Name | Origin | First flight | Type | Entered service | Number built | Notes |
Arado Ar 234 | Germany | June 1943 | Combat | August 1944 | 210+ | First jet bomber but used mostly for reconnaissance. Few ever flew. Night fighter tested operationally.[5][6] |
Bell P-59 Airacomet | US | October 1942 | Operational | September 1944 | 66 | First USAAF jet to fly, used as trainer only.[7] |
Bell XP-83 | US | February 1945 | Prototype | n/a | 2 | Cancelled long-range escort fighter.[8] |
Caproni Campini N.1 | Italy | August 1940 | Prototype | n/a | 2 | First motorjet.[9] |
Consolidated Vultee XP-81 | US | February 1945 | Prototype | n/a | 2 | Cancelled mixed-power fighter.[10] |
Curtiss XF15C | US | February 1945 | Prototype | n/a | 3 | Cancelled mixed-power fighter.[11] |
de Havilland Vampire F.1 | UK | September 1943 | Production | March 1946 | 244 | Only 12 produced before VE Day; no combat service.[12] |
Douglas XBTD-2 Destroyer | US | May 1944 | Prototype | n/a | 2 | Cancelled mixed-power torpedo bomber[13][14] |
Fieseler Fi 103R Reichenberg | Germany | September 1944 | Operational | October 1944 | 300 | Manned V-1 flying bomb ready late 1944 but not used.[15] |
Gloster E.28/39 | UK | April 1941 | Prototype | n/a | 2 | Engine testbed and first Allied jet to fly.[16] |
Gloster Meteor F.1 & F.3 | UK | March 1943 | Combat | July 1944 | 250 | First operational Allied jet. First jet to down another jet aircraft (a V-1 flying bomb).[17] |
Heinkel He 162 | Germany | December 1944 | Combat | February 1945 | 238+ | Cheap mass-production interceptor (Volksjaeger) for use by semi-trained pilots. Little service before war over.[18] |
Heinkel He 178 | Germany | August 1939 | Prototype | n/a | 2 | First jet aircraft to fly[19] |
Heinkel He 280 | Germany | September 1940 | Prototype | n/a | 9 | First jet fighter to fly, cancelled.[1] |
Horten Ho 229 | Germany | February 1945 | Prototype | n/a | 3 | Fighter/bomber, first jet powered flying wing.[20] |
Junkers Ju 287 | Germany | August 1944 | Prototype | n/a | 1 | Testbed for multi-engine bomber design.[21] |
Lockheed P-80 Shooting Star | US | January 1944 | Operational | January 1945 | 361 | First operational US jet fighter. Four deployed during the war, two seeing limited service in Italy, but no combat.[22] |
McDonnell FD Phantom | US | January 1945 | Production | July 1947 | 62 | Postwar production, designation changed April 1946 to FH.[23][24] |
McDonnell TD2D Katydid | US | 1942 | Operational | 1942 | Unknown | US Navy pulsejet-powered target drone.[25] |
Messerschmitt Me 262 | Germany | July 1942 | Combat | June 1944 | 1,433 | First operational jet fighter as fighter and fighter-bomber, with night-fighter, bomber, and reconnaissance versions trialled.[26] |
Messerschmitt Me 328 | Germany | 1944 (early) | Prototype | n/a | 9 | Cancelled pulsejet fighter/bomber.[27] |
Mikoyan-Gurevich I-250 | USSR | March 1945 | Prototype | n/a | 28 | Mixed-power motorjet fighter.[28] |
Nakajima Kikka | Japan | August 1945 | Prototype | n/a | 1[N 2] | Jet bomber inspired by Me 262.[30] |
NAMU TD2N | US | June 1945 | Prototype | n/a | 9 | Target drone based on Gorgon III missile.[31] |
Polikarpov I-153DM | USSR | September 1940 | Prototype | n/a | 1 | Experimental mixed power ramjet fighter biplane.[32] |
Ryan FR Fireball | US | June 1944 | Operational | March 1945 | 66 | US Navy mixed power fighter, never saw combat.[33] |
Sukhoi Su-5 | USSR | April 1945 | Prototype | n/a | 1 | Cancelled mixed power motorjet fighter.[34] |
Yakovlev Yak-7PVRD | USSR | 1944 (late) | Prototype | n/a | 2 | Mixed-power ramjet fighter.[35] |
Yokosuka MXY7 Model 22 | Japan | June 1945 | Production | n/a | 50 | Motorjet "Ohka" Kamikaze, not used operationally.[36] |