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List of flight altitude records
Highest journeys by aircraft ever made
Highest journeys by aircraft ever made
This listing of flight altitude records are the records set for the highest aeronautical flights conducted in the atmosphere and beyond, set since the age of ballooning.
Some, but not all of the records were certified by the non-profit international aviation organization, the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI). One reason for a lack of 'official' certification was that the flight occurred prior to the creation of the FAI.
For clarity, the "Fixed-wing aircraft" table is sorted by FAI-designated categories as determined by whether the record-creating aircraft left the ground by its own power (category "Altitude"), or whether it was first carried aloft by a carrier-aircraft prior to its record setting event (category "Altitude gain", or formally "Altitude Gain, Aeroplane Launched from a Carrier Aircraft"). Other sub-categories describe the airframe, and more importantly, the powerplant type (since rocket-powered aircraft can have greater altitude abilities than those with air-breathing engines).
An essential requirement for the creation of an "official" altitude record is the employment of FAI-certified observers present during the record-setting flight. Thus several records noted are unofficial due to the lack of such observers.
Balloons

- 1783-08-15: 24 m; Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier of France, the first ascent in a hot-air balloon.
- 1783-10-19: 81 m; Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier, in Paris.
- 1783-10-19: 105 m; Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier with André Giroud de Villette, in Paris.
- 1783-11-21: 1000 m; Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier with Marquis d'Arlandes, in Paris.
- 1783-12-01: 2.7 km; Jacques Alexandre Charles and his assistant Marie-Noël Robert, both of France, made the first flight in a hydrogen balloon to about 610 m. Charles then ascended alone to the record altitude.
- 1784-06-23: 4 km; Pilâtre de Rozier and the chemist Joseph Proust in a Montgolfier.
- 1803-07-18: 7.28 km; Étienne-Gaspard Robert and Auguste Lhoëst in a balloon.
- 1839: 7.9 km; Charles Green and Spencer Rush in a free balloon.
- 1862-09-05: about 29,500 ft; Henry Coxwell and James Glaisher in a balloon filled with coal gas. Glaisher lost consciousness during the ascent due to the low air pressure and cold temperature of -11 °C.
- 1901-07-31: 10.8 km; Arthur Berson and Reinhard Süring in the hydrogen balloon Preußen, in an open basket and with oxygen in steel cylinders. This flight contributed to the discovery of the stratosphere.
- 1927-11-04: 13.222 km; Captain Hawthorne C. Gray, of the U.S. Army Air Corps, in a helium balloon. Gray lost consciousness after his oxygen supply ran out and was killed in the crash.
- 1931-05-27: 15.781 km; Auguste Piccard and Paul Kipfer in a hydrogen balloon.
- 1932: 16.201 km -Auguste Piccard and Max Cosyns in a hydrogen balloon.
- 1933-09-30: 18.501 km; USSR balloon USSR-1.
- 1933-11-20: 18.592 km; Lt. Comdr. Thomas G. W. Settle (USN) and Maj Chester L. Fordney (USMC) in Century of Progress balloon
- 1934-01-30: 21.946 km; USSR balloon Osoaviakhim-1. The three crew were killed when the balloon broke up during the descent.
- 1935-11-10: 22.066 km; Captain O. A. Anderson and Captain A. W. Stevens (U.S. Army Air Corps) ascended in the Explorer II gondola from the Stratobowl, near Rapid City, South Dakota, for a flight that lasted 8 hours 13 minutes and covered 362 km.
- 1956-11-08: 23.165 km; Malcolm D. Ross and M. L. Lewis (U.S. Navy) in Office of Naval Research Strato-Lab I, using a pressurized gondola and plastic balloon launching near Rapid City, South Dakota, and landing 282 km away near Kennedy, Nebraska.
- 1957-06-02: 29.4997 km; Captain Joseph W. Kittinger (U.S. Air Force) ascended in the Project Manhigh 1 gondola to a record-breaking altitude.
- 1957-08-19: 31.212 km; above sea level, Major David Simons (U.S. Air Force) ascended from the Portsmouth Mine near Crosby, Minnesota, in the Manhigh 2 gondola for a 32-hour record-breaking flight. Simons landed at 5:32 p.m. on August 20 in northeastern South Dakota.
