thumb|[[Apollo 7 heads into orbit with its crew of three, 1968]]

This is a list of all crewed spaceflights throughout history. Beginning in 1961 with the flight of Yuri Gagarin aboard Vostok 1, crewed spaceflight occurs when a human crew flies a spacecraft into outer space. Human spaceflight is distinguished from spaceflight generally, which entails both crewed and uncrewed spacecraft.

There are two definitions of spaceflight. The Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI), an international record-keeping body, defines the boundary between Earth's atmosphere and outer space at above sea level. This boundary is known as the Kármán line. The United States awards astronaut wings to qualified personnel who pilot a spaceflight above an altitude of .

As of the launch of Shenzhou-23 on 24 May 2026, there have been 414 human spaceflights.

  • Three of these were launched without crew but returned crew to Earth after damage to the crew's launch vehicle. These were Soyuz 34, Soyuz MS-23 and Shenzhou 22.
  • Two missions did not cross either the Kármán line or the U.S. definition of space and therefore do not qualify as spaceflights. These were the fatal STS-51-L (Challenger disaster), and the non-fatal aborted Soyuz mission T-10a.
  • Two non-fatal aborted missions crossed either the Kármán line or the U.S. definition of space. One was the Soyuz mission MS-10, which did not reach the Kármán line but did pass the 80 km (50 mi) line. The other was the Soyuz mission 18a, which crossed the Kármán line.
  • Four missions successfully achieved human spaceflight, yet ended as fatal failures as their crews died during the return. These were Soyuz 1, X-15 flight 191, Soyuz 11, and STS-107 (Columbia disaster).
  • Twenty four flights in total reached an apogee beyond , but failed to go beyond , so therefore do not qualify as spaceflights under the FAI definition.

Summary

Since 1961, three countries (China, Russia, and the United States) and one former country (Soviet Union) have conducted human spaceflight using seventeen different spacecraft series, or: "programs", "projects".

<!-- WITH THE FLIGHT OF NEW SOYUZ MISSIONS, THIS TABLE SHOULD BE UPDATED IN FOUR SPOTS ACCORDINGLY: TOTAL SOYUZ FLIGHTS, TOTAL SOVIET/RUSSIAN FLIGHTS, TOTAL 2021–2030 DECADE FLIGHTS, AND GRAND TOTAL FLIGHTS. FOUR HIDDEN MARKERS ARE INSERTED BELOW FOR EASE OF IDENTIFICATION. -->

<!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW New Shepard flights -->

<!-- WITH THE FLIGHT OF PLANNED SPACEX DRAGON MISSIONS, THIS TABLE SHOULD BE UPDATED IN FOUR SPOTS ACCORDINGLY: TOTAL DRAGON FLIGHTS, TOTAL SPACEX FLIGHTS, TOTAL 2021–2030 DECADE FLIGHTS, AND GRAND TOTAL FLIGHTS. FOUR HIDDEN MARKERS ARE INSERTED BELOW FOR EASE OF IDENTIFICATION. -->

<!-- WITH THE FLIGHT OF PLANNED SPACESHIPTWO FLIGHTS, THIS TABLE SHOULD BE UPDATED IN FOUR SPOTS ACCORDINGLY: TOTAL SPACESHIPTWO FLIGHTS, TOTAL VIRGIN GALACTIC FLIGHTS, TOTAL 2021–2030 DECADE FLIGHTS, AND GRAND TOTAL FLIGHTS. FOUR HIDDEN MARKERS ARE INSERTED BELOW FOR EASE OF IDENTIFICATION. -->

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;" style="font-size:1.00em; line-height:1.5em;"

! style="text-align:right;"| Entity !! colspan="3"| (1961–1991) /<br /> (1992–present) !! colspan="11" | !! colspan="3"| !! rowspan="3" colspan="2"| Subtotals <br /> by decade

|-

! style="text-align:right;"| Agency !! colspan="3"| Soviet space program <br /> 30px Roscosmos !! colspan="3"| 30px NASA !! colspan="4"| Private space corporations operating sub-orbital flights out of the United States

! colspan="4" | Private space corporations operating orbital flights out of the United States

! colspan="3"| CMSA

|-

! style="vertical-align:bottom;"| Decades !! Program !! Dates!! No.!! Program!! Dates !! No.!!Company !! Program !! Dates !! No.!! Company !! Program !! Dates !! No. !! Program !! Dates !! No.

