concept '' taking off on
STS-27 With the development of
rocket propulsion in the first half of the twentieth century,
space travel became a technical possibility. Early ideas of a single-stage reusable
spaceplane proved unrealistic and although even the first practical rocket vehicles (
V-2) could reach the fringes of space, reusable technology was too heavy. In addition, many early rockets were developed to deliver weapons, making reuse impossible by design. The problem of mass efficiency was overcome by using multiple expendable stages in a vertical launch
multistage rocket. USAF and NACA had been studying orbital reusable spaceplanes since 1958, e.g.
Dyna-Soar, but the first reusable stages did not fly until the advent of the US
Space Shuttle in 1981. Perhaps the first reusable launch vehicles were the ones conceptualized and studied by
Wernher von Braun from 1948 until 1956. The
von Braun ferry rocket underwent two revisions: once in 1952 and again in 1956. They would have landed using parachutes. The
General Dynamics Nexus was proposed in the 1960s as a fully reusable successor to the Saturn V rocket, having the capacity of transporting up to to orbit. See also
Sea Dragon, and
Douglas SASSTO. The
BAC Mustard was studied starting in 1964. It would have comprised three identical spaceplanes strapped together and arranged in two stages. During ascent the two outer spaceplanes, which formed the first stage, would detach and glide back individually to earth. It was canceled after the last study of the design in 1967 due to a lack of funds for development. concept concept prototype Phoenix RLV |alt=
The Space Shuttle era NASA started the
Space Shuttle design process in 1968, with the vision of creating a fully reusable
spaceplane using a crewed
fly-back booster. This concept proved expensive and complex, therefore the design was scaled back to reusable
solid rocket boosters and an expendable
external tank. Space Shuttle
Columbia launched and landed 27 times and was lost with all crew on the 28th landing attempt;
Challenger launched and landed 9 times and was lost with all crew on the 10th launch attempt;
Discovery launched and landed 39 times;
Atlantis launched and landed 33 times;
Endeavour launched and landed 25 times. The last mission of
Space Shuttle,
STS-135, landed back on Earth on 21 July 2011 after delivering supplies and equipment to the
International Space Station ISS. In 1986 President
Ronald Reagan called for an air-breathing
scramjet National Aerospace Plane (NASP)/
X-30. The project failed due to technical issues and was canceled in 1993. In the late 1980s a fully reusable version of the Soviet
Energia rocket, the Energia II, was proposed. Its boosters and core would have had the capability of landing separately on a runway. This concept was not developed and even the original expendable Energia flew only twice in the late 1980s. The second flight launched the reusable spacecraft
Buran on its first and only, uncrewed mission. In the 1990s the
McDonnell Douglas Delta Clipper VTOL SSTO proposal progressed to the testing phase. The
DC-X prototype demonstrated rapid turnaround time and automatic computer control. In mid-1990s, British research evolved an earlier
HOTOL design into the
Skylon design, which remained in development at
Reaction Engines until 2024 when the company went bankrupt. In 2025, the
European Space Agency (ESA) announced a plan to use technologies developed for Skylon's
SABRE engine in its future Flying Engine Testbed initiative INVICTUS. From the late 1990s to the 2000s, the
European Space Agency (ESA) studied the recovery of the
Ariane 5 solid rocket boosters. The last recovery attempt took place in 2009. Two commercial ventures, Kistler Aerospace (later
Rocketplane Kistler) and
Rotary Rocket, attempted to build reusable privately developed rockets in the 1990s before going bankrupt. NASA proposed reusable concepts to replace the Shuttle technology, to be demonstrated under the
X-33 and
X-34 programs, which were both cancelled in the early 2000s due to rising costs and technical issues. The
Ansari X Prize contest, created in 1996, was intended to develop private suborbital reusable vehicles. Many private companies competed, with the winner,
Scaled Composites, reaching the
Kármán line twice in a two-week period in 2004 with their reusable
SpaceShipOne. The design was later developed into the
space tourism vehicle
SpaceShipTwo, which flew on multiple suborbital flights, but never reached the
Kármán line. Between 1999 and 2004, the German
DLR was working on two reusable launch vehicle concepts within the ASTRA (Ausgewählte Systeme und Technologien für Raumtransport) program. The
Liquid Fly-back Booster (LFBB) was a winged horizontal landing booster for the
Ariane family of rockets. The
Hopper spacecraft was a
rocket sled-launched
spaceplane. In 2004, DLR performed a series of drop tests with Phoenix RLV, a subscale prototype of Hopper, at the
North European Aerospace Test range in
Kiruna. In 2001, the Russian
Khrunichev space centre proposed a reusable fly-back booster
Baikal for the
Angara family of rockets. This vehicle never flew. A similar concept was later proposed by
Roscosmos in 2018 with no subsequent updates. In 2005,
NASA initiated the
Commercial Orbital Transportation Services (COTS) program supporting private companies in developing
uncrewed cargo vehicles for resupplying the
ISS. This program has briefly resurrected the reusable
Kistler K-1 concept by
Rocketplane Kistler before it was cancelled for lack of private funding. However, another recipient of
COTS funding from NASA,
SpaceX, managed to use this support to keep operating and to develop its
Falcon 9 rocket, which later became partially reusable.
