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Space Agencies in the World – Complete List

Complete space agencies in the world list with headquarters, founded year & key missions. Updated 2026. Essential for UPSC, SSC, Banking & competitive exams. Revise now.

⏱️ 14 min read
📊 2,610 words
📅 April 2026
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Space agencies in the world represent humanity’s collective ambition to explore the cosmos — and their budgets, missions, and milestones are a recurring topic in UPSC Prelims, SSC CGL, Banking, and General Awareness sections of all major competitive exams.

From NASA’s Moon landings to ESA’s Rosetta comet mission, CNSA’s Tiangong space station, and ISRO’s record-breaking achievements, this page gives you a complete, updated list of the world’s most important space agencies with their headquarters, founding years, key missions, and exam-critical facts for confident, focused revision.

1957 Sputnik-1 — Start of Space Age
3 Countries with Independent Human Spaceflight
22 ESA Member States (2026)
5 ISS Partner Agencies

⚡ Quick Facts

Must-Know Facts for Exams
  • NASA (USA), established in 1958, is the world’s largest and most funded space agency — responsible for Apollo Moon landings and the Hubble Space Telescope.
  • Roscosmos (Russia) launched the world’s first satellite (Sputnik-1, 1957) and sent the first human to space (Yuri Gagarin, 1961).
  • ESA (European Space Agency), established in 1975, is the collective space agency of 22 European nations — headquartered in Paris, France.
  • CNSA (China) launched its first astronaut in 2003 and operates the Tiangong space station — making China the 3rd country to independently send humans to space.
  • ISRO (India), established in 1969, is the world’s most cost-effective space agency — famous for Chandrayaan-3’s lunar south pole landing (2023).
⚠️ Common Exam Trap

Only 3 countries have independently sent humans to space (with their own rockets): Russia (1961), USA (1962), China (2003). India (Gaganyaan) will be the 4th — but has not yet done so. ESA has 22 member states — NOT 27 (don’t confuse with the EU). Luna-25 (Russia, 2023) crashed — India’s Chandrayaan-3 succeeded. The UAE’s Hope Mission was the Arab world’s first Mars mission — it orbited Mars but did NOT land. And Roscosmos was established in 1992 — the Soviet space programme goes back to 1955.

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🚀 Space Agencies in the World — Complete List

