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Timeline of space travel by nationality

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Timeline of space travel by nationality

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Map of countries (and successor states) that have sent humans into space as of June 2025. In dark blue are countries with own human spacecrafts.

Since the first human spaceflight by the Soviet Union, citizens of 55 countries have flown in space. For each nationality, the launch date of the first mission is listed. The list is based on the nationality of the person at the time of the launch. Only 8 of 55 countries have been represented by female "first flyers" (Helen Sharman for the United Kingdom in 1991, Anousheh Ansari for Iran in 2006, Yi So-yeon for South Korea in 2008, Sara Sabry for Egypt in 2022, and Keisha Schahaff and Anastatia Mayers for Antigua and Barbuda in 2023, Namira Salim for Pakistan in 2023, Marina Vasilevskaya for Belarus in 2024, Aisha Bowe for The Bahamas in 2025). Only three nations (Soviet Union/Russia, U.S., China) have launched their own crewed spacecraft, with the Soviets/Russians and the American programs providing rides to other nations' astronauts. Twenty-eight "first flights" occurred on Soviet or Russian flights while the United States carried twenty-six.

Timeline

Note: All dates given are UTC. Countries indicated in bold have achieved independent human spaceflight capability.

No.CountryNameFlightDate (UTC)
1960s
1Soviet UnionYuri GagarinSoviet Union Vostok 112 April 1961
2United StatesAlan ShepardUnited States MR-35 May 1961
1970s
3Czechoslovak Socialist RepublicVladimír RemekSoviet Union Soyuz 282 March 1978
4Polish People's RepublicMirosław HermaszewskiSoviet Union Soyuz 3027 June 1978
5East GermanySigmund JähnSoviet Union Soyuz 3126 August 1978
6People's Republic of BulgariaGeorgi IvanovSoviet Union Soyuz 3310 April 1979
1980s
7Hungarian People's RepublicBertalan FarkasSoviet Union Soyuz 3626 May 1980
8VietnamPhạm TuânSoviet Union Soyuz 3723 July 1980
9CubaArnaldo Tamayo MéndezSoviet Union Soyuz 3818 September 1980
10Mongolian People's RepublicJügderdemidiin GürragchaaSoviet Union Soyuz 3922 March 1981
11Socialist Republic of RomaniaDumitru PrunariuSoviet Union Soyuz 4014 May 1981
12FranceJean-Loup ChrétienSoviet Union Soyuz T-624 June 1982
13West GermanyUlf MerboldUnited States STS-928 November 1983
14IndiaRakesh SharmaSoviet Union Soyuz T-113 April 1984
15CanadaMarc GarneauUnited States STS-41-G5 October 1984
16Saudi ArabiaSultan al-SaudUnited States STS-51-G17 June 1985
17NetherlandsWubbo OckelsUnited States STS-61-A30 October 1985
18MexicoRodolfo Neri VelaUnited States STS-61-B26 November 1985
19Ba'athist SyriaMuhammed FarisSoviet Union Soyuz TM-322 July 1987
20Democratic Republic of AfghanistanAbdul Ahad MomandSoviet Union Soyuz TM-629 August 1988
1990s
21JapanToyohiro AkiyamaSoviet Union Soyuz TM-112 December 1990
22United KingdomHelen SharmanSoviet Union Soyuz TM-1218 May 1991
23AustriaFranz ViehböckSoviet Union Soyuz TM-132 October 1991
24RussiaAleksandr Kaleri
Aleksandr ViktorenkoRussia Soyuz TM-1417 March 1992
25BelgiumDirk FrimoutUnited States STS-4524 March 1992
26ItalyFranco MalerbaUnited States STS-4631 July 1992
SwitzerlandClaude Nicollier
28UkraineLeonid KadenyukUnited States STS-8719 November 1997
29SpainPedro DuqueUnited States STS-9529 October 1998
30SlovakiaIvan BellaRussia Soyuz TM-2920 February 1999
2000s
31South AfricaMark ShuttleworthRussia Soyuz TM-3425 April 2002
32IsraelIlan RamonUnited States STS-10716 January 2003
33ChinaYang LiweiChina Shenzhou 515 October 2003
34BrazilMarcos PontesRussia Soyuz TMA-830 March 2006
35IranAnousheh AnsariRussia Soyuz TMA-918 September 2006
36SwedenChrister FuglesangUnited States STS-11610 December 2006
37MalaysiaSheikh Muszaphar ShukorRussia Soyuz TMA-1110 October 2007
38South KoreaYi So-yeonRussia Soyuz TMA-128 April 2008
2010s
39DenmarkAndreas MogensenRussia Soyuz TMA-18M2 September 2015
KazakhstanAidyn Aimbetov
41United Arab EmiratesHazza Al MansouriRussia Soyuz MS-1525 September 2019
2020s
42AustraliaChris BoshuizenUSA Blue Origin NS-1813 October 2021
43PortugalMário FerreiraUSA Blue Origin NS-224 August 2022
EgyptSara Sabry
45Antigua and BarbudaKeisha Schahaff
Anastatia MayersUSA Galactic 0210 August 2023
46PakistanNamira SalimUSA Galactic 046 October 2023
47TR TurkeyAlper GezeravcıUSA Axiom Mission 318 January 2024
Norway NorwayMarcus Wandt
49Belarus BelarusMarina VasilevskayaRussia Soyuz MS-2523 March 2024
50MaltaChun WangUS Fram21 April 2025
Saint Kitts and Nevis
52The BahamasAisha BoweUSA Blue Origin NS-3114 April 2025
53PanamaJaime AlemánUSA Blue Origin NS-3231 May 2025
New ZealandMark Rocket
55NigeriaOwolabi SalisUSA Blue Origin NS-3329 June 2025

