Wingsuit formation records Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI), the world governing airsports body, established judging criteria for official world record wingsuit formations in February 2015. The rules are available on the FAI website. Prior to this, the largest wingsuit formation recognized as meeting the criteria for a national record consisted of 68 wingsuit pilots, which set a U.S. national record at
Lake Elsinore, California, on 12 November 2009. The largest global record was a diamond formation involving 100 wingsuit pilots at Perris, California, on 22 September 2012. These records have since been retired as they do not meet the current rules. The current U.S. national record includes 43 wingsuit pilots. It was set on 5 October 2018 in
Rosharon, Texas, at Skydive Spaceland-Houston. The current U.S. open national docked record (when wingsuit pilots complete a formation holding onto each other) was set in 2014 by 5 wingsuit pilots--Billy delGiudice, Matthew Veno, Andreea Olea, Jeff Harrigan, and Sarah Chamberlain--at Connecticut Parachutists in
Ellington, CT.
Wingsuit BASE jump records Highest altitude On 23 May 2006, the Australian couple Heather Swan and
Glenn Singleman jumped from off
Meru Peak in
India, setting a world record for highest wingsuit BASE jump. This record was broken on 5 May 2013, by the Russian
Valery Rozov, who jumped from on
Mount Everest's North Col. Rozov broke his own record by jumping from on
Cho Oyu in 2016.
Longest The longest verified wingsuit BASE jump is by the American
Dean Potter on 2 November 2011. Potter jumped from the
Eiger mountain and spent 3 minutes and 20 seconds in flight, descending of altitude.
Biggest The biggest wingsuit BASE jump as measured from exit to landing was performed on 11 August 2013 by Patrick Kerber with a height of off the
Jungfrau in Switzerland.
Wingsuit flight records Fastest On 22 May 2017, British wingsuit pilot
Fraser Corsan set world records for the fastest speed reached in a wingsuit of . Chilean Sebastián Álvarez broke the World Record on 27 March 2025, he set the new record on .
Greatest average horizontal speed The current world record for greatest average horizontal speed within the performance competition rules, i.e. within of vertical distance, was set by Travis Mickle (US) with a speed of 325.4 km/h (202.19 mph) 6 November 2017. American
Ellen Brennan is considered the fastest flying woman in the world.
Longest time On 20 and 21 April 2012, Colombian skydiver Jhonathan Florez set
Guinness World Records in wingsuit flying. The jumps took place in
La Guajira in
Colombia. The longest (duration) wingsuit flight was 9 minutes, 6 seconds. Sebastián Álvarez flew for 11 minutes, 1 second on 27 March 2025. The current world record for longest time in flight within the performance competition rules, i.e. within of vertical distance, was set on 28 Aug 2018 by Chris Geiler (US) with a time of 100.2 sec (1.67 min).
Highest altitude The highest altitude wingsuit jump is , and was achieved by Aaron Smith above Whiteville, Tennessee, US, on 1 July 2023.
Farthest , the
Guinness World Record for "greatest absolute distance flown in a wing suit" is 32.094 km (19.94 mi) set by Kyle Lobpries (US) in Davis, California, on 30 May 2016. Sebastián Álvarez set the record on 53.450 km on 27 March 2025. The current world record for longest horizontal distance covered within the performance competition rules, i.e. within of vertical distance, was set on 27 May 2017 by U.S. wingsuit pilot Alexey Galda with a distance of 5.137 km (3.19 mi)
Highest Flare The highest recorded flare ever achieved so far is in altitude from lowest to highest point, set by Daniel Ossio (CH) in Piotrków Trybunalski, Poland on 3 May 2022. The flare was made after exiting a tail gate aircraft at high speed.
Highest Flare (conventional) The highest conventional flare ever made so far is performed by Luke Rogers (AUS), performed in Ramblers, Australia on 9 September 2018. The flare was made after diving and accelerating the wingsuit from altitude.
Landing On 23 May 2012, British
stuntman Gary Connery safely landed a wingsuit without deploying his parachute, landing on a crushable "runway" (landing zone) built with thousands of cardboard boxes. ==Safety==