🔍
# ↕ Agency ↕ Country / Region HQ Founded ↕ Key Missions / Achievements Current Head (2026)
1NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration) USAWashington D.C.1958 Apollo Moon landings; Hubble; Mars rovers (Curiosity, Perseverance); ISS; Artemis programme Jared Isaacman (Administrator, since Dec 2025)
2Roscosmos RussiaMoscow1992 (Soviet prog. from 1955) Sputnik-1 (1957); Gagarin first human (1961); Mir station; ISS partner; Luna-25 (2023, failed) Yuri Borisov
3ESA (European Space Agency) 22 European nationsParis, France1975 Rosetta comet mission; Huygens/Titan; Copernicus; Galileo GPS; Gaia; BepiColombo (Mercury) Josef Aschbacher (Director-General)
4CNSA (China National Space Administration) ChinaBeijing1993 Chang’e Moon missions; Tianwen-1 Mars + Zhurong rover (2021); Tiangong space station; Long March rockets Zhang Kejian
5ISRO (Indian Space Research Organisation) IndiaBengaluru, Karnataka1969 Chandrayaan-3 (first south pole Moon landing, 2023); Mangalyaan; PSLV-C37 (104 satellites); Aditya-L1 V. Narayanan (Chairman, since 2024)
6JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) JapanChofu, Tokyo2003 Hayabusa asteroid sample return; Kaguya Moon orbiter; H-IIA rockets; ISS partner; BepiColombo (with ESA) Hiroshi Yamakawa
7CSA / ASC (Canadian Space Agency) CanadaSaint-Hubert, Quebec1989 Canadarm on Space Shuttle and ISS; SCISAT; Radarsat; contributing to Artemis Gateway Lisa Campbell
8ASI (Italian Space Agency) ItalyRome1988 COSMO-SkyMed radar satellites; ISS contributions; ESA partner missions Teodoro Valente
9CNES (French Space Agency) FranceParis1961 Ariane rockets (with ESA); SPOT satellites; helped develop Arianespace commercial launch company Philippe Baptiste
10DLR (German Aerospace Centre) GermanyCologne1969 ESA partner; GRACE gravity mission (with NASA); Mars missions; DLR remote sensing Anke Kaysser-Pyzalla
11UKSA (UK Space Agency) United KingdomSwindon2010 Supports ESA missions; Skylon spaceplane research; OneWeb satellite support; UK spaceport development Paul Bate
12KARI (Korea Aerospace Research Institute) South KoreaDaejeon1989 Nuri (KSLV-II) rocket; Danuri Moon orbiter (2022); first domestic launch vehicle Dongsun Bang
13UAESA / MBRSC (UAE Space Agency) UAEAbu Dhabi / Dubai2014 Hope Mars Mission (2021) — Arab world’s first interplanetary mission; Rashid Rover (2022, failed landing) Salem AlMarri (MBRSC)
14SUPARCO PakistanKarachi1961 Limited launch capability; PakSAT satellite series; satellite development with China Commodore Syed Hasan Nasir Shah
15NSPO (National Space Organization, Taiwan) TaiwanHsinchu1991 FORMOSAT satellite series; COSMIC weather satellite programme (with NOAA) Various (govt. body)
16INPE (Brazilian Space Research Agency) BrazilSão José dos Campos1961 Amazon monitoring satellites; CBERS (with China); AMAZÔNIA-1; launches from Alcântara Clézio Saldanha
17IN-SPACe (India) IndiaAhmedabad2020 Promotes private sector space activities in India; authorises launches by Skyroot, Agnikul etc. Pawan Goenka
18SpaceX (Space Exploration Technologies — Private) USA (private)Hawthorne, California2002 Falcon 9 (reusable); Starship; Crew Dragon (ISS crew); Starlink (6,000+ internet satellites); NASA Artemis HLS Elon Musk (CEO)
19Blue Origin (Private) USA (private)Kent, Washington2000 New Shepard suborbital; New Glenn orbital rocket; Blue Moon lunar lander Dave Limp (CEO)
20Arianespace (Commercial) France / EuropeÉvry-Courcouronnes, France1980 World’s first commercial launch company; Ariane 5/6 rockets; launches ISRO’s GSAT satellites Stéphane Israël
21ispace (Japan — Private) Japan (private)Tokyo2010 HAKUTO-R lunar lander (2023, crashed); commercial Moon mining vision Takeshi Hakamada (CEO)
22Rocket Lab (Private) USA / New ZealandLong Beach, California2006 Electron rocket; small satellite specialist; Photon space bus; lunar missions for NASA Peter Beck (CEO)
23Soviet Space Programme (Historical) USSR (now Russia)Moscow1955 Sputnik-1 (1957); Laika (1957); Gagarin (1961); Tereshkova — first woman (1963); Leonov spacewalk (1965); Mir; Salyut Historical
24ISS Partnership InternationalDistributed1998 5 partners: NASA, Roscosmos, ESA, JAXA, CSA; continuous human habitation since 2 Nov 2000; deorbit ~2030 N/A (joint)
25ILRS (International Lunar Research Station) China + Russia + partnersBeijing-led2021 (plan) China-Russia Moon base project; rival to NASA’s Artemis; planned for 2030s CNSA / Roscosmos
No agencies match your filter.

🏆 Space Race Firsts — Most Tested in Exams

Milestone Who Achieved It Date Key Detail
First artificial satelliteUSSR (Roscosmos)4 Oct 1957Sputnik-1; “Sputnik” = fellow traveller in Russian
First living creature in spaceUSSRNov 1957Laika the dog; one-way mission
First human in spaceUSSR (Yuri Gagarin)12 Apr 1961Vostok-1; 12 April = Cosmonautics Day / Yuri’s Night
First American in spaceUSA (Alan Shepard)5 May 1961Suborbital flight; first to orbit = John Glenn (1962)
First woman in spaceUSSR (Valentina Tereshkova)16 Jun 1963Vostok-6; first woman to orbit Earth
First spacewalk (EVA)USSR (Alexei Leonov)18 Mar 1965Outside Voskhod-2 for 12 minutes
First humans on the MoonUSA / NASA (Neil Armstrong)20 Jul 1969Apollo 11; “One small step…”
First space stationUSSR (Salyut-1)1971Followed by Mir (1986–2001); ISS (1998–present)
First Chinese astronautChina / CNSA (Yang Liwei)Oct 2003Shenzhou-5; China = 3rd country for independent human spaceflight
First private ISS crew missionSpaceX Crew Dragon2020Ended US dependence on Russia’s Soyuz rocket

