The first Chinese cargo spacecraft, named Tianzhou-1, provides a very quiet and stable environment to test space accelerometers. In this study, the high-precision electrostatic accelerometer with a resolution of 3×10−10m/s2/Hz1/2 onboard Tianzhou-1 is calibrated and validated by in-orbit measurements. In our analysis, we employ 14.5 hours of accelerometer, Global Navigations Satellite Systems (GNSS), and attitude measurements. Non-gravitational linear accelerations of the spacecraft are estimated from GNSS observables by reduced dynamic orbit determination, and centrifugal accelerations are estimated from the spacecraft attitude data and the center of mass offset. The spacecraft microgravity reaches a level of 1×10−6m/s2/Hz1/2 within the bandwidth of 1×10−4 to 1×10−2 Hz revealed from accelerometer measurements, which agrees well with our estimation of the non-gravitational and centrifugal accelerations. The results show that the centrifugal forces are the dominant signal at the frequencies above 3 cycle per revolution (cpr, 1 cpr ≈1.8×10−4 Hz) while non-gravitational forces occupy the lower frequency band. Furthermore, the bias and scale factor of the accelerometer are obtained by calibration with the estimated non-gravitational and centrifugal accelerations, using the method of least-squares linear fit. Based on the data covering the whole test period (00:33:20-15:02:43, 3 June, 2017, Beijing time), the estimated biases are −(5.31±0.04)×10−5, −(1.75±0.02)×10−6 and (2.65±0.01)×10−6m/s2 for the x, y and z axes, respectively, and the estimated scale factors are 1.001±0.008, 0.999±0.003 and 1.018±0.003 for the x, y and z axes, respectively.