FAA Ends Astronaut Wings Program

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Key Takeaways:

  • The FAA is discontinuing its commercial astronaut "wings" program starting in the New Year, stating it has served its purpose of promoting the nascent industry.
  • Jeff Bezos, Richard Branson, William Shatner, and about a dozen others will be among the final recipients of the official "commercial space astronaut" designation and wings.
  • Future space tourists, who pay for rides, will no longer receive wings but will instead be listed on an FAA website.
  • Initially requiring a 50-mile altitude, the FAA briefly tightened qualifications post-Bezos's flight to require flight contribution, but has now abandoned these restrictions, ensuring all 2021 applicants who experienced weightlessness will receive their wings.
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The FAA says its astronaut “wings” program has served its purpose and it will stop handing out the mementoes in the New Year. But that also means Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Virgin Galactic head Sir Richard Branson and Star Trek’s Capt. Kirk, actor William Shatner, along with about a dozen others, will each be officially proclaimed as a “commercial space astronaut.” From now on, those who hitch a $200,000-plus ride on a space tourism launch will be listed on a website. 

The wings program was launched in 2004 to promote the nascent commercial launch industry and the first recipient was Scaled Composites’ test pilot Mike Melvill, who rode SpaceShipOne to the edge of space in 2004. To qualify for the pin, one had to reach 50 miles in altitude. Just after Bezos launched with his brother and some Amazon employees in and autonomously operated Blue Origin in July, the FAA decided to tighten the qualifications for the pin by requiring that those receiving it actually do something to contribute to the safe completion of the flight (other than pay for it). In abandoning the program altogether, the FAA has also thrown out those restrictions and anyone who got weightless in 2021 and applied for the wings will get them.

Russ Niles

Russ Niles is Editor-in-Chief of AVweb. He has been a pilot for 30 years and joined AVweb 22 years ago. He and his wife Marni live in southern British Columbia where they also operate a small winery.
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