2010s side boosters landing during 2018
demonstration mission concept and
10 models rocket family rocket demonstrator by
CNES,
DLR, and
JAXA second flight, 2025 In 2012,
SpaceX started a flight test program with
experimental vehicles. These subsequently led to the development of the
Falcon 9 reusable rocket launcher. SpaceX achieved the first vertical soft landing of a reusable orbital rocket stage on December 21, 2015, after delivering 11
Orbcomm OG-2 commercial satellites into
low Earth orbit. The first reuse of a Falcon 9 first stage occurred on 30 March 2017. Since then, SpaceX has been routinely recovering and reusing their first stages, as well as
fairings. In 2015,
Airbus Defence and Space proposed the
Adeline reusable engine pod for the
Ariane family of rockets. In 2018,
CNES declared the concept not financially interesting and it hasn't been developed further. On 23 November 2015 the
New Shepard rocket became the first
Vertical Take-off, Vertical Landing (VTVL) sub-orbital rocket to reach space by passing the
Kármán line (), reaching before returning for a propulsive landing. In November 2016, the
European Space Agency (ESA) selected the Spanish Company
PLD Space to start developing a reusable first stage under the agency's
FLPP program. This project became known as
Miura 5 in 2018, when
PLD Space redesigned the vehicle to increase its payload capacity after a review by
ESA. In April 2019,
PLD Space performed a successful drop and recovery test of a Miura 5 first stage demonstrator. In 2017, the
German Aerospace Center (DLR) started working on the Reusable Flight Experiment (ReFEx) aiming to demonstrate a winged fly-back rocket booster. As of 2024, its launch was planned for late 2026 atop a Brazilian
VSB-30 sounding rocket from the
Koonibba Test Range in Australia. In 2018, China was researching possible reusability for the
Long March 8 system. This had been later abandoned. However, multiple Chinese private companies developing reusable launch vehicles have been performing
VTVL test flights of varying complexity and success since 2019. In March 2019, the
German Aerospace Center (DLR) started working on the
EU-funded project
RETALT aimed at developing
retropropulsion technologies for reusable rockets. In 2019
Rocket Lab announced plans to recover and reuse the first stage of their
Electron launch vehicle, intending to use
parachutes and
mid-air retrieval. On 20 November 2020, Rocket Lab successfully returned an Electron first stage from an orbital launch, the stage softly splashing down in the Pacific Ocean. Nine first stage boosters were recovered between November 2020 and January 2024, however after Rocket Lab re-used certain components from the recovered boosters (including
Rutherford rocket engines), the company decided not to re-use
Electron first stage boosters, citing decreasing marginal financial savings from the booster recovery program, instead focusing on the larger, partially reusable
Neutron rocket.
2020s In 2020, the only operational reusable orbital-class launch systems were the
Falcon 9 and
Falcon Heavy, the latter of which is based upon the Falcon 9.
SpaceX was also developing the fully reusable
Starship launch system.
