Saturn takes about 29.5 Earth years (around 10,759 Earth days) to orbit the Sun.

Quick Scoop

  • Saturn’s “year” (one full trip around the Sun) ≈ 29.5 Earth years.
  • That’s nearly three decades for just one Saturn year.
  • In days, that’s roughly 10,759 Earth days.

A Tiny Story View

If a child was born on Earth the day Saturn started a new orbit, Saturn wouldn’t finish that single lap around the Sun until that child was almost 30 years old. By the time Saturn celebrated one “birthday,” that person could have finished school, started a career, and maybe even had kids of their own.

In human terms, one year on Saturn is basically a whole generation on Earth.

TL;DR: Saturn orbits the Sun once every 29.5 Earth years , or about 10,759 days.

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