|-

| rowspan="4"| 1961–1970

| style="background: LightPink;"| Vostok

| style="background: LightPink;"| 1961–1963

| style="background: LightPink;"| 6

| style="background: LightCyan;"| Mercury

| style="background: LightCyan;"| 1961–1963

| style="background: LightCyan;"| 6

| colspan="4" rowspan="9" style="background: LightCyan;"|

| colspan="4" rowspan="10" style="background: LightCyan;"|

| colspan="3" rowspan="9" style="background: LightPink;"|

| colspan="2" rowspan="4" | 52

|-

| style="background: LightPink;"| Voskhod

| style="background: LightPink;"| 1964–1965

| style="background: LightPink;"| 2

| style="background: LightCyan;"| X-15

| style="background: LightCyan;"| 1962–1968

| style="background: LightCyan;"| 13

|-

| rowspan="6" style="background: LightPink;"| Soyuz

| rowspan="6" style="background: LightPink;"| 1967–1991

| rowspan="6" style="background: LightPink;"| 66

| style="background: LightCyan;"| Gemini

| style="background: LightCyan;"| 1965–1966

| style="background: LightCyan;"| 10

|-

| rowspan="2" style="background: LightCyan;"| Apollo

| rowspan="2" style="background: LightCyan;"| 1968–1972

| rowspan="2" style="background: LightCyan;"| 11

|-

| rowspan="3"| 1971–1980

| rowspan="3" colspan="2"| 39

|-

| style="background: LightCyan;"| Skylab

| style="background: LightCyan;"| 1973–1974

| style="background: LightCyan;"| 3

|-

| style="background: LightCyan;"| Apollo–Soyuz

| style="background: LightCyan;"| 1975

| style="background: LightCyan;"| 1

|-

| 1981–1990

| rowspan="4" style="background: LightCyan;"| Space <br /> Shuttle

| rowspan="4" style="background: LightCyan;"| 1981–2011

| rowspan="4" style="background: LightCyan;"| 135

| colspan="2"| 63

|-

| 1991–2000

| rowspan="4" style="background: LightPink;" | Soyuz

| rowspan="4" style="background: LightPink;" | 1992–present

| rowspan="4" style="background: LightPink;" | 90<!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW SOYUZ FLIGHTS (1 OF 4) -->

| colspan="2"| 83

|-

| 2001–2010

| style="background: LightCyan;"| Scaled Composites

| style="background: LightCyan;"| SpaceShipOne

| style="background: LightCyan;"| 2004

| style="background: LightCyan;"| 3

| rowspan="3" style="background: LightPink;" | Shenzhou

| rowspan="3" style="background: LightPink;" | 2003–present

| rowspan="3" style="background: LightPink;" | 18<!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW SHENZHOU FLIGHTS (1 OF 4) -->

| colspan="2"| 61

|-

| 2011–2020

| rowspan="1" style="background: LightCyan;" | Virgin Galactic

| rowspan="1" style="background: LightCyan;" | SpaceShipTwo

| rowspan="1" style="background: LightCyan;" | 2018–2024

| rowspan="1" style="background: LightCyan;" | 11<!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW SPACESHIPTWO FLIGHTS (1 OF 4) -->

| rowspan="1" style="background: LightCyan;" | SpaceX

| rowspan="1" style="background: LightCyan;" | Crew Dragon (Commercial Crew)

| rowspan="1" style="background: LightCyan;" | 2020–present

| rowspan="1" style="background: LightCyan;" | 20<!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW DRAGON FLIGHTS (1 OF 4) -->

| colspan="2"| 47

|-

| rowspan="1" | 2021–2030

| rowspan="1" style="background: LightCyan;"| Artemis

| rowspan="1" style="background: LightCyan;"| 2026–present

| rowspan="1" style="background: LightCyan;"| 1<!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW Artemis flights (1 OF 4)-->

| rowspan="1" style="background: LightCyan;"| Blue Origin

| rowspan="1" style="background: LightCyan;"| New Shepard

| rowspan="1" style="background: LightCyan;"| 2021–present

| rowspan="1" style="background: LightCyan;"| 17<!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW New Shepard flights (1 OF 4)-->

