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🚀 Launch Vehicle Profile

New Shepard

Blue Origin's fully reusable suborbital vehicle — crewed space tourism flights to 100+ km altitude and microgravity research payloads.

Overview

New Shepard is Blue Origin's fully reusable suborbital launch system, named after astronaut Alan Shepard — the first American in space. It consists of a single-engine booster and a pressurised crew capsule, designed to carry up to six passengers past the Kármán line (100 km altitude) for a brief period of weightlessness before returning to Earth. The booster lands vertically and the capsule descends under parachutes.

100+ km
Apogee Altitude
6
Crew Capacity
3 min
Weightlessness

Key Specifications

ParameterValue
OperatorBlue Origin
First Crewed Flight20 July 2021 (NS-16)
Height18.3 m (60 ft) booster + capsule
Engine1 × BE-3 (liquid hydrogen / LOX)
Thrust490 kN (110,000 lbf)
Apogee100–107 km (above Kármán line)
Crew Capacity6 passengers
Weightlessness Duration~3–4 minutes
ReusabilityFully reusable (booster + capsule)
Launch SiteLaunch Site One, West Texas

Mission Profile

A typical New Shepard flight lasts approximately 11 minutes. The booster lifts off vertically, accelerates to Mach 3+, and the capsule separates at approximately 75 km altitude. The capsule coasts past the Kármán line while passengers experience 3–4 minutes of weightlessness and views of Earth's curvature through the largest windows ever flown in space. The booster lands vertically near the launch pad, and the capsule descends under three main parachutes with a retro-thrust landing.

Crewed Flights

New Shepard's first crewed flight (NS-16) on 20 July 2021 carried Jeff Bezos, his brother Mark, aviator Wally Funk (at age 82, the oldest person to fly to space at that time) and student Oliver Daemen. Subsequent flights have carried paying customers, research payloads and notable passengers including actor William Shatner.

NS-23 Anomaly

In September 2022, an uncrewed New Shepard mission (NS-23) experienced a booster failure approximately 65 seconds after liftoff. The capsule escape system activated successfully and the capsule landed safely under parachutes — demonstrating the abort system works as designed. Crewed flights were suspended pending investigation and have resumed cautiously.

Suborbital vs Orbital

New Shepard is not an orbital vehicle — it reaches space briefly but does not achieve orbital velocity (~28,000 km/h). For orbital missions, Blue Origin is developing New Glenn, a much larger rocket capable of delivering 45,000 kg to LEO.

📍 Track on Orbital Radar
Follow upcoming New Shepard missions live on the Launch Schedule — with countdown timers, mission details and pad locations. Browse the full Satellite Launch Log for New Shepard mission-by-mission history.
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Enter a payload mass and destination orbit to rank the global fleet by suitability — capability, cost, reliability and fit. Live calculation across 14 active launch vehicles.

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Anatomy & flight profile

Payload fairingFirst stage
  • Height18.3 m
  • Stages1
  • Engines1 × BE-3
  • PropellantLH₂ / LOX

Height to scale

18 mElectron18.3 mNew Shepard34.8 mVega-C44 mPSLV46 mSoyuz1.8 m
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New Shepard vs the global fleet

Vehicle Class Height LEO kg $/kg Flights Reuse Status
🇺🇸 New Shepard you are here Suborbital 18.3 m 25 ♻︎ Yes Active
🇺🇸 Falcon 9 Medium-lift 70 m 22,800 $2,700 400+ ♻︎ Yes Active
🇺🇸 Falcon Heavy Heavy-lift 70 m 63,800 $1,520 12 ♻︎ Yes Active
🇺🇸 Starship Super heavy-lift 121 m 150,000 7+ ♻︎ Yes In development
🇺🇸 SLS Super heavy-lift 98.1 m 95,000 $23,000 1 No Active
🇺🇸 New Glenn Heavy-lift 98 m 45,000 1 ♻︎ Yes Active
🇨🇳 Long March 5B Heavy-lift 53.7 m 25,000 4 No Active
🇪🇺 Ariane 6 Medium-to-heavy-lift 63 m 21,650 1 No Active
🇷🇺 Soyuz Medium-lift 46 m 8,200 $6,100 2,000+ No Active
🇮🇳 PSLV Medium-lift 44 m 3,800 $5,500 60+ No Active
🇳🇿 Electron Small-lift 18 m 300 $25,000 55+ ♻︎ Yes Active
🇺🇸 Vulcan Centaur Heavy-lift 61.6 m 27,200 2 No Active
🇯🇵 H3 Medium-to-heavy-lift 63 m 16,000 $3,200 3 No Active
🇪🇺 Vega-C Small-to-medium-lift 34.8 m 2,350 $17,000 2 No Return to flight

Tap any column to sort · figures are list-price estimates; live flight counts update daily.

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Frequently Asked Questions

No. New Shepard reaches 100+ km altitude but does not achieve orbital velocity (~28,000 km/h). It provides approximately 3–4 minutes of weightlessness before the capsule returns under parachutes.
The pressurised crew capsule can carry up to 6 passengers. The capsule features the largest windows ever flown in space for views of Earth's curvature.
Blue Origin does not publicly disclose ticket prices. Early auction-based seats sold for several hundred thousand dollars, with prices expected to decrease as flight rates increase.
New Shepard has completed over 25 flights. An uncrewed mission in September 2022 experienced a booster failure, but the capsule escape system activated successfully and landed safely — demonstrating the abort system works as designed.
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