Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21 Fishbed — History, Specs & Stories

Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21 Fishbed
Aircraft MuseumInterceptorMiG-21

Mikojan-Gurevič MiG-21
“Fishbed”

The most-produced supersonic aircraft in history — a cheap, rugged Soviet dart that armed some 60 air forces, fought in nearly every Cold War proxy conflict, and remains one of the very few fighters a civilian can still fly supersonic today.

~11,000+Built — most of any supersonic jet
Mach 2.05Top speed
~60Nations that flew it
1959–2025Years in frontline service
Photo: Łukasz Golowanow, Konflikty.pl · Attribution
RoleLightweight interceptor & fighterEraCold War – presentMotorTumansky R-25-300OriginUSSR · Mikoyan-GurevichStatusFlyable with MiGFlugFly a real MiG-21 yourself
Příběh

Eleven thousand, and counting

The MiG-21 was born from the air-combat lessons of Korea, where subsonic MiG-15s and F-86 Sabres taught Soviet designers that the next fighter had to be light, supersonic, and simple enough to build in enormous numbers. After a run of experimental prototypes exploring swept versus delta wings, the delta won. The definitive aircraft first flew in the mid-1950s and entered Soviet service around 1959 as a clear-weather point-defence interceptor — a “MiG-15 for the supersonic age.”

Its defining claim is scale. It is the most-produced supersonic aircraft in history and the most-produced jet fighter of the post-war era: cross-checked totals cluster above 11,000, counting Soviet, Czechoslovak and Indian licence-built airframes. Add China’s reverse-engineered Chengdu J-7/F-7 — roughly 2,400 more, a line that outlived the Soviet original — and the Fishbed family becomes the single most common fast jet the world has ever known.

No aircraft has been so widely shared, so widely flown, or so widely fought. Around 60 nations put it on their flight lines, and it fired shots in nearly every Cold War proxy war — over the Red River Delta against American Phantoms, over Sinai against Israeli Mirages, over Kashmir against Pakistani jets. India flew it for 62 years, retiring its last MiG-21 only in September 2025. And uniquely among Cold War fighters, you can still climb into one and go supersonic yourself.

The same silver dart wore North Vietnamese, Egyptian, Indian, Cuban, Finnish and East German colours — genuinely the world’s fighter.The People’s Supersonic Fighter — why the MiG-21 is everywhere
01The MiG-21’s numbers: how a cheap delta became the most-produced supersonic jet ever

Production totals for the MiG-21 are so large they are hard to pin down precisely — credible tallies run from about 11,000 to nearly 12,000. The Soviet Union built roughly 10,645 between 1959 and 1985; Czechoslovakia added about 194; and India’s HAL built around 650–660 under licence. China’s Chengdu J-7 / F-7 — a reverse-engineered derivative — contributed roughly 2,400 more, in production right up to 2013.

That scale is the whole story. A jet cheap enough to build by the thousand and simple enough to maintain from a rough forward strip could be sold to almost anyone, which is exactly why it ended up in some 60 air forces on every inhabited continent. The MiG-21 didn’t win the Cold War in the sky — it simply was the Cold War in the sky, more than any other aircraft.


Design & Engineering

What makes it special

01

The tailed delta wing

The Fishbed’s signature is a thin tailed delta: a low-drag delta wing for supersonic dash and high-altitude interception, plus a conventional tailplane that pure-delta rivals like the Mirage III left off. The tail restored pitch control and let the jet use flaps — taming the delta’s brutal landing speeds and making a Mach-2 airframe genuinely flyable by conscript-trained pilots.

02

Ruthless simplicity

The design philosophy was rugged, cheap and mass-producible: few systems, tough landing gear, tolerance for rough airstrips, and easy field maintenance. That minimalism is why more than 11,000 could be built and why 60 nations — many with little infrastructure — could afford and sustain it. A triumph of “good enough, by the thousand” over gold-plated complexity.

03

Tumansky power — and the range penalty

The definitive MiG-21bis carried the Tumansky R-25-300 afterburning turbojet — around 70 kN in reheat, enough for Mach 2.05 and a ferocious climb. The trade-off was brutal: tiny internal fuel gave a combat radius of only about 370 km, earning the MiG-21 a reputation as a superb short-range knife-fighter with almost no legs.