| rowspan="1" style="background: LightCyan;"| Boeing

| rowspan="1" style="background: LightCyan;"| Boeing Starliner (Commercial Crew)

| rowspan="1" style="background: LightCyan;"| 2024–present

| rowspan="1" style="background: LightCyan;"| 1<!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW Boeing Starliner flights (1 OF 4)-->

| colspan="2" rowspan="1" | 69<!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW SOYUZ FLIGHTS (2 OF 4) --><!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW DRAGON FLIGHTS (2 OF 4) --><!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW SPACESHIPTWO FLIGHTS (2 OF 4) --><!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW New Shepard flights (2 OF 4)--><!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW SHENZHOU FLIGHTS (2 OF 4) --><!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW Boeing Starliner flights (2 OF 4)--><!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW Artemis flights (2 OF 4)-->

|-

| Subtotals <br /> by entity

| colspan="2" style="background: LightPink;"|

| style="background: LightPink;"| 164<!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW SOYUZ FLIGHTS (3 OF 4)-->

| colspan="2" style="background: LightCyan;"|

| style="background: LightCyan;"| 180<!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW Artemis flights (3 OF 4)-->

| colspan="3" style="background: LightCyan;"|

| style="background: LightCyan;"| 31<!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW SPACESHIPTWO FLIGHTS (3 OF 4) --><!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW New Shepard flights (3 OF 4)-->

| colspan="3" style="background: LightCyan;"|

| style="background: LightCyan;"| 21<!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW DRAGON FLIGHTS (3 OF 4) --><!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW Boeing Starliner flights (3 OF 4)-->

| colspan="2" style="background: LightPink;"|

| style="background: LightPink;"| 18<!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW SHENZHOU FLIGHTS (3 OF 4) -->

| Total

| 414<!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW SOYUZ FLIGHTS (4 OF 4) --><!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW New Shepard flights (4 OF 4)--><!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW DRAGON FLIGHTS (4 OF 4) --><!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW BOEING STARLINER FLIGHTS (4 OF 4) --><!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW SPACESHIPTWO FLIGHTS (4 OF 4) --><!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW SHENZHOU FLIGHTS (4 OF 4) --><!-- UPDATE HERE IN EVENT OF NEW Artemis flights (4 OF 4)-->

|}

Human spaceflights

The Salyut series, Skylab, Mir, ISS, and Tiangong series space stations, with which many of these flights docked in orbit, are not listed separately here. See the detailed lists (links below) for information.

  • Missions which were intended to reach space but which failed to do so are listed in bold.
  • Missions with a maximum altitude between 50 miles (80.45 km) and 100 kilometers (62 mi), which satisfy the US Military definition of space (50&nbsp;mi), but not the internationally recognized FAI and NASA definition of the Kármán Line (100&nbsp;km), are listed in italics.
  • Fatal missions are marked with a dagger (†) symbol.

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:1.00em; line-height:1.5em;"

|

1961–1970

|-

|Vostok 1 — Mercury-Redstone 3 — Mercury-Redstone 4 — Vostok 2

|-

|Mercury-Atlas 6 — Mercury-Atlas 7 — X-15 Flight 62 — Vostok 3 — Vostok 4 — Mercury-Atlas 8

|-

|X-15 Flight 77 — Mercury-Atlas 9 — Vostok 5 — Vostok 6 — X-15 Flight 87 — X-15 Flight 90 — X-15 Flight 91

|-

|Voskhod 1

|-

|Voskhod 2 — Gemini 3 — Gemini 4 — X-15 Flight 138 — X-15 Flight 143 — Gemini 5 — X-15 Flight 150 — X-15 Flight 153 — Gemini 7 — Gemini 6A

|-

|Gemini 8 — Gemini 9A — Gemini 10 — Gemini 11 — X-15 Flight 174 — Gemini 12

|-

|Soyuz 1† — X-15 Flight 190 — X-15 Flight 191†

|-

|X-15 Flight 197 — Apollo 7 — Soyuz 3 — Apollo 8

|- valign="top"

| Soyuz 4 — Soyuz 5 — Apollo 9 — Apollo 10 — Apollo 11 — Soyuz 6 — Soyuz 7 — Soyuz 8 — Apollo 12

