List of Mikoyan and MiG aircraft

This is a list of aircraft produced by Russian Aircraft Corporation MiG, formerly Mikoyan, a Russian aircraft manufacturer.

Other experimental projects and prototypes

 * MiG I-210 (IKh) - MiG-3 re-engined with a M-82A radial engine, 1941; also known as MiG-9
 * MiG I-211 (E) - high-altitude fighter prototype, refined I-210, 1943
 * MiG I-220 (A) - high-altitude interceptor prototype developed from the MiG-3, 1943
 * MiG I-221 (2A) - high-altitude pressurized interceptor prototype developed from the I-220 and powered by a twin-supercharged AM-39A inline engine, 1943
 * MiG I-222 (3A) - high-altitude, high-speed pressurized interceptor prototype, 1943
 * MiG I-224 (4A) - I-222 with improved air-air radiator and special high-altitude propeller, 1944
 * MiG I-225 (5A) - high-altitude interceptor prototype, 1944; heaviest and most powerful of the I-220 family
 * MiG I-230/MiG-3U (D) - improved MiG-3 powered by a AM-35A engine, 1942
 * MiG I-231 (2D) - I-230 with AM-39 engine and all-metal fuselage, 1943
 * MiG I-250 (N) - motorjet fighter prototype, 1945; erroneously known as MiG-13
 * MiG I-270 (Zh) - rocket-powered interceptor prototype, 1947
 * MiG I-300 (F) - prototype for MiG-9, 1946; MiG's first jet fighter design
 * MiG I-301T (FT) - experimental two-seat trainer version of MiG-9, 1946; first Soviet aircraft with an ejection seat
 * MiG I-305 (FL) - experimental version of MiG-9 powered by a Lyulka TR-1A engine, 1947
 * MiG I-307 (FF) - prototype version of MiG-9 powered by afterburning RD-20F engines, 1947
 * MiG I-308 (FR) - prototype version of MiG-9 with RD-21 engines and a pressurized cockpit, 1947
 * MiG I-310 (S) - prototype for MiG-15, 1947
 * MiG I-320 (FN) - single-engine, straight-wing version of MiG-9, MiG-15 predecessor, 1948
 * MiG I-320 (R) - twin-engine, all-weather heavy fighter-interceptor prototype, 1949
 * MiG I-330 (SI) - prototype for MiG-17, 1949
 * MiG I-340/SM-1 - prototype version of MiG-17 with two Mikulin AM-5 engines, 1952
 * MiG I-350 (M) - fighter prototype, 1951; first Soviet fighter to maintain supersonic speed
 * MiG I-360/SM-2 - derivative of I-350, powered by Mikulin AM-5 engines, 1952
 * MiG I-370/I-1 - swept-wing supersonic fighter prototype, 1955
 * MiG I-3 family - fighter prototypes in the 1950s
 * MiG I-7 - heavy interceptor fighter prototype developed from the I-3, 1957
 * MiG I-75 - swept-wing interceptor developed from the I-7, 1958; lost to the Sukhoi Su-9
 * Ye-8 - supersonic jet fighter aircraft prototype, 1962; planned replacement of the MiG-21
 * Ye-150 family - prototype interceptors in the 1950s
 * MiG-AT - advanced trainer/light attack prototype, 1996; lost to the Yakovlev Yak-130
 * MiG-105 Spiral - 1965
 * MiG-110 - proposed cargo/passenger aircraft, 1995; not built
 * MiG-2000 - ramjet-powered SSTO spaceplane, 1990s; lost to the Tupolev Tu-2000
 * MiG MFI objekt 1.44/1.42 - 1986–2000
 * MiG LFI project
 * Mikoyan LMFS - proposed stealth light multirole fighter; developed into the Sukhoi Su-75
 * Mikoyan Skat - stealth UCAV
 * Mikoyan MiG SVB - proposed regional airliner and tactical transport, 1990-94; not built

Fictional

 * MiG-28: a fictional aircraft flown by the antagonist in the 1986 film Top Gun. The real aircraft used to portray the MiG-28 was a Northrop T-38 Talon.
 * MiG-31 Firefox: a fictional aircraft that appeared in Craig Thomas' novels Firefox and Firefox Down, as well as the 1982 film by the same name starring Clint Eastwood. The aircraft was portrayed as a Soviet interceptor with stealth capabilities, and had a thought-controlled weapons system. Its designation is shared with the real MiG-31 Foxhound.
 * MiG-37 Ferret: a fictional Soviet stealth model aircraft, produced by the Testors Model Company, as a counter to the American F-19. The craft combined a faceted airframe design with cooled exhausts, and radar-absorbing skin. Purely conjectural, the design nonetheless turned out to be closer in shape to the actual F-117 Nighthawk.
 * MiG-242: a fictional Soviet aircraft appearing in the 1968 pilot episode of Joe 90, a British Supermarionation television series co-created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson

Naming conventions
MiGs follow the convention of using odd numbers for fighter aircraft. However, this naming convention is maintained not directly by MiG, but by ordering institutions, such as Ministry of Defence or Council of Ministers' Military-Industrial Commission (before the dissolution of the Soviet Union). The original designations for MiG aircraft are 2- or 3-digit numbers, separated by a dot. 1.44 or 1.42 is an example of the original naming. Although the MiG-8 and MiG-110 exist, they are not fighters. The MiG-105 "Spiral" was designed as an orbital interceptor, contemporaneous with the U.S. Air Force's cancelled X-20 Dyna-Soar.