Sir Christopher Cockerell, a British engineer, is widely credited as the inventor of the modern hovercraft.

Core answer

  • The hovercraft as known today was invented and first successfully patented by Sir Christopher Cockerell in the 1950s.
  • He developed a working model by 1955 and secured a key British patent for the hovercraft concept soon after, which is why he is generally called the “father of the hovercraft.”

How the invention came about

  • Cockerell experimented using a vacuum cleaner and tin cans to show that a jet of air could create a stable cushion between a surface and an object.
  • These experiments led him to the idea of a vehicle riding on a cushion of air to reduce friction over water and land, forming the basis of the hovercraft principle.

First practical hovercraft

  • The first full‑size practical hovercraft was the Saunders‑Roe SR.N1, designed by Cockerell and built by the firm Saunders‑Roe under Britain’s National Research Development Corporation.
  • The SR.N1 made its first public “flight” in June 1959 and soon crossed the English Channel, dramatically proving that the hovercraft concept worked in real-world conditions.

Were there earlier ideas?

  • Earlier inventors, such as American engineer Charles J. Fletcher with his wartime “Glidemobile,” had experimented with air‑cushion concepts, but those designs remained classified or unpatented.
  • Because Cockerell independently developed, demonstrated, and successfully patented a workable air‑cushion vehicle, history and most references credit him as the true inventor of the hovercraft.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.