Iran is the
9th country to put a domestically built satellite into orbit using its own launcher.
Launched satellites , Iran's first satellite placed into orbit with own launcher. • On 28 October 2005, a
Kosmos-3M booster rocket launched
Sina-1. The joint Iranian-Russian Sina-1 project cost US$15 million, and the launch made Iran the 43rd country to possess its own satellite. •
Huanjing (Environment) 1, a joint research satellite of
Iran, China and
Thailand was launched on a Chinese
Long March 2C carrier rocket on 6 September 2008, aimed at boosting cooperation on
natural disasters such as
flooding,
drought,
typhoon,
landslide and
earthquake. The twin
Earth observation satellites of eight planned were launched from
Taiyuan SLC. The satellites will work as a constellation with six other satellites yet to be launched. Its observational footprint is 720 km. With a lifespan of more than three years, they have state-of-the-art imaging systems and infrared cameras and provide a global scan every two days. Iran had shouldered US$6.5 million out of the $44 million of the total project cost. •
Omid, Iran's first satellite placed into orbit in February 2009 using a domestic launcher, the
Safir. Omid was described as a data-processing satellite for research and telecommunications. •
Rasad-1 is an imaging satellite that has been built and launched successfully by Iran. The satellite was sent into the 260 kilometres orbit by a Safir rocket launcher on 15 June 2011. It beams back to earth pictures with 150-meter resolution. It
decayed from orbit three weeks after launch, on 6 July 2011. •
Navid-e Elm-o Sanat (also known as 'Ya Mahdi') which is an "experimental satellite" built by students for testing camera and telecommunications equipment was revealed to the public on 3 February 2010. It has store-dump capability and a resolution of 400 meters. On 3 February 2012, Iranian press reported that Iran has successfully launched its domestically built Navid-e Elm-o Sanat satellite into orbit. The satellite remained in orbit for two months, before
reentering the atmosphere on 1 April 2012. •
Fajr, is an imaging satellite which also carries an experimental locally made GPS system built by
Iran Electronics Industries. The satellite had a life span of 1.5 years and an imaging resolution of 500 meters. It is the first Iranian satellite to use "cold gas thruster" and has solar panels. Originally, it was to be launched in 2012. Allegedly, non-announced by Iran of a failed launch of Fajr satellite occurred on 23 May in 2012. Finally, Fajr was successfully launched and placed into orbit on 2 February 2015. On 26 February 2015, Fajr
reentered Earth's atmosphere after 23.8 days in orbit. •
Toloo is the first satellite of the new generation of detector satellites built by Iran's electronics industry with
SIGINT capability. It was launched from the Imam Khomeini launch base with a satellite on "Simorgh", but it was not successfully launched and did not enter the orbit. •
Dousti, satellite designed for Earth observation. Launched by a Safir rocket on 5 February 2019. The launch failed. • Payam (formerly AUT-SAT), is a
microsatellite being developed by students of
Amirkabir University of Technology. It is designed as a
remote sensing satellite with store-dump capability. It was launched on 15 January 2019 by a Simorgh rocket, but failed to reach orbit. Amir Kabir satellite, weighing 80 kg, will reportedly be placed in a Sun-synchronous orbit of 660 km in radius, and will remain in space between three and five years. The launcher is expected to be a Simorgh rocket. • On 9 February 2020, Iran successfully launched the
communication satellite, Zafar 1, through a
Simorgh rocket from
Imam Khomeini Space Center at 19:15 local time. However, spokesman for the
defence ministry's space programme, Ahmad Hosseini, notified that the satellite didn't reach the required speed in its final moments for being put in the
orbit. • On 22 April 2020, Iran successfully launched "
Noor" (Farsi for "Light"), a military satellite, into a 426 x 444 km / 59.8° orbit. • On 31 December 2021, Iran launched a
Simorgh rocket carrying "three research cargos into space". However, following the launch, a defence ministry spokesman, Ahmad Hosseini, confirmed the mission had failed to put its three payloads into orbit after the rocket was unable to reach the required speed. France described the launch as "regrettable" as it was conducted amid renegotiations of the
Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action. • On 8 March 2022, Iran reportedly sent its second “
Noor-2” military satellite into 500 km orbit. • The
Khayyam, a high resolution imaging satellite, was successfully launched into orbit by a Russian
Soyuz rocket on 9 August 2022. •
Nahid-1 launched on board a
Qaem 100 on 4 March 2023 as part of the rocket's maiden flight, however the launch failed and the satellite was destroyed together with the rocket. •
Noor-3, also called Najm is the third satellite of the Noor class, was launched on a Qassed launcher on 27 September 2023 to a 450 kilometre orbit. It has a weight of 24 kg with a resolution of 6 to 4.8 meters. • The
Soraya satellite is a remote sensing satellite and one of the SRI research satellite series built by the Iranian Space Research Institute, which was built by the Iranian Space Organization and was sent to the near-Earth orbit on January 20, 2024, by the Iranian
Qaim 100 satellite launcher. First successful orbital flight. Satellite placed into 750 km orbit breaking Iran's previous record. • On 28 January 2024, three Iranian satellites, Mehda, Kayhan 2 and Hatef 1, were launched with a
Simorgh rocket and placed in a 450 km orbit. This was the first time that an Iranian satellite carrier carried more than one satellite and successfully put it into orbit. • On 29 February 2024, Russia launched an Iranian research satellite that scans Iran's topography from a 500 km (310 mi) orbit. The remote sensing satellite
Pars 1, which was launched by a Russian
Soyuz rocket from the
Vostochny space base, weighs 134 kg and is equipped with three cameras. • On September 14, 2024,
Chamran-1 was launched using the
Qaim-100 carrier, the Chamran-1 research satellite was built by
Iran Electronic Industries and weighed 60 kg (132 lb) and was successfully launched and placed into orbit. • On July 25, 2025, Russia's
Soyuz-2-1b rocket launched iran's domestically built Nahid-2
telecomms satellite from a cosmodrome into space. Nahid-2 was deployed into 500-kilometer orbit, designed to last up to 2-5 years. Built by Irans Space Agency, weighing 110kg with 3-axis control system, and a propulsion system for orbital control. • On 28 December 2025, Russia launched three Iranian-built satellites into low Earth orbit on a
Soyuz rocket from the
Vostochny Cosmodrome. The satellites, reportedly including Zafar-2, Kowsar, and Paya, were developed by Iranian institutions and launched into orbit as part of expanding scientific and technological cooperation between Iran and Russia. According to international media reports, these satellites are intended for civilian purposes, such as Earth observation, environmental monitoring, and communications research. The launch successfully placed multiple Iranian satellites into orbit during a single mission using a foreign launch provider.
