As of 2021, Space Adventures and SpaceX are the only companies to have coordinated tourism flights to Earth's orbit. Virginia-based Space Adventures has worked with Russia to use its Soyuz spacecraft to fly ultra-wealthy individuals to the International Space Station. The tourists included entrepreneur and space investor
Anousheh Ansari and
Cirque du Soleil co-founder
Guy Laliberté. Those missions were priced at around $20 million each. The space industry could soon be headed for a tourism revolution if SpaceX and Boeing make good on their plans to take tourists to orbit.
Successful projects (left) aboard the ISS At the end of the 1990s,
MirCorp, a private venture that was by then in charge of the space station, began seeking potential space tourists to visit
Mir in order to offset some of its maintenance costs.
Dennis Tito, an American businessman and former
JPL scientist, became their first candidate. When the decision was made to de-orbit
Mir, Tito managed to switch his trip to the
International Space Station (ISS) aboard a Russian
Soyuz spacecraft through a deal between MirCorp and US-based
Space Adventures, Ltd. Dennis Tito visited the ISS for seven days in April–May 2001, becoming the world's first "fee-paying" space tourist. Tito paid a reported $20 million for his trip. Tito was followed in April 2002 by South African
Mark Shuttleworth (
Soyuz TM-34). In February 2003, the Space Shuttle Columbia disintegrated on re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere, killing all seven astronauts aboard. After this disaster, space tourism on the Russian
Soyuz program was temporarily put on hold, because
Soyuz vehicles became the only available transport to the ISS. After the Shuttle's return to service in July 2005, space tourism was resumed. The third was
Gregory Olsen in October 2005 (
Soyuz TMA-7). In September 2006, an
Iranian American businesswoman named
Anousheh Ansari became the fourth space tourist (
Soyuz TMA-9).) In April 2007,
Charles Simonyi, an American businessman of Hungarian descent, joined their ranks (
Soyuz TMA-10). Simonyi became the first repeat space tourist, paying again to fly on
Soyuz TMA-14 in March 2009.
British-American Richard Garriott became the next space tourist in October 2008 aboard
Soyuz TMA-13. Canadian
Guy Laliberté visited the ISS in September 2009 aboard
Soyuz TMA-16, becoming the last visiting tourist until Japanese nationals
Yusaku Maezawa and
Yozo Hirano aboard
Soyuz MS-20 in December 2021. Originally the third member aboard
Soyuz TMA-18M would have been the British singer
Sarah Brightman as a space tourist, but on May 13, 2015, she announced she had withdrawn from training. Since the Space Shuttle was retired in 2011, Soyuz once again became the only means of accessing the ISS, and so tourism was once again put on hold. On June 7, 2019, NASA announced a plan to open the ISS to space tourism again. On September 16, 2021, the
Inspiration4 mission launched from the
Kennedy Space Center on a
SpaceX Falcon 9 and spent almost three days in orbit aboard the
Crew Dragon Resilience, becoming the first all-civilian crew to fly an orbital space mission. On September 12, 2024,
Jared Isaacman and
Sarah Gillis performed the first commercial
spacewalk during the
Polaris Dawn spaceflight operated by
SpaceX. On April 1, 2025,
Fram2 became the first
crewed spaceflight to enter a
polar retrograde orbit, launched on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.
Ongoing projects •
Axiom Space uses
Crew Dragon flights contracted with
SpaceX to send crews to the International Space Station.
Mission 1 flew in April 2022,
Mission 2 in May 2023,
Mission 3 in January 2024, and
Mission 4 in June 2025. Through these missions, NASA hopes to create a non-NASA market for human spaceflight to enable cost-sharing on future commercial space stations. • The
Boeing Starliner capsule is being developed as part of the NASA's
Commercial Crew Program. Part of the agreement with NASA allows Boeing to sell seats for space tourists. Boeing proposed including one seat per flight for a
spaceflight participant at a price that would be competitive with what Roscosmos charges tourists. • The
Polaris Program: The commander and financier of the Inspiration4 mission,
Jared Isaacman, announced plans for a three-mission program called Polaris in February 2022. The first mission,
Polaris Dawn, launched four private astronauts in a
Crew Dragon spacecraft to earth orbit. Polaris Dawn was a free-flyer mission in which the spacecraft did not perform any rendezvous maneuvers, instead setting the all-time earth orbit altitude record at 1,400 km, surpassing the 1,373 km record set by
Gemini XI. Polaris Dawn also included the first private
extravehicular activity (EVA). The last Polaris program mission is planned to be the first crewed flight of the in-development Starship launch system.
Cancelled projects • In 2004,
Bigelow Aerospace established a competition called
America's Space Prize, which offered a $50 million prize to the first US company to create a reusable spacecraft capable of carrying passengers to a Nautilus space station. The prize expired in January 2010 without anyone making a serious effort to win it. • The Space Island Group proposed having 20,000 people on their "space island" by 2020. • A United States startup firm, Orion Span announced during the early part of 2018 that it planned to launch and position a luxury space hotel in orbit within several years.
Aurora Space Station, the name of the hotel, would have offered guests (at most six individuals) 12 days of staying in a pill-shaped space hotel for $9.5 million. The hotel's cabins would have measured approximately 12.9 metres (43 feet) by 4.8 metres (14 feet) in width. •
Space Adventures Crew Dragon mission:
Space Adventures and
SpaceX planned to send up to four tourists to low Earth orbit for a few days in late 2021 or early 2022. In October 2021, Space Adventures stated that the mission contract had expired, though the possibility of a future partnership with SpaceX was left open. •
Galactic Suite Design •
Orbital Technologies Commercial Space Station •
Space Industries Incorporated •
Space Islands == Tourism beyond Earth orbit ==