List of Indian satellites


This list covers most artificial satellites built in and operated by the Republic of India. India has been successfully launching satellites of various types from 1975. Apart from Indian rockets, these satellites have been launched from various vehicles, including American, Russian and European rockets sometimes as well. The organisation responsible for India's space program is Indian Space Research Organisation and it shoulders the bulk of the responsibility of designing, building, launching and operating these satellites.

Legend

This is a list of Indian satellites and orbital space crafts, both operated by the Indian government or private entities. All satellite launches marked successful have completed at least one full orbital flight.
;Mission status/type legend:

1970s

Indian space missions began in the 1970s, with Soviet assistance in launching the first two satellites.
In case of discrepancy in data between sources, and is taken as the source of truth.
Orbital Longitude is applicable only for Geostationary and Geosynchronous satellites.

1980s

India had three continuous successful satellite launches from its first generation rocket SLV. ISRO had two running projects for next generation rockets based on SLV:
ISRO did not have enough funds to run both projects simultaneously. Initial setbacks complexity led ISRO to terminate ASLV in just initial flights and focus on PSLV. Technologies to launch geostationary satellites arrived only in 2000s.
In case of discrepancy in data between sources, and is taken as the source of truth.
Orbital Longitude is applicable only for Geostationary and Geosynchronous satellites.

1990s

From this decade on, PSLV arrived that allowed India to become self-reliant in launching most of its remote sensing satellites. However, for heavy geostationary systems, India continued to remain dependent on Europe entirely. Capability to launch geostationary satellites will arrive in next decade.
In case of discrepancy in data between sources, and is taken as the source of truth.
Orbital Longitude is applicable only for Geostationary and Geosynchronous satellites.

2000s

ISRO's workhorse, the PSLV, became the mainstay for successful launches of indigenous satellites from India during this decade. India successfully launched 11 geostationary or geosynchronous satellites during this period, which was equal to the total number of similar launches in the previous 2 decades put together. India's first extra terrestrial mission was also successfully executed during this period.
In case of discrepancy in data between sources, and is taken as the source of truth.
Orbital Longitude is applicable only for Geostationary and Geosynchronous satellites.
§ All orbital data related to Chandrayaan-1 is for its lunar orbit only.

2010s

While India had to face failure in launching relatively heavier satellites early on in the decade, it did end up launching 27 geosynchronous/geostationary satellites. In 2010s, it managed to launch most of its geosynchronous/geostationary satellites successfully on its own. This period also saw India enter the exclusive club of nations capable of launching probes to Mars. ISRO also improved upon its student/university outreach by launching multiple pico-, nano- and mini-satellites from various Indian universities. This period was also marked by multiple bilateral collaborations with foreign universities and research organizations. The same decade saw completion of NAVIC, India's regional navigation system.
Increased subcontracting to private vendors across the nation improved launch frequency by a factor of more than 2. India was able to fix glitches and operationalise its Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle with an indigenous upper stage and operationalise next generation launch vehicle GSLV Mk III with nearly double payload capacity, enabled the country to launch nearly all of its communication satellites. India launched its delayed Moon mission Chandrayaan-2 in 2019 which however failed to conduct soft landing on lunar surface. India also demonstrated capability to destroy "enemy" satellites in orbit. Increased application of India's space capabilities in strengthening its national security was observed.
Substantial increase in budget over the decade, increased payload capacity with increased reliability, increased launch frequency and many "firsts" in this decade had made Indian space program far more visible to world with significant coverage from international media and its hyphenation with leading spacefaring nations. The last launch of the decade marked with completion of 50 launches of PSLV rocket.
In case of discrepancy in data between sources, and is taken as the source of truth.
Orbital Longitude is applicable only for Geostationary and Geosynchronous satellites.
§ All orbital data related to Mangalyaan-1 is for its Martian orbit only.
§ All orbital data related to Chandrayaan-2 is for its lunar orbit only.