Unlaunched satellites •
Nasir 1, Iran's indigenously designed
satellite navigation system (SAT NAV) has been manufactured to find the precise locations of satellites moving in orbit. •
Sharif satellite was originally scheduled for launch in 2012 is an observation satellite with an imaging resolution of better than 12.5 meters. The satellite is manufactured by
Sharif University of Technology. •
Mesbah (meaning 'Lantern') was to be built by Iran in collaboration with Italy's Carlo Gavazzi Space S.p.A . Mesbah was a
Low Earth orbit telecommunication satellite. The satellite was never launched as both Russia and Italy refused to cooperate with Iran anymore on space projects. The original Mesbah project was later on replaced by indigenous
Mesbah-2 which is to be built and launched by Iran alone. It was reported, in April 2011, that the US$10 million satellite built in Italy, has not been delivered to Iran. Italy has refused to hand over the satellite to Iran under the pretext of
international sanctions on Iran. Iran maintains that the satellite be handed over for its launch by an Iranian satellite carrier. •
Mesbah-2 is a limited application communication satellite which was conceived as a locally designed satellite after the original
Mesbah project failed to materialize due to international pressures on Iran. It will have a life span of 3 years with store dump capability and its own navigation system. It is scheduled for launch in 2012. •
Pars Sepehr, is a remote sensing satellite being built and to be launched from Iran. Its launch date is not yet confirmed. •
Sina-2 is a small satellite that will replace the mission role of
Sina-1. • Iran is also to implement 10 satellite projects with
Asia-Pacific Space Cooperation Organization (APSCO) members. The organization has defined 10 projects on designing, building and launching light satellites, middle class satellites weighing 500–600 kg, research satellites, remote-sensing and telecommunications satellites. •
Besharat satellite is being built by Iran with collaboration of some
OIC members which have volunteered in the project. It is to be launched by Iran. The countries which are jointly working with Iran on the project are Pakistan, Turkey, Malaysia and some Arab countries. Its launch date is not yet confirmed. •
Saar (Starling) will be produced by Iran's
Khajeh Nasir Toosi University of Technology. •
Zohreh, is a
geosynchronous communication satellite which was originally proposed before the Revolution in the 1970s as part of a joint Indian-Iranian project of four Iranian satellites to be launched by the then upcoming
NASA Space Shuttles. Iran had also negotiated with France to build and launch the satellites but the project never materialized. In 2005, Iran negotiated with Russia to build and launch the first Zohreh satellite under an agreement worth $132 million with the satellite launch date stipulated as 2007–2008. The new agreement had followed the earlier failed negotiations with Russia in 2003 when Russia cancelled the project under US pressures. The satellite was to be of
Express-1000 type and capable of relaying telephone, fax, data and television signals with a life span of 15 years. In September 2010, Iran announced that it will build and launch the satellite locally as the foreign contractors had refused to complete the project. New launch date for the satellite was announced as 2014. Russia had announced in 2009 that it is not going to cooperate with Iran on any space projects but reversed course again following the lifting of international
sanctions against Iran in 2015. Iran has also solicited
NASA's cooperation in future space projects. •
Ekvator, a geosynchronous communications satellite built by
ISS Reshetnev for Iran in a continuation of previous Russia-Iran space cooperation efforts. As of October 2022, Ekvator is expected to be launched on a
Proton-M rocket in early 2024. • Two satellites, Kausar and Hodhod, will be launched by a Russian launcher. The launch time of these two sensing and telecommunication satellites has been announced in early 2024. • Toloo 3 satellite is Iran's first miniature satellite, capable of taking black-and-white photos with a 5-meter spatial resolution and colored photos with a 10-meter resolution. It is scheduled to be launched in the middle of March 2024. • Nahid-2, built by the Iranian Space Research Center, is a communications satellite with a minimum lifespan of two years and will also be positioned in a 500-kilometre orbit above the earth, it is scheduled to launch in mid-2024. == Space centers ==