- 1960-08-16: 31.333 km; Testing a high-altitude parachute system, Joseph Kittinger of the U.S. Air Force parachuted from the Excelsior III balloon over New Mexico at 102800 ft. He set world records for: high-altitude jump; freefall diving by falling 16 mi before opening his parachute; and fastest speed achieved by a human without motorized assistance, 614 mph.
- 1961-05-04: 34.668 km; Commander Malcolm D. Ross and Lieutenant Commander Victor A. Prather, Jr., of the U.S. Navy ascended in the Strato-Lab V, in an unpressurized gondola. After descending, the gondola containing the two balloonists landed in the Gulf of Mexico. Prather slipped off the rescue helicopter's hook into the gulf and drowned.
- 1966-02-02: 37.6 km; Amateur parachutist Nicholas Piantanida of the United States with his "Project Strato-Jump" II balloon. Because he was unable to disconnect his oxygen line from the gondola's main feed, the ground crew had to remotely detach the balloon from the gondola. His planned free fall and parachute jump was abandoned, and he returned to the ground in the gondola. Nick was unable to accomplish his desired free fall record, however his spectacular flight set other records that held up for 46 years. Because of the design of his glove, he was unable to reattach his safety seat belt harness. He endured very high g-forces, but survived the descent. Piantanida's ascent is not recognized by the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale as a balloon altitude world record, because he did not return with his balloon, although that was not the feat he was trying to accomplish. On this second attempt of "Project Strato-Jump", Nick Piantanida took with him 250 postmarked air-mail envelopes and letters. At the time, these letters were the first covers to have ever been delivered by the U.S. Post Office via space. The habit of taking cover letters to space continued with the Apollo Program; in 1972 there was a scandal involving the Apollo 15 astronauts. It is unclear if any of the "Project Strato-Jump" covers survived, and were eventually mailed to the intended recipients.
- 2012-10-14: 38.969 km; Felix Baumgartner in the Red Bull Stratos balloon. The flight started near Roswell, New Mexico, and returned to earth via a record-setting parachute jump.
- 2014-10-24: 41.424 km; Alan Eustace, a senior vice president at the Google corporation, in a helium balloon, returning to earth via parachute jump during the StratEx mission executed by Paragon Space Development Corporation.
Hot-air balloons
| Year | Date | Altitude | Person | Aircraft | Notes | imperial | metric |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1783 | October 15 | 84 ft | Pilâtre de Rozier | Montgolfier | tethered balloon | ||
| 1988 | June 6 | 64996 ft | Per Lindstrand | Colt 600 | In Laredo, Texas. | ||
| 2004 | December 13 | 21699 ft | David Hempleman-Adams | Boland Rover A-2 | Fédération Aéronautique Internationale record for hot air balloon | ||
| 2005 | November 26 | 68986 ft | Vijaypat Singhania | Cameron Z-1600 | Vijaypat Singhania set the world altitude record for hot-air-balloon flight, reaching 21027 m. He launched from downtown Mumbai, India, and landed 240 km south in Panchale. |
Uncrewed gas balloon
During 1893 French scientist Jules Richard constructed sounding balloons. These uncrewed balloons, carrying light, but very precise instruments, approached an altitude of 15.24 km.
A Winzen balloon launched from Chico, California, in 1972 set the uncrewed altitude record of 51.8 km. Its volume was 47,800,000 ft3.
On September 20, 2013, JAXA launched an ultrathin film balloon called BS13-08 made of 2.8 μm thick polyethylene film with a volume of 80000 m3, which was 60 m in diameter. The balloon rose at a speed of 250 m/min and reached an altitude of 53.7 km, surpassing the previous world record set in 2002.
This was the greatest height a flying object reached without using rockets or a launch with a cannon.