02The MiG-21’s delta: why it kept the tail the Mirage threw away

A pure delta wing is wonderful at supersonic speed and terrible at low speed: it has to land fast and nose-high, and it can’t easily carry trailing-edge flaps. France’s Mirage III accepted those penalties. Mikoyan-Gurevich did not — they bolted a conventional horizontal tailplane behind the delta. That tail gave back crisp pitch control and allowed proper flaps, cutting approach speeds to something a mass-conscript air force could handle safely. It is the single design choice that made a Mach-2 interceptor buildable by the thousand and flyable by the many.

03The MiG-21’s short legs: a knife-fighter that couldn’t stay long

Everything about the MiG-21 was optimised for a fast climb, a supersonic dash and a quick kill — not endurance. Its internal fuel was tiny, giving a combat radius of only around 370 km even in the later bis. Pilots learned to fight in short, violent bursts and get home. It made the Fishbed a superb close-in interceptor scrambled against an incoming raid, and a poor choice for anything that needed to loiter or reach out — the exact opposite trade-off from its stablemate the MiG-25.


Technické údaje

Full specifications

Airframe & Performance

Posádka
1 (two-seat trainers exist)
Délka
~15.8 m (incl. pitot)
Rozpětí křídel
7.15 m
Výška
~4.1 m
Max takeoff weight
~10,400 kg
Max speed
Mach 2.05 · ~2,175 km/h
Servisní strop
~17,800 m
Bojový rádius
~370 km
Ferry range
~1,200 km with tanks

Propulsion & Systems

Motor
Tumansky R-25-300 (bis)
Tah
~40 kN dry / ~70 kN afterburner
Cannon
1 × 23 mm GSh-23L
Missiles
R-3 (K-13), R-60 AAMs
First flight
1955–56
Built
~11,000+ (incl. licence)
Unit cost
~$2–3 million (estimate)
Cost per flight hour
No reliable public figure
04The MiG-21’s operating costs: the cheap supersonic fighter

Low cost was the entire point of the MiG-21 — it is precisely what allowed more than 11,000 to be built and 60 nations to afford them. But firm dollar figures do not reliably exist: it was a Soviet state product, and export prices varied enormously by variant, year and buyer. Period estimates for export models circulate in the low single-digit millions of US dollars, but treat these as unverified secondary figures. No credible cost-per-flight-hour number exists in open sources either. What is certain is the comparison: where a contemporary Western interceptor cost a fortune, the Fishbed was built and sold like a rifle.


Timeline

Seventy years of the Fishbed

1955–56

First flight

The definitive delta-winged prototype flies, after a run of experimental Ye-series aircraft testing swept versus delta wings.

1956

Public debut

The new fighter is shown to the world at the Tushino air display near Moscow.

1959–60

Enters service

The MiG-21 joins the Soviet Air Force as a clear-weather supersonic point-defence interceptor.

1964

India adopts it

The Indian Air Force begins its 62-year relationship with the type — the longest of any operator.

Mid-1960s

The Chinese copy

China reverse-engineers the MiG-21 into the Chengdu J-7/F-7 — a line that will build ~2,400 aircraft into 2013.

1966+

Combat over Vietnam

North Vietnamese MiG-21s begin hit-and-run supersonic passes against US F-4s and F-105s.

1971

Decisive over Dacca

IAF MiG-21FLs win air superiority in the Indo-Pakistani War and fly the pinpoint strike on the Governor’s House in Dacca.

1972

The definitive bis

The MiG-21bis, with the R-25-300 engine, enters production as the final major variant.

1985

Soviet production ends

After ~10,645 built, the Soviet MiG-21 line closes — but the type flies on for four more decades.

2025

India retires the last

The Indian Air Force flies its final MiG-21 sortie in September 2025, closing the Soviet-built Fishbed era after ~66 years.

2026

Supersonic flights restart

MiGFlug restarts civilian supersonic MiG-21 flight experiences — once again the only way for a civilian to break the sound barrier.


Stories & Eyewitnesses

From the flight line: twelve Fishbed stories

A rival’s tribute

“The best flying job in the world”

US ace Robin Olds reportedly said the best flying job on Earth would be MiG-21 pilot.