Notes

Other claims

The above list uses the nationality at the time of launch. Lists with differing criteria might include the following people:

  • Pavel Popovich, first launched 12 August 1962, was the first Ukrainian-born man in space. At the time, Ukraine was a part of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
  • Michael Collins, first launched 18 July 1966 was born in Italy to American parents and was an American citizen when he went into space.
  • William Anders, American citizen, first launched 21 December 1968, was the first Hong Kong-born man in space.
  • Vladimir Shatalov, first launched 14 January 1969, was the first Kazakh-born man in space. At the time, Kazakhstan was a part of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
  • Bill Pogue, first launched 16 November 1973, as an inductee to the 5 Civilized Tribes Hall of Fame can lay claim to being the first Native American in space. See John Herrington below regarding technicality of tribal registration.
  • Pyotr Klimuk, first launched 18 December 1973, was the first Belarusian-born man in space. At the time, Belarus was a part of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
  • Vladimir Dzhanibekov, first launched 16 March 1978, was the first Uzbek-born man in space. At the time, Uzbekistan was a part of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
  • Paul D. Scully-Power, first launched 5 October 1984, was born in Australia, but was an American citizen when he went into space; Australian law at the time forbade dual-citizenship.
  • Taylor Gun-Jin Wang, first launched 29 April 1985, was born in China to Chinese parents, but was an American citizen when he went into space.
  • Lodewijk van den Berg, launched 29 April 1985, was born in the Netherlands, but was an American citizen when he went into space.
  • Patrick Baudry, first launched 17 June 1985, was born in French Cameroun (now part of Cameroon), but was a French citizen when he went into space.
  • Shannon Lucid, first launched 17 June 1985, was born in China to American parents of European descent, and was an American citizen when she went into space.
  • Franklin Chang-Diaz, first launched 12 January 1986, was born in Costa Rica, but was an American citizen when he went into space
  • Musa Manarov, first launched 21 December 1987, was the first Azerbaijan-born man in space. At the time, Azerbaijan was a part of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
  • Anatoly Solovyev, first launched 7 June 1988, was the first Latvian-born man in space. At the time, Latvia was a part of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
  • Sergei Konstantinovich Krikalev and Aleksandr Aleksandrovich Volkov became Russian rather than Soviet citizens while still in orbit aboard Mir, making them the first purely Russian citizens in space.
  • James H. Newman, American citizen, first launched 12 September 1993, was born in the portion of the United Nations Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands that is now the Federated States of Micronesia.
  • Talgat Musabayev, first launched 1 July 1994, was born in the Kazakh SSR and is known in Kazakhstan as the "first cosmonaut of independent Kazakhstan", but was a Russian citizen when he went into space.
  • Frederick W. Leslie, American citizen, launched 20 October 1995, was born in Panama Canal Zone (now Panama).
  • Andy Thomas, first launched 19 May 1996, was born in Australia but like Paul D. Scully-Power was an American citizen when he went to space; Australian law at the time forbade dual-citizenship.
  • Carlos I. Noriega, first launched 15 May 1997, was born in Peru, but was an American citizen when he went into space.
  • Bjarni Tryggvason, launched 7 August 1997, was born in Iceland, but was a Canadian citizen when he went into space.
  • Salizhan Sharipov, first launched 22 January 1998, was born in Kyrgyzstan (then the Kirghiz SSR), but was a Russian citizen when he went into space. Sharipov is of Uzbek ancestry.
  • Philippe Perrin, first launched 5 June 2002, was born in Morocco, but was a French citizen when he went into space.
  • John Herrington, an American citizen first launched 24 November 2002, is the first tribal registered Native American in space (Chickasaw). See also Bill Pogue above.
  • Fyodor Yurchikhin, first launched 7 October 2002, was born in Georgia (then the Georgian SSR). He was a Russian citizen at the time he went into space and is of Pontian Greek descent.
  • Fernando Caldeiro, first launched January 2006, was born in Argentina, but worked under NASA as an American citizen.
  • Joseph M. Acaba, first launched 15 March 2009, was born in the U.S. state of California to American parents of Puerto Rican descent.
  • Aymette (Amy) Medina Jorge, first launched May 31, 2025, was the first person born in Puerto Rico to fly in space.

References

References

  1. "BBC News - Sci/Tech - Expensive ticket to ride".
  2. "BBC News - SCI/TECH - Space tourist lifts off".
  3. "BBC NEWS - Science/Nature - Lift-off for woman space tourist".
  4. "'It's not tourism for me': Meet Australia's next space traveller".
  5. Rogge, Rabea. (27 November 2024). "We just completed another round of training!".
  6. [https://www.nytimes.com/1986/01/13/us/man-in-the-news-franklin-r-chang-diaz-a-dreamer-in-space.html MAN IN THE NEWS: FRANKLIN R. CHANG-DIAZ; A DREAMER IN SPACE], Malcolm W. Browne, ''[[The New York Times]]'', January 13, 1986
  7. "КАЗКОСМОС | Мусабаев Талгат Амангельдиевич".
  8. Bukharbayeva, Bagila. (20 June 2004). "Kazakhstan Gets a Bigger Say in Space Launch Site".
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