Gliders
5th november 1966 polish pilot Stanisław Józefczak with passenger Jan Tarczoń on polish woodmade training glider SZD-9 Bocian climb to 12560m over Tatry mountain in Poland On February 17, 1986, the highest altitude obtained by a soaring aircraft was set at 49009 ft by Robert Harris using lee waves over California City, United States. The flight was accomplished using the Grob 102 Standard Astir III.
This was surpassed at 50720 ft set on August 30, 2006, by Steve Fossett (pilot) and Einar Enevoldson (co-pilot) in their high performance research glider Perlan 1, a modified Glaser-Dirks DG-500. This record was achieved over El Calafate (Patagonia, Argentina) and set as part of the Perlan Project.
This was raised at 52172 ft on September 3, 2017 by Jim Payne (pilot) and Morgan Sandercock (co-pilot) in the Perlan 2, a special built high altitude research glider. This record was again achieved over El Calafate and as part of the Perlan Project.
On September 2, 2018, within the Airbus Perlan Mission II, again from El Calafate, the Perlan II piloted by Jim Payne and Tim Gardner reached 76,124 ft, surpassing the 73,737 ft attained by Jerry Hoyt on April 17, 1989, in a Lockheed U-2: the highest subsonic flight.
Fixed-wing aircraft
| Year | Date | Altitude | Person | Aircraft | Propulsion | Notes | Imperial | Metric | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1890 | October 8 | 8 in | 0.2 m | Clément Ader | Éole | propeller | Uncontrolled hop | |||||||||
| 1903 | December 17 | 10 ft | 3 m | Wilbur Wright, Orville Wright | Wright Flyer | propeller | Photographed and witnessed controlled flight. | |||||||||
| 1906 | October 23 | 10 ft | Alberto Santos-Dumont | 14-bis | propeller | First public flight. | ||||||||||
| 1906 | November 12 | 13 ft | Alberto Santos-Dumont | 14-bis | propeller | |||||||||||
| 1908 | December 18 | 360 ft | Wilbur Wright | Biplane | propeller | at Auvers | ||||||||||
| 1909 | July 18 | 492 ft | Louis Paulhan | Farman | propeller | Concours d’Aviation, La Brayelle, Douai | ||||||||||
| 1909 | 3018 ft | Louis Paulhan | Farman | propeller | Lyon | |||||||||||
| 1910 | January 9 | 4164 ft | Louis Paulhan | Farman | propeller | Los Angeles Air Meet | ||||||||||
| 1910 | June 17 | 4603 ft | Walter Brookins | Wright biplane | propeller | |||||||||||
| 1910 | August 11 | 6621 ft | John Armstrong Drexel | Blériot monoplane | propeller | Lanark Aviation Meeting | ||||||||||
| 1910 | October 30 | 8471 ft | Ralph Johnstone | Wright biplane | propeller | International Aviation Tournament was at the Belmont Park race track in Elmont, New York | ||||||||||
| 1910 | December 26 | 11474 ft | Archibald Hoxsey | Wright Model B | propeller | Second International Aviation Meet held in 1910 at Dominguez Field, Los Angeles. Hoxsey died in a plane crash five days later while trying to set a new record. | ||||||||||
| 1912 | September 11 | 5610 m | Roland Garros | propeller | Saint-Brieuc (France) | |||||||||||
| 1915 | January 5 | 11950 ft | Joseph Eugene Carberry | Curtiss Model E | propeller | |||||||||||
| 1916 | November 9 | 26083 ft | Guido Guidi | Caudron G.4 | propeller | Torino Mirafiori airfield | ||||||||||
| 1919 | June 14 | 31230 ft | Jean Casale | Nieuport NiD.29 | propeller | url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304095823/http://www.fai.org/fai-record-file/?recordId=15455 | date=March 4, 2016 }}. | |||||||||
| 1920 | February 27 | 33113 ft | Major Rudolf Schroeder | LUSAC-11 | propeller | |||||||||||
| 1921 | September 18 | 34508 ft | Lt. John Arthur Macready | LUSAC-11 | propeller | |||||||||||