Read the full story
American triple-ace Robin Olds — 12 kills in World War II and 4 more over Vietnam — is often quoted as saying that the best flying job in the world would have been that of a MiG-21 pilot. Coming from one of the Fishbed’s deadliest adversaries, it is a striking tribute to how sweet the little delta was to fly.
Cold War espionage

Operation Diamond — the stolen MiG

In 1966 Israel’s Mossad persuaded an Iraqi pilot to defect with his MiG-21.

Read the full story
In one of the Cold War’s great intelligence coups, Israel’s Mossad reportedly persuaded a disaffected Iraqi pilot to defect and fly his MiG-21 to Israel in 1966, in exchange for money and citizenship. The intact jet — marked “007” — let Western analysts study the Soviet fighter in detail, and it is displayed today at the Israeli Air Force Museum at Hatzerim.
Vietnam

The deadliest interceptor over Hanoi

North Vietnam’s MiG-21s bled US strike packages with supersonic hit-and-run passes.

Read the full story
Over the Red River Delta, small numbers of MiG-21s inflicted damage far out of proportion to their numbers, diving out of the sun on heavily-laden American strike formations and vanishing before the escorts could react. Kill tallies are fiercely contested between Vietnamese and US records, but the Fishbed’s reputation as a lethal ambush interceptor was made here. The top MiG-21 ace, Nguyễn Văn Cốc, is credited with around nine victories.
The legend

“Colonel Toon” — the ace who may never have existed

A mythical North Vietnamese ace supposedly downed in 1972 — probably a composite.

Read the full story
US Navy legend tells of “Colonel Toon” (or Tomb), a North Vietnamese super-ace finally shot down by Randy “Duke” Cunningham on 10 May 1972. Most researchers now believe “Toon” never existed as a single man — the myth was stitched together from the exploits of several pilots. It endures as one of aviation’s great campfire stories.
Numbers

More than eleven thousand

No supersonic aircraft has ever been built in greater numbers.

Read the full story
Cross-checked production totals put the MiG-21 above 11,000 airframes — more than any other supersonic aircraft in history. Add the ~2,400 Chinese J-7/F-7 derivatives and the Fishbed family becomes the most common fast jet ever to fly. It is a number no Western fighter comes close to.
Global reach

Sixty flags on one airframe

From Finland to Cuba to Vietnam, roughly 60 nations flew the MiG-21.

Read the full story
Few machines have ever been so universal. The same basic aircraft served in the markings of NATO-neighbour Finland, communist Cuba, non-aligned India, Warsaw-Pact East Germany and dozens more — an export spread unmatched by any other supersonic fighter. To trace the MiG-21’s operators is to draw a map of the entire Cold War world.
Indie

The long, hard love affair

India flew the MiG-21 for 62 years — and mourned it at the end.

Read the full story
No country flew the Fishbed longer or more intensely than India, whose long service record also came with a heavy accident toll that earned the type a grim nickname in the press. Yet when the Indian Air Force retired its last MiG-21 in September 2025, it did so with genuine emotion — a 62-year relationship with an aircraft that had defined generations of fighter pilots.
Legacy

China’s copy outlived the original

The reverse-engineered J-7/F-7 stayed in production decades after the Soviet line closed.

Read the full story
China reverse-engineered the MiG-21 into the Chengdu J-7 and its F-7 export version, refining it steadily and keeping it in production until around 2013 — nearly three decades after the Soviet MiG-21 line shut down. Roughly 2,400 were built, arming air forces from Pakistan to Africa and ensuring the Fishbed’s DNA still flies today.
1971

The strike on the Governor’s House

IAF MiG-21s flew the pinpoint rocket attack that helped end the 1971 war.

Read the full story
During the 1971 Indo-Pakistani War, Indian MiG-21FLs flew a precise rocket strike on the Governor’s House in Dacca — a psychologically decisive blow that helped precipitate the surrender ending the war. In the air, IAF Fishbeds are credited with downing several Pakistani aircraft, cementing the type’s reputation in Indian service.
2019

Still fighting at sixty

A MiG-21 Bison was lost in the 2019 India–Pakistan clash — six decades on.

Read the full story
In February 2019, during a flare-up between India and Pakistan, an IAF MiG-21 Bison was shot down and its pilot briefly captured — a stark reminder that an aircraft designed in the 1950s was still flying front-line combat missions in the 21st century. Few fighters have ever had so long a fighting life.
The nickname

The supersonic pencil

Pilots dubbed the slim, needle-nosed jet the “supersonic pencil.”