|-

|Apollo 13 — Soyuz 9

|-

|

1971–1980

|-

|Apollo 14 — Soyuz 10 — Soyuz 11† — Apollo 15

|-

|Apollo 16 — Apollo 17

|-

|Skylab 2 — Skylab 3 — Soyuz 12 — Skylab 4 — Soyuz 13

|-

|Soyuz 14 — Soyuz 15 — Soyuz 16

|-

|Soyuz 17 — Soyuz 18a — Soyuz 18 — Soyuz 19 — Apollo-Soyuz

|-

|Soyuz 21 — Soyuz 22 — Soyuz 23

|-

|Soyuz 24 — Soyuz 25 — Soyuz 26

|-

|Soyuz 27 — Soyuz 28 — Soyuz 29 — Soyuz 30 — Soyuz 31

|-

|Soyuz 32 — Soyuz 33

|-

|Soyuz 35 — Soyuz 36 — Soyuz T-2 — Soyuz 37 — Soyuz 38 — Soyuz T-3

|-

|

1981–1990

|-

|Soyuz T-4 — Soyuz 39 — STS-1 — Soyuz 40 — STS-2

|-

|STS-3 — Soyuz T-5 — Soyuz T-6 — STS-4 — Soyuz T-7 — STS-5

|-

|STS-6 — Soyuz T-8 — STS-7 — Soyuz T-9 — STS-8 — Soyuz T-10a — STS-9

|-

|STS-41-B — Soyuz T-10 — Soyuz T-11 — STS-41-C — Soyuz T-12 — STS-41-D — STS-41-G — STS-51-A

|-

|STS-51-C — STS-51-D — STS-51-B — Soyuz T-13 — STS-51-G — STS-51-F — STS-51-I — Soyuz T-14 — STS-51-J — STS-61-A — STS-61-B

|-

|STS-61-C — STS-51-L† — Soyuz T-15

|-

|Soyuz TM-2 — Soyuz TM-3 — Soyuz TM-4

|-

|Soyuz TM-5 — Soyuz TM-6 — STS-26 — Soyuz TM-7 — STS-27

|-

|STS-29 — STS-30 — STS-28 — Soyuz TM-8 — STS-34 — STS-33

|-

|STS-32 — Soyuz TM-9 — STS-36 — STS-31 — Soyuz TM-10 — STS-41 — STS-38 — STS-35 — Soyuz TM-11

|-

|

1991–2000

|-

|STS-37 — STS-39 — Soyuz TM-12 — STS-40 — STS-43 — STS-48 — Soyuz TM-13 — STS-44

|-

|STS-42 — Soyuz TM-14 — STS-45 — STS-49 — STS-50 — Soyuz TM-15 — STS-46 — STS-47 — STS-52 — STS-53

|-

|STS-54 — Soyuz TM-16 — STS-56 — STS-55 — STS-57 — Soyuz TM-17 — STS-51 — STS-58 — STS-61

|-

|Soyuz TM-18 — STS-60 — STS-62 — STS-59 — Soyuz TM-19 — STS-65 — STS-64 — STS-68 — Soyuz TM-20 — STS-66

|-

|STS-63 — STS-67 — Soyuz TM-21 — STS-71 — STS-70 — Soyuz TM-22 — STS-69 — STS-73 — STS-74

|-

|STS-72 — Soyuz TM-23 — STS-75 — STS-76 — STS-77 — STS-78 — Soyuz TM-24 — STS-79 — STS-80

|-

|STS-81 — Soyuz TM-25 — STS-82 — STS-83 — STS-84 — STS-94 — Soyuz TM-26 — STS-85 — STS-86 — STS-87

|-

|STS-89 — Soyuz TM-27 — STS-90 — STS-91 — Soyuz TM-28 — STS-95 — STS-88

|-

|Soyuz TM-29 — STS-96 — STS-93 — STS-103

|-

|STS-99 — Soyuz TM-30 — STS-101 — STS-106 — STS-92 — Soyuz TM-31 — STS-97

|-

|

2001–2010

|-

|STS-98 — STS-102 — STS-100 — Soyuz TM-32 — STS-104 — STS-105 — Soyuz TM-33 — STS-108

