Overview
SaxaVord Spaceport is a commercial launch site on the island of Unst — the northernmost inhabited island in the British Isles — in the Shetland archipelago, Scotland. It holds the distinction of being Europe's first fully licensed vertical orbital launch facility. SaxaVord's high-latitude location at 60.8°N provides direct access to polar and sun-synchronous orbits with a clear northward trajectory over the Norwegian Sea.
Facility Details
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Location | Lamba Ness, Unst, Shetland, Scotland, UK |
| Coordinates | 60.8267°N, 0.8717°W |
| Operator | SaxaVord Spaceport Ltd |
| Planned Vehicles | Multiple small-lift rockets (tenant model) |
| Pads | 3 planned launch pads (Fredo, Heimdall, plus one more) |
| Orbital Access | Polar (90°), sun-synchronous (97–98°) |
| Regulator | UK Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) |
Why Shetland?
Unst's 60.8°N latitude and position at the edge of the North Atlantic provides an unobstructed northward flight path over open ocean — ideal for polar and SSO missions that serve Earth observation, weather, climate and intelligence customers. There is huge demand for dedicated small-sat launch to these orbits, and Europe currently lacks its own polar launch capability (the Guiana Space Centre is optimised for equatorial/GEO launches).
Significance for UK Space
SaxaVord represents the UK's ambition to become the first European country to conduct vertical orbital launches from its own territory. The UK Space Agency has supported spaceport development as part of a broader strategy to grow the UK's £17.5 billion space sector. Multiple launch companies are developing small rockets intended to fly from SaxaVord, positioning Shetland as Europe's answer to New Zealand's Māhia Peninsula.