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🏗️ Spaceports & Launch Sites

World's Spaceports

Every major orbital launch facility on Earth — from the historic pads at Cape Canaveral and Baikonur to the newest launch complexes in Shetland and Arctic Sweden. Locations, coordinates, orbital access, active pads, operators and launch history.

12
Spaceports Profiled
10
Countries
10
Global Launches This Year
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All Spaceports

12 sites
🇺🇸
Kennedy Space Center
USA — Florida's Space Coast — the most storied launch complex on Earth. From the Apollo Moon landings and ...
28.57°N · 80.65°W · NASA
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Vandenberg SFB
USA — California's gateway to polar orbit — the primary US launch site for sun-synchronous, polar and retr...
34.74°N · 120.57°W · US Space Force
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Starbase
USA — SpaceX's dedicated Starship facility in South Texas — where the world's largest and most powerful ro...
25.99°N · 97.15°W · SpaceX
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Baikonur
Kazakhstan — The world's first and most historic spaceport — launched Sputnik, sent Yuri Gagarin into space, and ...
45.96°N · 63.34°E · Roscosmos
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Guiana Space Centre
French Guiana — Europe's gateway to space — positioned at just 5° north of the equator, making it the world's best-l...
5.24°N · 52.77°W · CNES
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Jiuquan
China — China's oldest and most active spaceport — deep in the Gobi Desert, launching crewed Shenzhou missio...
40.96°N · 100.29°E · PLA Strategic Support Force
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Wenchang
China — China's newest and most capable spaceport — on the coast of Hainan Island at 19°N, enabling sea tran...
19.61°N · 110.95°E · PLA Strategic Support Force
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Satish Dhawan (SDSC)
India — India's primary spaceport — ISRO's launch site for PSLV, GSLV and LVM3 rockets, Chandrayaan lunar mi...
13.72°N · 80.23°E · ISRO
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Vostochny
Russia — Russia's new sovereign spaceport in the Far East — built to reduce dependence on leased Baikonur in ...
51.88°N · 128.33°E · Roscosmos
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Māhia (Rocket Lab)
New Zealand — The world's first private orbital launch site — on New Zealand's remote Māhia Peninsula, providing u...
39.26°S · 177.86°E · Rocket Lab
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SaxaVord
UK — Europe's first licensed vertical orbital launch site — on the island of Unst in Shetland, Scotland. ...
60.83°N · 0.87°W · SaxaVord Spaceport Ltd
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Esrange
Sweden — Sweden's Arctic spaceport — sounding rockets and scientific balloons since 1966, now developing orbi...
67.89°N · 21.11°E · Swedish Space Corporation
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Spaceport Comparison

Spaceport Country Latitude Longitude Operator Key Vehicle Primary Orbit
Kennedy Space Center 🇺🇸 USA 28.57°N 80.65°W NASA Falcon 9 LEO
Vandenberg SFB 🇺🇸 USA 34.74°N 120.57°W US Space Force Falcon 9 Polar (90°)
Starbase 🇺🇸 USA 25.99°N 97.15°W SpaceX Starship / Super Heavy LEO
Baikonur 🇰🇿 Kazakhstan 45.96°N 63.34°E Roscosmos Soyuz-2 (crew + cargo) ISS (51.6°)
Guiana Space Centre 🇫🇷 French Guiana 5.24°N 52.77°W CNES Ariane 6 All inclinations; optimal for GEO (near-equatorial)
Jiuquan 🇨🇳 China 40.96°N 100.29°E PLA Strategic Support Force Long March 2F (crewed) LEO (various inclinations)
Wenchang 🇨🇳 China 19.61°N 110.95°E PLA Strategic Support Force Long March 5 LEO
Satish Dhawan (SDSC) 🇮🇳 India 13.72°N 80.23°E ISRO PSLV LEO
Vostochny 🇷🇺 Russia 51.88°N 128.33°E Roscosmos Soyuz-2.1a LEO
Māhia (Rocket Lab) 🇳🇿 New Zealand 39.26°S 177.86°E Rocket Lab Electron SSO
SaxaVord 🇬🇧 UK 60.83°N 0.87°W SaxaVord Spaceport Ltd Multiple small-lift rockets (tenant model) Polar (90°)
Esrange 🇸🇪 Sweden 67.89°N 21.11°E Swedish Space Corporation Sounding rockets Polar (90°)

Frequently Asked Questions

There are roughly 30 active orbital launch sites worldwide, with more under development. The busiest include Cape Canaveral/KSC (Florida), Vandenberg (California), Baikonur (Kazakhstan), Kourou (French Guiana), and Jiuquan/Wenchang (China). Orbital Radar profiles 12 of the most important sites.
Rockets launch from specialised spaceports around the world. The site's latitude is crucial — equatorial locations like Kourou (5°N) are ideal for geostationary orbit, while high-latitude sites like Vandenberg and SaxaVord serve polar orbits. All sites need open ocean or unpopulated land downrange for safety.
Kennedy Space Center and Cape Canaveral combined host more orbital launches than any other site — over 100 per year as of 2025, dominated by SpaceX Falcon 9 missions.
Earth rotates fastest at the equator, giving eastward-launching rockets a free velocity boost of up to ~465 m/s. This makes equatorial sites like Kourou (5°N) and Wenchang (19°N) more efficient for GEO launches. Conversely, high-latitude sites are needed for polar orbits, since launching over populated land at low latitudes to reach polar inclinations would be unsafe.
Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan is the world's oldest and most historic spaceport, established in 1955. It launched Sputnik (1957) and Yuri Gagarin (1961) and has hosted over 1,500 orbital missions.
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