|-

|STS-109 — STS-110 — Soyuz TM-34 — STS-111 — STS-112 — Soyuz TMA-1 — STS-113

|-

|STS-107† — Soyuz TMA-2 — Shenzhou 5 — Soyuz TMA-3

|-

|Soyuz TMA-4 — SpaceShipOne Flight 15P — SpaceShipOne Flight 16P — SpaceShipOne Flight 17P — Soyuz TMA-5

|-

|Soyuz TMA-6 — STS-114 — Soyuz TMA-7 — Shenzhou 6

|-

|Soyuz TMA-8 — STS-121 — STS-115 — Soyuz TMA-9 — STS-116

|-

|Soyuz TMA-10 — STS-117 — STS-118 — Soyuz TMA-11 — STS-120

|-

|STS-122 — STS-123 — Soyuz TMA-12 — STS-124 — Shenzhou 7 — Soyuz TMA-13 — STS-126

|-

|STS-119 — Soyuz TMA-14 — STS-125 — Soyuz TMA-15 — STS-127 — STS-128 — Soyuz TMA-16 — STS-129 — Soyuz TMA-17

|-

|STS-130 — Soyuz TMA-18 — STS-131 — STS-132 — Soyuz TMA-19 — Soyuz TMA-01M — Soyuz TMA-20

|-

|

2011–2020

|-

|STS-133 — Soyuz TMA-21 — STS-134 — Soyuz TMA-02M — STS-135 — Soyuz TMA-22 — Soyuz TMA-03M

|-

|Soyuz TMA-04M — Shenzhou 9 — Soyuz TMA-05M — Soyuz TMA-06M — Soyuz TMA-07M

|-

|Soyuz TMA-08M — Soyuz TMA-09M — Shenzhou 10 — Soyuz TMA-10M — Soyuz TMA-11M

|-

|Soyuz TMA-12M — Soyuz TMA-13M — Soyuz TMA-14M — Soyuz TMA-15M

|-

|Soyuz TMA-16M — Soyuz TMA-17M — Soyuz TMA-18M — Soyuz TMA-19M

|-

|Soyuz TMA-20M — Soyuz MS-01 — Shenzhou 11 — Soyuz MS-02 — Soyuz MS-03

|-

|Soyuz MS-04 — Soyuz MS-05 — Soyuz MS-06 — Soyuz MS-07

|-

|Soyuz MS-08 — Soyuz MS-09 — Soyuz MS-10 — Soyuz MS-11 — VSS Unity VP-03

|-

|VSS Unity VF-01 — Soyuz MS-12 — Soyuz MS-13 — Soyuz MS-15

|-

|Soyuz MS-16 — Crew Dragon Demo-2 — Soyuz MS-17 — SpaceX Crew-1

|-

|

2021–present

|-

|Soyuz MS-18 — SpaceX Crew-2 — Virgin Galactic Unity-21 — Shenzhou-12 — Virgin Galactic Unity-22 — Blue Origin NS-16 — SpaceX Inspiration4 — Soyuz MS-19 — Blue Origin NS-18 — Shenzhou-13 — SpaceX Crew-3 — Soyuz MS-20 — Blue Origin NS-19

|-

|Soyuz MS-21 — Blue Origin NS-20 — Axiom Mission 1 — SpaceX Crew-4 — Blue Origin NS-21 — Shenzhou-14 — Blue Origin NS-22 — Soyuz MS-22 — SpaceX Crew-5 — Shenzhou-15

|-

|SpaceX Crew-6 — Axiom Mission 2 — Virgin Galactic Unity 25 — Shenzhou-16 — Galactic 01 — Galactic 02 — SpaceX Crew-7 — Galactic 03 — Soyuz MS-24 — Galactic 04 — Shenzhou-17 — Galactic 05

|-

|Axiom Mission 3 — Galactic 06 — SpaceX Crew-8 — Soyuz MS-25 — Shenzhou-18 — Blue Origin NS-25 — Boeing CFT — Galactic 07 — Blue Origin NS-26 — Polaris Dawn — Soyuz MS-26 — SpaceX Crew-9 — Shenzhou-19 — Blue Origin NS-28

|-

|Blue Origin NS-30 — SpaceX Crew-10 — Fram2 — Soyuz MS-27 — Blue Origin NS-31 — Shenzhou-20 — Blue Origin NS-32 — Axiom Mission 4 — Blue Origin NS-33 — SpaceX Crew-11 — Blue Origin NS-34 — Blue Origin NS-36 — Shenzhou-21 — Soyuz MS-28 — Blue Origin NS-37

|-

|Blue Origin NS-38 — SpaceX Crew-12 — Artemis II — Shenzhou-23

|}

Timeline

List by decades

{| Class="wikitable"