🛰️ Recent Space Milestones (2020–2026)

YearMissionAgencySignificance
2020SpaceX Crew DragonSpaceX / NASAFirst commercial crew to ISS; ended US dependence on Soyuz
2021Hope Mars MissionUAE (MBRSC)Arab world’s first Mars orbiter; entered Mars orbit Feb 2021
2021Tianwen-1 + ZhurongCNSA (China)China’s first Mars landing; Zhurong rover deployed
2022Tiangong Space StationCNSA (China)China’s own space station; third after Mir and ISS
2022Danuri Moon OrbiterKARI (South Korea)South Korea’s first Moon mission
2022Artemis INASAUncrewed Moon circumnavigation; first SLS launch
2023Chandrayaan-3ISRO (India)First soft landing near Moon’s south pole (23 Aug 2023 = National Space Day)
2023Luna-25Roscosmos (Russia)Crashed — failed before Chandrayaan-3 could land
2023HAKUTO-Rispace (Japan, private)First private Moon landing attempt — crashed
2023Aditya-L1ISRO (India)India’s first solar observatory; at Sun-Earth L1 point

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📝 Key Notes & Memory Tips

Note 1 — The Space Race Context: Key Firsts
  • First satellite: Sputnik-1 (USSR, 4 October 1957)
  • First living creature in space: Laika the dog (USSR, 1957)
  • First human in space: Yuri Gagarin (USSR, 12 April 1961) — Cosmonautics Day
  • First American in space: Alan Shepard (May 1961) — first to orbit: John Glenn (1962)
  • First woman in space: Valentina Tereshkova (USSR, 1963)
  • First spacewalk: Alexei Leonov (USSR, 1965)
  • First human on the Moon: Neil Armstrong (USA/NASA, 20 July 1969, Apollo 11)
  • First commercial ISS crew: SpaceX Crew Dragon (2020)
Note 2 — Countries with Independent Human Spaceflight

Only 3 countries have independently sent humans to space using their own rockets:

  • 1. USSR/Russia — Yuri Gagarin, Vostok-1, 12 April 1961
  • 2. USA — John Glenn (orbital), Friendship 7, 20 February 1962
  • 3. China — Yang Liwei, Shenzhou-5, October 2003

India (Gaganyaan, planned 2025–26) will become the 4th. Other countries’ astronauts have flown to space, but on Russian Soyuz or US rockets — not their own vehicles.

Note 3 — ESA: The Collective European Agency

ESA has 22 member states (2026) — not the same as the EU’s 27. Headquarters: Paris, France; main technical centre: ESTEC (Noordwijk, Netherlands); launch site: Guiana Space Centre, Kourou, French Guiana (near the equator — ideal for launches). Notable missions: Rosetta (first to orbit and land on a comet, 2014); Galileo (European GPS); Huygens probe (Titan); Gaia (stellar mapping); BepiColombo (Mercury mission, joint with JAXA). Arianespace (commercial entity) launches ESA and commercial satellites using Ariane rockets.

Note 4 — Recent Space Milestones (High-Priority Current Affairs)
  • SpaceX Crew Dragon (2020): First commercial crew to ISS — ended US dependence on Soyuz
  • UAE Hope Mission (2021): Arab world’s first Mars orbiter
  • CNSA Tianwen-1 + Zhurong (2021): China’s first Mars landing
  • Tiangong (2022–present): China’s own space station — third after Mir and ISS
  • Chandrayaan-3 (India, 23 August 2023): First south pole Moon landing = National Space Day
  • Luna-25 (Russia, 2023): Crashed — failed before Chandrayaan-3 could land
  • Artemis I (NASA, 2022): Uncrewed Moon circumnavigation — first SLS launch
Note 5 — SpaceX’s Revolutionary Impact

SpaceX (founded by Elon Musk, 2002) transformed the global space industry: first private company to reach the ISS (2012), first reusable orbital rocket (Falcon 9, 2015 landing), Starlink constellation (6,000+ LEO satellites for broadband), Crew Dragon transporting NASA astronauts since 2020, and Starship — the world’s most powerful rocket for Moon/Mars missions. SpaceX’s model inspired India’s IN-SPACe framework and Indian private startups (Skyroot Aerospace, Agnikul Cosmos).

