch, aboard a Thor-Delta rocket.[2]
31 August 1962 – President John F. Kennedy signs the Communications Satellite Act of 1962 providing the regulatory framework for private companies in the United States to own and operate their own satellites.
6 April 1965 – IntelsatIntelsat 1 known as "Early Bird" was the first commercial communications satellite to be placed in geosynchronous orbit.
9 November 1972 – Canadian TelesatAnik A1 launched world's first domestic communications satellite in geostationary orbit operated by a commercial company.
13 April 1974 – Western UnionWestar 1 becomes America's first domestic and commercially launched geostationary communications satellite.
1975 – OTRAG, the first company to attempt private development and manufacture of space propulsion systems, is founded in Stuttgart, Germany, though its program is ultimately abandoned in the early 1980s.[3]
15 June 1988 – PanAmSatPAS-1 becomes the first privately owned international telecommunications satellite.
29 March 1989 – Starfire, a repurposed Black Brantsounding rocket launched by Space Services Inc., is the first rocket to launch with a commercial launch license from the Office of Commercial Space Transportation.[10]
5 April 1990 – Pegasus, an air launched rocket developed by Orbital Sciences Corporation becomes the first launch vehicle fully developed by a private company to reach space, as well as the first air launched rocket of any kind to reach orbit[11]
16 November 1992 – Space Flight Europe-America 500, an orbital mission consisting of a space capsule bearing gifts from Russia to the United States, is launched by the Russian company TsSKB-Progress aboard a Soyuz rocket, before landing six days later off the coast of Grays Harbor in the United States.[12]
November 1995 – The Office of Commercial Space Transportation is transferred to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), becoming the FAA Associate Administrator for Space Transportation, or FAA/AST.[10]
24 December 1997 – DigitalGlobe EarlyBird-1 becomes the first commercial Earth imaging satellite.
13 May 1998 – HGS-1, a communications satellite operated at the time by Hughes Global Services Inc., becomes the first commercial spacecraft to visit the Moon, after flying to within 6,200 km of the lunar surface on a free return trajectory to salvage it from an unusable orbit.[13][14]
4 April 2000 – Soyuz TM-30, a crewed mission to the space station Mir arranged by the company MirCorp in collaboration with the Russian Federal Space Agency, launches, becoming the first privately funded space station expedition.[15]
17 May 2004 – The Civilian Space eXploration Team (CSXT) becomes the first amateur organization to send a rocket into space, with the launch of their "GoFast" rocket to 116 km (72 miles) altitude.[17]
23 December 2004 – President George W. Bush signs the Commercial Space Launch Amendments Act of 2004, which provides a basic legal framework for commercial human spaceflight.[19] It also creates the so-called "learning period," a temporary restriction on the FAA's ability to regulate the private spaceflight industry, which has since been extended multiple times.[20]
28 September 2008 – SpaceX conducts the first successful launch of its Falcon 1 rocket, the first privately developed fully liquid fueled rocket to reach orbit.[22]
8 December 2010 – SpaceX successfully launches and recovers its Dragon capsule on its first mission, marking the first time a privately developed and operated spacecraft is recovered from orbit.[23]
3 December 2013 – SpaceX successfully launches SES-8 with its Falcon 9 rocket, marking the first time a privately developed rocket reached geostationary transfer orbit.
May–July 2014 – A private initiative known as the ISEE-3 Reboot Project successfully contacts and takes control of NASA's defunct ISEE-3 space probe with support from NASA and the Arecibo Observatory, making them the first private group to command a spacecraft in deep space, though their plans to change the probe's orbit are abandoned weeks later when its thrusters fail to respond properly.[24][25]
23 October 2014 – LuxSpace, an aerospace contractor based in Luxembourg, launches the Manfred Memorial Moon Mission (4M), the first commercial payload sent to fly by the Moon, attached to the third stage of the rocket that lifted Chinese lunar flyby spacecraft Chang'e 5-T1.[26]
11 February 2015 – SpaceX launches NOAA's DSCOVR spacecraft to the L1 Lagrange point on a Falcon 9, marking the first time a privately developed rocket flew a payload beyond geostationary transfer orbit.
