Payload fraction

Measure of aircraft/spacecraft efficiency


title: "Payload fraction" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["astrodynamics", "aerospace-engineering"] description: "Measure of aircraft/spacecraft efficiency" topic_path: "engineering" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Payload_fraction" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Measure of aircraft/spacecraft efficiency ::

In aerospace engineering, payload fraction is a common term used to characterize the efficiency of a particular design. The payload fraction is the quotient of the payload mass and the total vehicle mass at the start of its journey. It is a function of specific impulse, propellant mass fraction and the structural coefficient. In aircraft, loading less than full fuel for shorter trips is standard practice to reduce weight and fuel consumption. For this reason, the useful load fraction calculates a similar number, but it is based on the combined weight of the payload and fuel together in relation to the total weight.

Propeller-driven airliners had useful load fractions on the order of 25–35%. Modern jet airliners have considerably higher useful load fractions, on the order of 45–55%.

For orbital rockets the payload fraction is between 1% and 5%, while the useful load fraction is perhaps 90%.

Examples

::data[format=table]

VehicleLiftoff MassPayload Mass to LEOMass ratioPayload fraction
Falcon 9 Block 5549,054 kg + 22,800 kg22,800 kg25.13.99%
Proton-M705,000 kg + 23,000 kg23,000 kg31.73.16%
Long March 3B/E458,970 kg + 11,500 kg11,500 kg40.92.44%
Ariane 6860,000 kg + 21,500 kg21,500 kg41.02.44%
Electron13,000 kg + 300 kg300 kg44.32.26%
SpaceX Starship200,000 kg + 5,000,000 kg200,000 kg263.85%
title=SOYUZ-2 Launch Vehicle / Power Characteristicsurl=http://en.samspace.ru/products/launch_vehicles/rn_soyuz_2/access-date=2015-08-20publisher=JSC SRC Progress}}312,000 kg + 8,200 kg
Space Shuttle2,030,000 kg27,500 kg73.81.35%
author=Richard W. Orloftitle=Apollo by the Numbersurl=https://www.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/sp-4029.pdfdate=2000publisher=NASA
Apollo 17 Lunar Module Descent stage36,362 lb10,542.8 lb (LLO to Moon)3.4529.0%
Apollo 17 Lunar Module Ascent stage10,542.8 lb552.1 lb (Moon to LLO)19.15.24%
V-212,805 kg1,000 kg (320 km distance suborbital)12.87.81%
::

For payload fractions and fuel fractions in aviation, see Fuel Fraction.

References

References

  1. Musk, Elon. (2024-03-15). "Max Payload of Starship V1".
  2. "SOYUZ-2 Launch Vehicle / Power Characteristics". [[Progress State Research and Production Rocket Space Center.
  3. Richard W. Orlof. (2000). "Apollo by the Numbers". NASA.
  4. "V-2".

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astrodynamicsaerospace-engineering