| 1923 | September 5 | 35240 ft | Joseph Sadi-Lecointe | Nieuport NiD.40R | propeller | url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304194439/http://www.fai.org/fai-record-file/?recordId=8246 | date=March 4, 2016 }}. | |||||||||
| 1923 | October 30 | 36565 ft | Joseph Sadi-Lecointe | Nieuport NiD.40R | propeller | url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160306144900/http://www.fai.org/fai-record-file/?recordId=8223 | date=March 6, 2016 }}. | |||||||||
| 1924 | October 21 | 12066 m | Jean Callizo | Gourdou-Leseurre 40 C.1 | propeller | Callizo later claimed several higher records, but these were stripped from him, as he had falsified barograph readings. | ||||||||||
| 1928 | December 7 | 20,269 ft | 6,178 m | Louise Thaden | Travel Air 3000 | propeller | Woman's altitude record | |||||||||
| 1930 | June 4 | 43168 ft | Lt. Apollo Soucek, USN | Wright Apache | propeller | |||||||||||
| 1932 | September 16 | 43976 ft | Cyril Uwins | Vickers Vespa | propeller | |||||||||||
| 1933 | September 28 | 44819 ft | Gustave Lemoine | Potez 506 | propeller | |||||||||||
| 1934 | April 11 | 47354 ft | Renato Donati | Caproni Ca.113 AQ | propeller | |||||||||||
| 1936 | August 14 | 48698 ft | Georges Détré | Potez 506 | propeller | highest with no pressure suit | ||||||||||
| 1936 | September 28 | 49967 ft | Squadron Leader Francis Ronald Swain | Bristol Type 138 | propeller | |||||||||||
| 1938 | June 30 | 53937 ft | M. J. Adam | Bristol Type 138 | propeller | |||||||||||
| 1938 | October 22 | 56850 ft | Lt. Colonel Mario Pezzi | Caproni Ca.161 | propeller | current crewed, propeller-driven, biplane record | ||||||||||
| 1948 | March 23 | 59430 ft | John Cunningham | de Havilland Vampire | turbojet | Modified Vampire F.1 with extended wingtips and a de Havilland Ghost jet engine. | ||||||||||
| 1949 | August 8 | 71902 ft | Brigadier General Frank Kendall Everest Jr. | Bell X-1 | air-launched rocket plane | Unofficial record. | ||||||||||
| 1951 | August 15 | 79494 ft | Bill Bridgeman | Douglas D-558-2 Skyrocket | air-launched rocket plane | Unofficial record. Powered by the XLR11 liquid fuel rocket engine (designated as XLR8-RM-5). | ||||||||||
| 1953 | May 4 | 63668 ft | Walter Gibb | English Electric Canberra B.2 | turbojet | propelled by two Rolls-Royce Olympus engines. | ||||||||||
| 1953 | August 21 | 83235 ft | Lt. Col. Marion Carl | Douglas D-558-2 Skyrocket | air-launched rocket plane | Unofficial record. Powered by the XLR11 liquid fuel rocket engine (designated as XLR8-RM-5). | ||||||||||
| 1954 | May 28 | 90440 ft | Arthur W. Murray | Bell X-1A | air-launched rocket plane | url=http://www.nasa.gov/centers/dryden/news/FactSheets/FS-082-DFRC.html | title=NASA Armstrong NASA Bell X-1 Fact Sheet: Second Generation X-1 | first=Yvonne | last=Gibbs | date=August 12, 2015 | url-status=live | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111109201433/http://www.nasa.gov/centers/dryden/news/FactSheets/FS-082-DFRC.html | archive-date=November 9, 2011}} | |||
| 1955 | August 29 | 65876 ft | Walter Gibb | English Electric Canberra B.2 | turbojet | Olympus powered. | ||||||||||
| 1956 | September 7 | 126283 ft | Iven Kincheloe | Bell X-2 | air-launched rocket plane | |||||||||||
| 1957 | August 28 | 70310 ft | Mike Randrup | English Electric Canberra WK163 | turbojet & rocket | With Napier "Double Scorpion" rocket motor | ||||||||||
| 1958 | April 18 | 76939 ft | Lt. Commander George C. Watkins, USN | Grumman F11F-1F Super Tiger | turbojet | |||||||||||