Blue Origin was developing its
New Glenn orbital rocket with a reusable first stage. In October 2020,
Roscosmos signed a development contract for
Amur, a new launcher with a reusable first stage. In 2024, Roscosmos expected the vehicle to fly no earlier than 2030 and announced intention to start developing a prototype first stage in 2025. In December 2020, the
European Space Agency (ESA) signed contracts to start developing
THEMIS, a prototype reusable first stage. In September 2025, the first THEMIS prototype has been fully assembled at its launch site at
Esrange in Sweden. Lessons learned through the development and testing of THEMIS, as well as smaller-scale demonstrators
CALLISTO, FROG-T, and FROG-H will be used in development of future European reusable launchers
Maia and
Ariane Next. In January 2022, the
German Aerospace Center (DLR) initiated the Advanced Technologies for High Energetic Atmospheric Flight of Launcher Stages (ATHEAt) program for demonstrating various technologies related to launch vehicle reusability. The first suborbital test flight of the program successfully launched on 6 October 2025 from
Andøya Space in
Norway and the second, using a different rocket booster, is scheduled for 2026 from
Esrange Space Center in
Sweden. In 2022, China revealed plans to use reusable first stages on the new
Long March 9 and
10 rockets, which are expected to serve the country's
crewed Lunar program. In August and September 2025, China performed first hot fire tests of
Long March 10's first stage, including a restart sequence likely related to first stage landing maneuvres needed for reusability.
Long March 10's first stage performed its first soft landing on water on 11 February 2026 during the launch abort test of the
Mengzhou spacecraft. In October 2023, the Spanish company
PLD Space, supported by
ESA's
FLPP funding, tested various technologies for its future reusable launch vehicle
Miura 5 by successfully launching the suborbital rocket
Miura 1 from the
El Arenosillo Test Centre in
Huelva, Spain. The company claimed that as much as 70% of the technology needed for Miura 5 could be tested on Miura 1. In September 2024, the Indian government has approved plans to develop a new partially reusable rocket
NGLV. The vehicle, with a
VTVL first stage, is expected to be operational around 2033. In November 2024, China debuted the
Long March 12 rocket, whose later version
Long March 12A is designed to have a reusable first stage. In January 2025, the Longxing-2
VTVL demonstrator, likely a precursor to Long March 12A's first stage, flew on a high altitude suborbital test flight. The outcome of this test was not made public.
Long March 12A had its maiden flight on 23 December 2025. The rocket successfully reached orbit but the first stage was destroyed during its landing attempt. In 2025,
Arianespace proposed making
Ariane 6 partially reusable by substituting the rocket's solid-fuel expendable boosters with Liquid Reusable Boosters (LRBs) derived from the
Maia rocket under development by Arianespace's subsidiary MaiaSpace. The development of the proposal was funded by
ESA's Boosters for European Space Transportation (BEST!) initiative. In June 2025, the Japanese company
Honda performed a successful 300 m high
VTVL flight of a
liquid-propellant demonstrator rocket equipped with
grid fins and landing legs. In September 2025, the
European Space Agency (ESA) awarded a contract to the Italian company
Avio to start developing a reusable upper stage demonstrator. Later in 2025, ESA also awarded a related contract to the Italian company Ingegneria Dei Sistemi (IDS) to design a reusable rocket stage recovery vessel. Meanwhile,
Avio has been developing the FD1 and FD2 rocket demonstrators of
methalox engines for their future Vega Next rocket, with possible reusability-related features like
grid fins. On 20 October 2025, the Chinese company
LandSpace performed a static-fire test of its new rocket
Zhuque-3 intended for partial reusability. The first stage of the rocket was equipped with
grid fins, aerodynamic chines, and landing legs. The rocket successfully launched and reached orbit on 3 December 2025 but the first stage was destroyed during its landing attempt. On 13 November 2025,
Blue Origin's
New Glenn rocket launched
NASA's twin
ESCAPADE spacecraft to Mars on its second flight. The rocket's first stage then successfully landed on a barge in the Atlantic Ocean. This made Blue Origin the second company after
SpaceX to recover an orbital-class booster by a propulsive landing. The same first stage, with a new set of engines, was then successfully reused on 19 April 2026 during the
third flight of New Glenn, although the flight's primary mission failed due to a second stage issue. == List of reusable launch vehicles ==