World View incorporated on August 30, 2012. During a test flight in June 2014 World View successfully deployed and remotely navigated a parafoil back down to Earth from an altitude of . An October 2015 test flight brought a 10-percent scale passenger capsule to over altitude; a full-scale test is anticipated to follow. A September 2016 flight carried a small, uncrewed, scientific payload to an altitude of over on behalf of the
Southwest Research Institute through NASA's Flight Opportunities Program. By January 2016, World View was planning to operate commercial flights from Spaceport Tucson beginning in 2017. In April 2016, World View announced that, following $7 million in "Series A" financing, it had raised an additional $15 million in "Series B" funding. In June 2017, World View completed a 17-hour flight featuring a
KFC product; though a balloon leak cut it short from the intended four-day duration, it was World View's first flight in which a solar array was "properly pointing at the sun". In July 2017, World View completed a 27-hour flight. On December 19, 2017, a hydrogen balloon exploded on site causing tremors in the Tucson area that shook for over half a mile and caused $200,000 in damage to a nearby building. According to an Independent Incident Review Team report, the explosion occurred when deflating the hydrogen balloon: interaction between the plastic balloon shell and/or inflation tube, built up electrostatic charge which then discharged and caused the hydrogen gas, which mixed with atmospheric oxygen, to ignite.
Jane Poynter (then CEO) later said about the accident: "we don't use hydrogen with our Stratollites, this was different from our core business. And we now know exactly how it occurred, why, and how to stop it from ever happening again." In March, 2018, World View announced that it had raised an additional $26.5 million in "Series C" funding. In August 2018, Matteo Genna joined World View as senior vice president. In February 2019, Ryan Hartman was named World View CEO. On June 5, 2019, a 16-day Stratollite Mission Milestone was achieved. On October 1, 2019, a 32-day Stratollite Mission Milestone was achieved. On 13 April 2020, Ryan Hartman said in an interview that World View would delay market-entry plans for their products (mainly the Stratollite) and furlough staff because of the COVID-19 pandemic. On 4 October 2021, World View announced their commercial flights will begin in 2024 out of Spaceport Grand Canyon. Explorer-class flights, which begin with Flight #21, cost $50,000 per seat. On 13 January 2023, World View announced that it had agreed to go public through a
SPAC merger later that year. The company would be listed at
New York Stock Exchange. The merger would value the company at $350 million. At the time of the announcement, the company had conducted more than 120 stratospheric flights, working with a variety of companies and government agencies. ==Key people==