| 1958 | May 2 | 79452 ft | Roger Carpentier | SNCASO Trident II | turbojet & rocket | |||||||||||
| 1958 | May 7 | 91243 ft | Major Howard C. Johnson | Lockheed F-104 Starfighter | turbojet | This F-104 became the first aircraft to simultaneously hold the world speed, rate of climb and altitude records when on May 16, 1958, U.S. Air Force Capt. Walter W. Irwin set a world speed record of 1,404.19 mph | ||||||||||
| 1959 | September 4 | 94658 ft | Vladimir Ilyushin | Sukhoi Su-9 | turbojet | |||||||||||
| 1959 | December 6 | 98557 ft | Commander Lawrence E. Flint, Jr. | McDonnell Douglas F-4 Phantom II | turbojet | |||||||||||
| 1959 | December 14 | 103389 ft | Capt "Joe" B. Jordan | Lockheed F-104 Starfighter | turbojet | General Electric J79 | ||||||||||
| 1961 | March 30 | 169600 ft | Joseph Albert Walker | X-15 | air-launched rocket plane | url=https://history.nasa.gov/x15conf/log.html | title = X-15 First Flight: Appendix A}} | |||||||||
| 1961 | April 28 | 113891 ft | Georgy Mosolov | Ye-66A Mig-21 | turbojet & rocket | R-11 | ||||||||||
| 1962 | July 17 | 314,700 ft | Robert Michael White | X-15 | air-launched rocket plane | Not a C-1 FAI record | ||||||||||
| 1963 | July 19 | 347,400 ft | Joseph Albert Walker | X-15 | air-launched rocket plane | Not a C-1 FAI record. | ||||||||||
| 1963 | August 22 | 353,200 ft | Joseph Albert Walker | X-15 | air-launched rocket plane | Not a C-1 FAI record | ||||||||||
| 1963 | October 22 | 118860 ft | Major Robert W. Smith | Lockheed NF-104A | turbojet & rocket | Unofficial altitude record for an aircraft with self-powered takeoff. | ||||||||||
| 1963 | December 6 | 120800 ft | Major Robert W. Smith | Lockheed NF-104A | turbojet & rocket | Unofficial altitude record for an aircraft with self-powered takeoff. | ||||||||||
| 1973 | July 25 | 118898 ft | Aleksandr Fedotov | Mikoyan-Gurevich Ye-266 MiG-25 | turbojet | Under Federation Aeronautique Internationale (FAI) classification the Ye-155 type | ||||||||||
| 1976 | July 28 | 85069 ft | Captain Robert Helt | Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird | turbojet | Absolute record for altitude in horizontal flight. Pratt & Whitney J58; Absolute Record of FAI classes C, H and M Another SR-71 set absolute speed record on the same day. | ||||||||||
| 1977 | August 31 | 123520 ft | Aleksandr Fedotov | Mikoyan-Gurevich Ye-266M MiG-25 | turbojet | Under Federation Aeronautique Internationale (FAI) classification the Ye-155 type | ||||||||||
| 1995 | August 4 | 60897 ft | 2 pilots: Einar Enevoldson and other, and two scientists | Grob Strato 2C | propeller | crewed propeller monoplane record to date | ||||||||||
| 2001 | August 14 | 96863 ft | Uncrewed | NASA Helios HP01 | propeller | Set altitude records for propeller driven aircraft, solar-electric aircraft, and highest altitude in horizontal flight by a winged aircraft. | ||||||||||
| 2004 | October 4 | 367490 ft | Brian Binnie | SpaceShipOne | air-launched rocket plane | url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151018225245/http://www.fai.org/fai-record-file/?recordId=9881 | date=2015-10-18 }}" Mass Turnaround time Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI). Retrieved: November 28, 2015. |
Piston-driven propeller aeroplane
The highest altitude obtained by a piston-driven propeller UAV (without payload) is 67028 ft. It was obtained during 1988–1989 by the Boeing Condor UAV.
The highest altitude obtained in a piston-driven propeller biplane (without a payload) was 17.083 km on October 22, 1938, by Mario Pezzi at Montecelio, Italy in a Caproni Ca.161 driven by a Piaggio XI R.C. engine.