Read the full story
With its razor-thin fuselage, sharply pointed nose and tiny wing, the MiG-21 earned the affectionate nickname “supersonic pencil” — a jet that looked, from head-on, like little more than an engine with a pilot bolted to the front. That minimalist silhouette was the visible signature of its whole design philosophy.
Today

The one you can still fly

MiGFlug keeps the Fishbed flyable — a civilian can still go supersonic in one.

Read the full story
Of the thousands of MiG-21s ever built, a handful remain airworthy — and through MiGFlug, an ordinary person can climb into the back seat of a genuine Cold War Fishbed and break the sound barrier. It is one of the very last ways left on Earth to fly supersonic in a real fighter jet — and in 2026 MiGFlug restarted these supersonic MiG-21 flights.

Gallery

The Fishbed in pictures

An Indian Air Force MiG-21 Bison on final approach  India flew the type for 62 years.
An Indian Air Force MiG-21 Bison on final approach — India flew the type for 62 years.Photo: Sanil Nath · CC BY 4.0
The tailed-delta planform that defined the Fishbed: delta wing plus a conventional tailplane.
The tailed-delta planform that defined the Fishbed: delta wing plus a conventional tailplane.Photo: Oleg Yunakov · CC BY-SA 4.0
The MiG-21bis  the definitive final major variant, with the R-25-300 engine.
The MiG-21bis — the definitive final major variant, with the R-25-300 engine.Photo: Dalibor Bosits · CC BY-SA 3.0
An early MiG-21F  the first mass-production day-fighter version.
An early MiG-21F — the first mass-production day-fighter version.Photo: Michael Barera · CC BY-SA 4.0
A MiG-21F-13 preserved at the Smithsonians Udvar-Hazy Center.
A MiG-21F-13 preserved at the Smithsonian’s Udvar-Hazy Center.Photo: Balon Greyjoy · CC0
A Fishbed on a pylon  one of countless MiG-21 monuments across the old Soviet world.
A Fishbed on a pylon — one of countless MiG-21 monuments across the old Soviet world.Photo: Alexander Novikov · CC BY-SA 4.0

Watch

The Fishbed in motion

A documentary look inside the MiG-21 — the little jet that armed the world.


Operations

Where the Fishbed flew


Combat Record

The most combat-tested jet ever

The MiG-21 fired shots in nearly every major Cold War proxy conflict, and its published kill/loss records are among aviation’s most politically contested — always cite them as claims, not settled scores. What is beyond dispute is the sheer breadth of its fighting career.

~60Nations that flew it into service
60+ yrsOf frontline combat, 1966–2025
~11,000Built — more than any supersonic jet

Compare the combat record of every military aircraft. Figures as of July 2026.


Questions & Answers

Everything people ask about the MiG-21

Can I fly a MiG-21?
Yes. MiGFlug offers supersonic MiG-21 flight experiences — you ride in a genuine Cold War fighter and break the sound barrier. It is currently the only possibility to fly supersonic for civilians. Learn more at migflug.com/mig-21-launch/.
How fast is the MiG-21?
About Mach 2.05 (~2,175 km/h) at altitude — genuinely supersonic, with a ferocious rate of climb.
How many MiG-21s were built?
More than 11,000 (commonly cited ~11,000–11,500) — the most-produced supersonic aircraft in history. Add the ~2,400 Chinese J-7/F-7 derivatives and the family is the most common fast jet ever flown.
Is the MiG-21 still in service?
Barely. India retired its last MiG-21 in September 2025; a few genuine MiG-21s and many Chinese J-7/F-7 derivatives still fly in a handful of air forces.
What was its biggest weakness?
Very short range and endurance — a combat radius of only about 370 km. It was a superb short-range interceptor with almost no legs.
What did the MiG-21 fight in?
Vietnam (against F-4s and F-105s), the Arab–Israeli wars, the Indo-Pakistani wars, the Iran–Iraq War and many more — one of the most combat-tested jets ever built.
Who built it under licence?
India’s HAL built around 650–660, and China reverse-engineered it into the Chengdu J-7/F-7 (~2,400 built into 2013).
Why was it built?
As a cheap, light, mass-producible supersonic interceptor drawn from the air-combat lessons of the Korean War — a “MiG-15 for the supersonic age.”

Sources & Further Reading

Every fact, checked