🧠 Mnemonics

Space Race Firsts: “Sputnik Laika Gagarin Glenn Tereshkova Armstrong”
S = Sputnik (first satellite, 1957) | L = Laika (first animal, 1957) | G = Gagarin (first human, 1961) | G = Glenn (first American orbit, 1962) | T = Tereshkova (first woman, 1963) | A = Armstrong (first Moon, 1969)

Countries with Independent Human Spaceflight: “RUC-I”
R = Russia (1961) | U = USA (1962) | C = China (2003) | I = India (planned, Gaganyaan)

ISS 5 Partners: “NASA Roscosmos ESA JAXA CSA”

🃏 Flashcards

Flashcards — Space Agencies in the World

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Question
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Card 1 of 5

🧩 Practice Quiz

Space Agencies in the World — MCQ Quiz

5 questions · Answer all · Check your score

Question 1 of 5
Which country launched the world’s first artificial satellite, and what was it called?
A. USA — Explorer-1
B. USSR — Sputnik-1
C. France — Astérix
D. UK — Ariel-1
✓ Explanation

The USSR (Soviet Union) launched Sputnik-1, the world’s first artificial satellite, on 4 October 1957. This marked the beginning of the Space Age and triggered the Space Race between the USA and USSR. The word “Sputnik” means “fellow traveller” or “satellite” in Russian. The USA’s Explorer-1 followed in January 1958.

Question 2 of 5
Which is the only Arab country to successfully send a mission to Mars, and what was the mission called?
A. Saudi Arabia — Saudi Mars Explorer
B. Egypt — Nile Mars Mission
C. UAE — Hope Mars Mission (Al-Amal)
D. Qatar — Red Planet Probe
✓ Explanation

The UAE successfully launched the Hope Mars Mission (Al-Amal) in 2020, which entered Mars orbit in February 2021 — the Arab world’s first successful interplanetary mission. It was developed by the Mohammed Bin Rashid Space Centre (MBRSC) in Dubai and launched on a Japanese H-IIA rocket. Note: it orbited Mars — it did NOT land.

Question 3 of 5
How many countries have independently sent humans to space using their own rockets, and which are they?
A. 2 — USA and Russia
B. 3 — Russia, USA, and China
C. 4 — Russia, USA, China, and India
D. 5 — Russia, USA, China, India, and Japan
✓ Explanation

Only 3 countries have independently launched humans into space using their own rockets — the USSR/Russia (Yuri Gagarin, 1961), the USA (John Glenn orbit, 1962), and China (Yang Liwei, 2003). India is working on becoming the 4th with Gaganyaan (planned 2025–26). Other nations’ astronauts have flown to space, but on Russian or American rockets.

Question 4 of 5
ESA (European Space Agency) is headquartered in which city and currently has how many member states?
A. Brussels, Belgium — 27 members
B. Paris, France — 22 members
C. Berlin, Germany — 19 members
D. Geneva, Switzerland — 25 members
✓ Explanation

The European Space Agency (ESA) is headquartered in Paris, France. As of 2026, ESA has 22 member states — note that ESA membership is not the same as EU membership. ESA’s main technical facility is ESTEC in Noordwijk, Netherlands, and its launches are conducted from the Guiana Space Centre in Kourou, French Guiana, near the equator.

Question 5 of 5
SpaceX’s Starlink programme is associated with which of the following?
A. A crewed mission to the International Space Station
B. A global satellite-based broadband internet constellation
C. A Mars colonisation spacecraft under development
D. A lunar lander for NASA’s Artemis programme
✓ Explanation

SpaceX’s Starlink is a global satellite internet constellation — over 6,000 low Earth orbit satellites providing high-speed broadband internet. It is separate from Crew Dragon (ISS crew transport), Starship (deep space vehicle), and Starship’s HLS variant (NASA Artemis lunar lander). Starlink has also been used in conflict zones (Ukraine) as a communications lifeline.