The highest altitude obtained in a piston-driven propeller monoplane (without a payload) was 18.552 km on August 4, 1995, by the Grob Strato 2C driven by two Teledyne Continental TSIO-550 engines.
Jet aircraft
The highest current world absolute general aviation altitude record for air breathing jet-propelled aircraft is 37.650 km set by Aleksandr Vasilyevich Fedotov in a Mikoyan-Gurevich E-266M (MiG-25M) on August 31, 1977.
Rocket plane
The record for highest altitude obtained by a crewed rocket-powered aircraft is the US Space Shuttle (STS) which regularly reached altitudes of more than 500 km on servicing missions to the Hubble Space Telescope.
The highest altitude obtained by a crewed aeroplane (launched from another aircraft) is 112.010 km by Brian Binnie in the Scaled Composites SpaceShipOne (powered by a Scaled Composite SD-010 engine with 18000 lbf of thrust) on October 4, 2004, at Mojave, California. The SpaceShipOne was launched at over 13.3 km.
The previous (unofficial) record was 107.960 km set by Joseph A. Walker in a North American X-15 in mission X-15 Flight 91 on August 22, 1963. Walker had reached 106 km – crossing the Kármán line the first time – with X-15 Flight 90 the previous month.
During the X-15 program, 8 pilots flew a combined 13 flights which met the Air Force spaceflight criterion by exceeding the altitude of 50 mi, qualifying these pilots as being astronauts; of those 13 flights, two (flown by the same civilian pilot) met the FAI definition of outer space: 100 km.
Mixed power
The official record for a mixed power aircraft was achieved on May 2, 1958, by Roger Carpentier when he reached 24.217 km over Istres, France in a Sud-Ouest Trident II mixed power (turbojet & rocket engine) aircraft.
The unofficial altitude record for mixed-power-aircraft with self-powered takeoff was 120,800 ft on December 6, 1963, by Major Robert W. Smith in a Lockheed NF-104A mixed power (turbojet and rocket engine) aircraft.
Electrically powered aircraft
The highest altitude obtained by an electrically powered aircraft is 96,863 ft on August 14, 2001, by the NASA Helios, and is the highest altitude in horizontal flight by a winged aircraft. This is also the altitude record for propeller driven aircraft, FAI class U (Experimental / New Technologies), and FAI class U-1.d (Remotely controlled UAV, weight 500 to).
Rotorcraft
On June 21, 1972, Jean Boulet of France piloted an Aérospatiale SA 315B Lama helicopter to an absolute altitude record of 40814 ft. At that extreme altitude, the engine flamed out and Boulet had to land the helicopter by breaking another record: the longest successful autorotation in history. The helicopter was stripped of all unnecessary equipment prior to the flight to minimize weight, and the pilot breathed supplemental oxygen.
Paper airplanes
The highest altitude obtained by a paper plane was previously held by the Paper Aircraft Released Into Space (PARIS) project, which was released at an altitude of 27.307 km, from a helium balloon that was launched approximately 160 km west of Madrid, Spain on October 28, 2010, and recorded by The Register's "special projects bureau". The project achieved a Guinness world record recognition. Haines, Lester. PARIS soars to Guinness World Record: Highest paper plane launch ever , February 17, 2012.
This record was broken on 24 June 2015 in Cambridgeshire, UK by the Space Club of Kesgrave High School, Suffolk, as part of their Stratos III project. The paper plane was launched from a balloon at 35.043 km.
Cannon rounds
The current world-record for highest cannon projectile flight is held by Project HARP’s 16 in space gun prototype, which fired a 180 kg Martlet 2 projectile to a record height of 180 km in Yuma, Arizona, on November 18, 1966. The projectile’s trajectory sent it beyond the Kármán line at 100 km, making it the first cannon-fired projectile to do so.
The Paris Gun (German: Paris-Geschütz) was a German long-range siege gun used to bombard Paris during World War I. It was in service from March–August 1918. Its 106 kg shells had a range of about 130 km with a maximum altitude of about 42.3 km.
Notes
References
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