2020s

ISRO aims to conduct 50 launches between 2020 and 2024. Besides increasing the launch frequency to 12+ an year, a number of extraterrestrial exploration missions including Aditya L1, Chandrayaan-3, Lunar Polar Exploration Mission, Shukrayaan-1 and Mars Orbiter Mission 2 are planned for this decade. A mission to Jupiter after Shukrayaan and a mission to explore beyond solar system have also been proposed. PSLV is expected to undergo its 100th flight mission in middle of the decade. India's new low cost Small Satellite Launch Vehicle is expected to make its maiden flight in January 2020 while SCE-200 which is expected to be the powerplant of India's upcoming heavy and super heavy launch systems, is expected to make first flight sometimes in middle of the decade. Conducting an orbital human spaceflight before August 2022 is the highest priority for the agency while the long term goals of the programme include manned space stations and crewed lunar landing.

Forthcoming

Following table lists Indian satellites in development and due for launch in near future.
SatelliteDate plannedLaunch vehicleLaunch SiteTypeOrbitRef
GISAT-1TBD GSLV Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshSynthetic aperture earth imaging radarGEO
RISAT-2BR2April 2020 PSLV C-49 Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshSynthetic aperture earth imaging radarSSO
RISAT-1A2020 PSLV C-50 Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshSynthetic aperture earth imaging radarSSO
GSAT-20June 2020 GSLV Mk III Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshCommunications satelliteGEO
GISAT-2August 2020 GSLV MkII Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshMultispectral and hyperspectral earth imaging satelliteGEO
Aditya-L1Late 2020 PSLV-XL C?? Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshSolar coronal observation spacecraftHalo orbit
Oceansat-32020 PSLV Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshOcean Colour Monitoring) OCM satelliteSSO
GSAT-322020 GSLV MkII Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshCommunications satelliteGEO
SPADEX x 22020 PSLV Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshDemonstration of rendezvous space docking and berthing of spacecraftLEO
GSAT-7R2020 GSLV MkII Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshMilitary Communications satelliteGEO
GSAT-7C2020 GSLV MkII Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshMilitary Communications satelliteGEO
DRSS-12020 GSLV Mk III Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshData Relay and satellite tracking systemGEO
DRSS-2TBD GSLV Mk III Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshData Relay and satellite tracking systemGEO
AstroSat-2Late 2020 PSLV Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshSpace telescopeLEO
X-ray Polarimeter Satellite2021 PSLV Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshSpace observatoryLEO
NISARSeptember 2022 GSLV MkII Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshSynthetic aperture radar on earth observation satelliteGEO
INSAT 3DSSeptember 2022 GSLV MkII Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshMilitary Communications satelliteGEO
Shukrayaan-12023 GSLV MkII Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshVenus explorationCytherion
Lunar Polar Exploration Mission2024 H3 LA-Y, TanegashimaLunar explorationSelenocentric
Mangalyaan 22024 GSLV MkII Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshMars explorationMartian
Disturbed and quiet type Ionosphere System at High Altitude x 22024–25 PSLV Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra PradeshAeronomy satelliteLEO
GSAT-22TBDTBDTBDCommunications satelliteGEO
GSAT-23TBDTBDTBDCommunications satelliteGEO
GSAT-24TBDTBDTBDCommunications satelliteGEO

Launch statistics

Following statistics are on the basis of number of satellites launched that were built-in or were to be operated by India. It does not account number of launch vehicles used or special orbital missions like re-entry that aren't taken into account as satellites. It also does not account foreign satellites launched by India.

Decade wise

The following bar chart lists number of Indian satellites launched decade-wise.

Country wise

The following bar chart lists the number of satellites launched based on the origin of the launch vehicle

Other orbital and suborbital spacecrafts

Overall launch statistics for Indian launch systems

Accounts all ISRO orbital missions involving Indian launch systems, may entirely consist of commercial payloads from foreign customers. Operational decade has been highlighted in green.