! Decade

! Total flights

! Major milestones

! First by nationality

|-

|

1960s

|41

|

Yuri Gagarin, first human in space. <br> Valentina Tereshkova, first woman in space. <br> Alexei Leonov, first EVA. <br> Neil Armstrong, first human on the Moon.

|

Yuri Gagarin <br> Alan Shepard

|-

|

1970s

|38

|

Alfred Worden, first deep space EVA.

|

Vladimír Remek <br> Mirosław Hermaszewski <br> Sigmund Jähn <br/> Georgi Ivanov <br> Bertalan Farkas <br> Phạm Tuân <br/> Arnaldo Tamayo Méndez

|-

|

1980s

|61

|

Bruce McCandless II, first untethered spacewalk.

|

Jügderdemidiin Gürragchaa <br> Dumitru Prunariu <br> Jean-Loup Chrétien <br> Ulf Merbold <br> Rakesh Sharma <br> Marc Garneau <br> Sultan Salman Al Saud <br> Wubbo J. Ockels <br> Mohammed Faris <br> Abdul Ahad Mohmand <br> Rodolfo Neri Vela <br> Toyohiro Akiyama

|-

|

1990s

|83

|

Yuri Gidzenko, Sergei Krikalev and William M. Shepherd, first crew on ISS.

|

Helen Sharman <br> Franz Viehböck<br> Dirk Frimout <br> Aleksandr Viktorenko and Aleksandr Kaleri <br> Claude Nicollier <br> Franco Malerba <br> Leonid Kadeniuk <br> Pedro Duque <br> Ivan Bella

|-

|2000s

|61

|

Dennis Tito, first paying space tourist.<br>SpaceShipOne flight 16P, first private suborbital flight

|

Mark Shuttleworth <br> Ilan Ramon <br> Yang Liwei <br> Christer Fuglesang <br> Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor <br> Yi So-yeon

|-

|

2010s

|44

| —

|

Andreas Mogensen <br> Aidyn Aimbetov <br> Hazza Al Mansouri

|-

|

2020-present

|51

| Inspiration4, first fully private orbital flight<br>Axiom Mission 1, first fully private ISS orbital flight<br>Polaris Dawn, first fully private orbital spacewalk<br>Fram2, first polar retrograde orbital flight<br> Michaela Benthaus, First wheelchair user in space<br>Victor Glover, First person of colour beyond Low Earth Orbit<br>Christina Koch, First woman beyond Low Earth Orbit<br>Jeremy Hansen, First non-American beyond Low Earth Orbit

| Mário Ferreira<br> Sara Sabry<br> Keisha Schahaff and Anastatia Mayers<br> Namira Salim <br> Alper Gezeravcı <br> Marina Vasilevskaya<br> / Chun Wang <br>

Chris Boshuizen<br>/ Jannicke Mikkelsen<br> Aisha Bowe<br> Jaime Alemán<br> Mark Rocket<br> Owolabi Salis

|}

See also

  • List of human spaceflight programs
  • Human presence in space
  • List of Asian astronauts

Notes

  • Spacefacts Compare with the present article. The Spacefacts list includes most flights listed here, but omits twelve: The three failed launches of STS-51-L, Soyuz T-10a and Soyuz MS-10, none of which achieved human spaceflight, the uncrewed launch of Soyuz 34 (which nevertheless returned a crew to Earth), and the eight sub-orbital human spaceflights: Mercury-Redstone 3 and 4, X-15 flights 90 and 91, SpaceShipOne flights 15P, 16P and 17P, and Soyuz 18a.
  • Astronautix Similarly, see the list for "Manned Spaceflight" given at Astronautix, which includes other related categories.

References

  • Vostok and Voskhod flight history
  • Mercury flight history
  • X-15 flight history (altitudes given in feet)
  • Gemini flight history
  • Apollo flight history (student resource)
  • Skylab flight history
  • Apollo-Soyuz flight history
  • Space Shuttle flight history infographic
  • Shenzhou flight history timeline
  • SpaceShipOne flight history