✅ Key Takeaways

Remember These for Your Exam
1
NASA (USA, 1958) = world’s largest/most funded space agency. Roscosmos (Russia, 1992) = heir to Soviet programme (from 1955); Sputnik-1 (1957), Gagarin (1961). ESA (Europe, 1975) = 22 member states; HQ Paris; launches from Kourou, French Guiana.
2
Only 3 countries independently sent humans to space: Russia (Gagarin, 1961) → USA (Glenn, 1962) → China (Yang Liwei, 2003). India (Gaganyaan, ~2025–26) will be the 4th. Mnemonic: RUC-I.
3
Space Race Firsts mnemonic: “Sputnik Laika Gagarin Glenn Tereshkova Armstrong” — first satellite (1957) → first animal (1957) → first human (1961) → first American orbit (1962) → first woman (1963) → first Moon landing (1969).
4
ISS partners (5): NASA + Roscosmos + ESA + JAXA + CSA. Continuous human habitation since 2 November 2000. Deorbit planned ~2030. CNSA’s Tiangong = China’s own space station (3rd after Mir and ISS).
5
UAE Hope Mission (2021) = Arab world’s first Mars orbiter (orbited, did not land). Chandrayaan-3 (India, 23 Aug 2023) = first south pole Moon landing. Luna-25 (Russia, 2023) = crashed before Chandrayaan-3 could land. JAXA’s Hayabusa = asteroid sample return.
6
SpaceX (Elon Musk, 2002): reusable Falcon 9 + Crew Dragon (ISS) + Starlink (6,000+ internet satellites) + Starship (Moon/Mars). Arianespace (France, 1980) = world’s first commercial launch company. ILRS (China-Russia, planned) = rival Moon base to NASA’s Artemis programme.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

FAQs — Space Agencies in the World
Which is the world’s largest space agency?

NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration) of the United States is generally the world’s largest and most funded space agency, with an annual budget of approximately $25 billion. Established on 29 July 1958 in response to the Soviet Sputnik launch, NASA’s achievements include the Apollo Moon landings (1969–1972), the Hubble Space Telescope, Mars rovers Curiosity and Perseverance, the ISS partnership, and the ongoing Artemis programme aimed at returning humans to the Moon and eventually Mars.

What are the world’s most significant space milestones?

Key milestones include: Sputnik-1 (USSR, 1957) as the first artificial satellite; Yuri Gagarin (USSR, 12 April 1961) as the first human in space; Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin (USA, 20 July 1969) on the Moon; the ISS beginning continuous habitation in November 2000; China’s Yang Liwei in 2003; SpaceX Crew Dragon (2020) as the first private ISS crew mission; the UAE’s Hope Mars orbiter (2021); India’s Chandrayaan-3 south pole Moon landing (23 August 2023); and the NASA Artemis programme targeting Moon return in the mid-2020s.

What is the International Space Station (ISS) and who manages it?

The International Space Station (ISS) is a modular space station in low Earth orbit at approximately 400 km altitude. It has been continuously inhabited by rotating crews since 2 November 2000 — the longest-running crewed space habitat in history. The ISS is a joint project of five agencies: NASA (USA), Roscosmos (Russia), ESA (Europe), JAXA (Japan), and CSA (Canada). It serves as a research laboratory for microgravity science, medicine, astronomy, and Earth observation. The ISS is expected to be deorbited around 2030, with NASA planning to hand over low Earth orbit habitation to commercial stations.

Why are space agencies important for competitive exams?

Space agencies are tested in UPSC Prelims (Science & Technology, International Relations, Current Affairs), SSC CGL, Banking General Awareness, Defence exams (NDA, CDS), and all State PSC papers. Key tested facts: first satellite (Sputnik-1, USSR, 1957), first human (Gagarin, USSR, 1961), first Moon landing (Apollo 11, NASA, 1969), 3 countries with independent human spaceflight (Russia, USA, China), ESA’s member count and HQ (Paris, 22 members), JAXA’s Hayabusa mission, CNSA’s Tiangong space station, UAE’s Hope Mars Mission, SpaceX’s commercial revolution (reusable rockets, Starlink, Crew Dragon), and ISRO’s recent achievements (Chandrayaan-3, 2023). The ongoing Artemis programme and the China-Russia ILRS rival Moon base are the highest-priority current affairs topics.

Relevant For
UPSC Prelims UPSC Mains GS-III SSC CGL NDA / CDS IBPS PO / Clerk Railways RRB State PSC SBI PO / Clerk

Prashant Chadha

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