23 November 2015 – Blue Origin successfully launches its New Shepard launch system into space and lands it vertically, making it the first VTVL rocket to land on Earth from space.[27]
22 January 2016 – Blue Origin successfully launches and lands the same New Shepard booster flown in November, making it the first VTVL rocket to reach space twice.[29]
30 March 2017 – SpaceX launches SES-10, during which they successfully launch and land the first stage of a Falcon 9 that had previously flown as part of their CRS-8 mission in April 2016, making it the first VTVL rocket to be used on two orbital flights.[30]
21 January 2018 – American aerospace company Rocket Lab successfully launched its Electron rocket from Mahia Launch Center on January 21, 2018 carrying three CubeSats into low Earth orbit. This was the first time that a rocket entered orbit after launching from a privately owned and operated spaceport.
30 May 2020 – SpaceX successfully launches a Falcon 9 rocket carrying the Crew Dragon space capsule during the Demo-2 mission, marking the first privately-developed crewed mission to orbit, the first to visit the ISS, and the first American crewed mission in general since STS-135 in 2011.
11 July 2021 – Virgin Galactic successfully launches Richard Branson on a SpaceShipTwo to space, marking the first privately-developed crewed mission to space carrying a founder of a space company. It however did not reach the Karman Line.
20 July 2021 – Blue Origin successfully launches Jeff Bezos on a New Shepard rocket to space above the Karman Line, marking the first privately-developed crewed mission to space with a company founder to get above the Karman Line. The mission also launched the first person born in the 21st century in space and first teenager in space (Oliver Daemen).[33]
2 September 2021 – Firefly Aerospace launches its Alpha FLTA001 rocket DREAM Test Flight carrying demonstration payloads.[34]
16 September 2021 – SpaceX operates the Inspiration4 mission, the first orbital spaceflight with only private citizens aboard.[35]
8 April 2022 – Axiom Mission 1 by Axiom Space is the first wholly commercially-operated crewed mission to the International Space Station.
1 October 2022 – Firefly Aerospace launches its Alpha FLTA002 rocket for the TO THE BLACK mission. The mission was the first successful orbital launch for the company.[36]
20 April 2023 – SpaceX launches Starship, the largest and most powerful rocket to date, with twice the thrust of the Saturn V. It however fails 4 minutes into flight.[37]
21 May 2023 – Axiom Mission 2 marks the first time a commercially operated crewed mission was used to fly government astronauts as well as being the first private mission with a female commander.
14 September 2023 – Firefly Aerospace conducts a successful orbital launch with the VICTUS NOX mission for the U.S. Space Force Space Systems Command. Firefly launched this mission 27 hours after receiving notice to launch, setting a new national security mission responsive-launch record.[38]
22 December 2023 – Firefly Aerospace launches the Fly the Lightning mission, carrying a Lockheed Martin payload, on its Alpha FLTA004 rocket.[39]
22 February 2024- IM-1 Odysseus marks the first successful private lunar landing and the first to do so with cryogenicpropellants.[40]
5 June 2024– ULA successfully launches an Atlas V rocket carrying the Boeing Starliner space capsule during the CFT mission, marking the Starliner operational to conduct crewed mission to orbit and visit the ISS.
21 June 2024 - Rocket Lab's Electron becomes the fastest privately developed orbital launch vehicle to 50 launches in history.[41]
November 2024 – Blue Origin plans to launch their maiden flight of their New Glenn rocket, the company's orbital launcher.
30 December 2024 – Planned launch of Rocket Lab's Venus Life Finder, an atmospheric probe anticipated to be the first private mission to another planet.
Mid 2020s – Polaris III is a planned mission that will involve the first ever crewed launch of SpaceX's Starship vehicle with a crew onboard, it is being funded by the Polaris Program, founded by Jared Isaacman.[43]
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Jaeger, Ralph-W.; Claudon, Jean-Louis (May 1986). Ariane — The first commercial space transportation system. Proceedings of the 15th International Symposium on Space Technology and Science. Vol. 2. Tokyo, Japan: AGNE Publishing, Inc. (published 1986). Bibcode:1986spte.conf.1431J. A87-32276 13–12.
^Davenport, Christian (15 September 2021). "SpaceX makes history by launching Inspiration4, first all-civilian crew, to orbit". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 16 September 2021. Retrieved 16 September 2021. The Inspiration4 mission may be the first time a spaceflight crew is comprised entirely of civilians – nongovernment astronauts. There has been a long history of ordinary citizens going to space. In fact, that was NASA's goal at the beginning of the space shuttle era – to fly regular people on a routine basis