“I didn’t think I’d ever get to go up,” said Ms Funk, who has spent the past six decades trying to reach space.
She trained to be an astronaut in the 1960s, but was overlooked for a space flight because she was a woman.
The quartet were launched skyward on New Shepard, a rocket developed by Mr Bezos’s firm, Blue Origin, from the Texan desert.
The craft travelled at nearly three times the speed of sound, reaching a height of nearly 100km (62 miles) above the Earth’s surface.
As she exited the vessel, Ms Funk gleefully spread her arms wide as a small crowd cheered.
Passion for flying
Born in New Mexico in 1939, Wally Funk says she has had a life-long love of aviation, taking her first flying lesson aged nine.
Since then, she has logged 19,600 flight hours across her career and taught some 3,000 people to fly.
At 21, Funk volunteered in 1961 for the Women in Space programme where she underwent rigorous physical and mental testing in the hope of becoming an astronaut.
But the scheme was later abruptly cancelled and she and the other women – collectively known as the Mercury 13 – never made it to space with Nasa.
She nevertheless became the first female air safety investigator for the National Transportation Safety Board, and the first female flight instructor at a US military base.
Ms Funk previously spent $200,000 (£145,000) in 2010 on a ticket for Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic programme – which recently got FAA approval to start taking paying customers on its own rocket missions.
Mr Bezos had invited Ms Funk as an “honoured guest” on the flight earlier this month, sharing video on Instagram of him telling her the news.
“No one has waited longer,” Mr Bezos said as he told Ms Funk she had been chosen for the trip.
Throughout the flight, Ms Funk could be heard whooping and saying “wow”.
A grinning Ms Funk embraced the Amazon founder and thanked him for inviting her on the trip.