§ 8.01-227.9.Civil immunity for space flight entities.
Chapter 3. Actions · Article 24. Space Flight Liability and Immunity Act · Last amended 2007 · Last verified July 16, 2026
Full Text of § 8.01-227.9
Plain-English Summary
Subsection A grants the core immunity: a space flight entity is not liable for a participant injury resulting from the risks of space flight activities, so long as the participant was informed of those risks as federal law and this article require, and gave informed, voluntary consent to take part. The bar reaches beyond the participant — no representative, including heirs, administrators, executors, assignees, next of kin, or the participant’s estate, and no one else attempting to bring a claim on the participant’s behalf, may maintain an action or recover for that injury.
Subsection B preserves liability in two situations: when the entity commits an act or omission amounting to gross negligence that shows willful or wanton disregard for the participant’s safety and proximately causes the injury, or when the entity intentionally causes the injury. Ordinary negligence by the entity is immune; reckless disregard or deliberate harm is not.
Subsection C makes clear that this immunity supplements rather than replaces whatever other legal limitations on liability a space flight entity might already have available.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a participant sue a space flight company for an injury caused by the ordinary risks of spaceflight?
Generally no. Section 8.01-227.9 makes a space flight entity immune from liability for a participant injury caused by the risks of space flight activities, provided informed consent was given.
What has to happen before this immunity applies?
The participant must have been informed of the risks of space flight activities as federal law and this article require, and must have given informed, voluntary consent to participate.
When does the immunity not apply?
When the space flight entity commits gross negligence evidencing willful or wanton disregard for the participant’s safety that proximately causes the injury, or when it intentionally causes the injury.
Who besides the participant is barred from suing?
The participant’s representatives — heirs, administrators, executors, assignees, next of kin, and the participant’s estate — along with anyone else attempting to bring a claim on the participant’s behalf.
Does this immunity replace other legal defenses available to a space flight entity?
No. Subsection C states that the limitation on liability is in addition to any other limitation of legal liability otherwise provided by law.
Amendment History
2007, c. 893.