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🚀 Launch Vehicle Profile

PSLV

India's Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle — ISRO's reliable medium-lift workhorse that put India on the interplanetary map.

60+
Total Missions
1993
First Flight
1,750 kg
SSO Payload
44 m
Height

Overview

The Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) is a four-stage expendable rocket developed and operated by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO). Designed primarily to deliver Earth observation satellites into Sun-synchronous polar orbits (SSO), the PSLV has become India's most reliable and versatile launch vehicle — with over 60 flights since its first successful mission in 1994 (after an initial failure in 1993) and a consecutive success streak exceeding 50 missions.

Despite its relatively modest payload capacity compared to larger international launchers, the PSLV has achieved remarkable feats — including launching India's first lunar probe (Chandrayaan-1), Mars orbiter (Mangalyaan) and navigation satellites (NavIC/IRNSS), as well as a record 104 satellites on a single mission in February 2017.

Specifications — PSLV-XL

ParameterValue
Height44 m (144 ft)
Mass at liftoff~320,000 kg (PSLV-XL)
Stages4 (alternating solid and liquid)
Stage 1S139 solid motor (one of the largest in the world) + 6 solid strap-on boosters
Stage 2Vikas liquid engine (UDMH/N₂O₄)
Stage 3S7 solid motor
Stage 42 × L-2-5 liquid engines (MMH/MON-3, restartable)
Payload to SSO (600 km)~1,750 kg
Payload to LEO~3,800 kg
Payload to GTO~1,425 kg
Launch siteSatish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, India

Variants

The PSLV flies in three main configurations, differing in the number and size of strap-on boosters:

Notable Missions

DateMissionSignificance
Oct 2008Chandrayaan-1India's first lunar mission. Discovered water molecules on the Moon's surface — a landmark scientific finding.
Nov 2013Mars Orbiter Mission (Mangalyaan)India became the first Asian nation to reach Mars orbit — and did so on its first attempt. The mission cost approximately $74 million, less than the budget of many Hollywood films.
Feb 2017PSLV-C37Deployed 104 satellites on a single flight — a world record at the time. Payloads from 7 countries.
2013–2018NavIC/IRNSSPSLV launched all seven satellites of India's regional navigation constellation.
Aug 2023Chandrayaan-3Launched by ISRO's heavier LVM3 — but the programme's heritage traces directly to PSLV-launched Chandrayaan-1.

PSLV Orbital Platform (POEM)

In a creative reuse of spent hardware, ISRO has begun converting the PSLV's spent fourth stage into a PSLV Orbital Experimental Module (POEM) — an orbital platform that hosts technology demonstration payloads in orbit for weeks or months after primary payload deployment. This gives the fourth stage a second life as a micro-satellite platform, generating additional mission value from hardware that would otherwise be orbital debris. Several POEM experiments have been conducted, and the concept has attracted interest from international researchers.

Future: PSLV and Beyond

ISRO continues to fly the PSLV regularly for Indian government missions and commercial rideshare payloads (marketed through its commercial arm, NewSpace India Limited / NSIL). Looking ahead, ISRO's Small Satellite Launch Vehicle (SSLV) is designed to complement the PSLV for lighter payloads with faster turnaround, while the heavier LVM3 (formerly GSLV Mk III) handles GEO and beyond. A next-generation reusable launch vehicle (RLV-TD) is also under development, though it remains in early testing as of 2026.

📍 Track on Orbital Radar
Follow upcoming PSLV missions live on the Launch Schedule from Satish Dhawan — with countdown timers, mission details and pad locations. Browse the full Satellite Launch Log for PSLV 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 fairingUpper stagesFirst stage+ solid boosters
  • Height44 m
  • Stages4
  • Engines1 × Vikas
  • PropellantSolid + UDMH/N₂O₄ + Solid + MMH/MON-3

Height to scale

34.8 mVega-C44 mPSLV46 mSoyuz53.7 mLong March 5B61.6 mVulcan Centaur1.8 m
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PSLV vs the global fleet

Vehicle Class Height LEO kg $/kg Flights Reuse Status
🇮🇳 PSLV you are here Medium-lift 44 m 3,800 $5,500 60+ No 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
🇺🇸 New Shepard Suborbital 18.3 m 25 ♻︎ 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
🇳🇿 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

PSLV has launched India's Chandrayaan-1 lunar orbiter, Mars Orbiter Mission (Mangalyaan), numerous Earth observation and navigation satellites, and foreign payloads for commercial customers.
A PSLV launch costs approximately $21 million, making it one of the most affordable launch vehicles for small-to-medium payloads to polar and sun-synchronous orbits.
PSLV comes in three variants: PSLV-CA (core alone, no strap-ons), PSLV-DL (two strap-on boosters), and PSLV-XL (six extended strap-on boosters for maximum performance).
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