Snapchat planets are a Snapchat+ feature that ranks your eight closest friends as planets in a miniature solar system. Your friend is the sun. You're a planet. Mercury means you're their #1 best friend. Neptune means you're #8. The closer you orbit, the more you interact.

How the Friend Solar System Works

This feature requires a Snapchat+ subscription — free users can't see it. As reported by TechCrunch, Snap turned the feature off by default after concerns about its impact on teen anxiety. When you visit a friend's profile, you'll see a badge: either "Best Friends" (mutual top eight) or "Friends" (you're in their top eight, but they're not in yours).

Tap the badge to reveal which planet you are. The system recalculates based on recent interactions — snaps, chats, story engagement, reply consistency. More frequent interaction pushes you closer to the sun.

Rankings are dynamic. Snap someone more and you might jump from Jupiter to Mars. Go quiet and you drift outward. It updates every few days.

You can toggle the feature on or off in Snapchat+ Settings → Manage Features → Friend Solar System. It's off by default.

Full Snapchat Planets Order and Meanings

Planet

Ranking

Color/Visual

Meaning

Mercury

#1 Best Friend

Red with red hearts

Your closest, most active connection

Venus

#2

Beige with multi-color hearts

Strong emotional bond

Earth

#3

Blue-green with stars

Consistent, reliable friendship

Mars

#4

Red-orange with sparks

Fun, playful connection

Jupiter

#5

Orange-brown, large

Regular interaction, solid friendship

Saturn

#6

Yellow with ring

Consistent but less frequent

Uranus

#7

Green/teal

Occasional interaction

Neptune

#8

Blue, distant

Lowest interaction in top eight

Each planet has a distinct visual design within the app — colors, floating hearts, stars, and other decorative elements.

What Determines Your Planet Position?

Snapchat hasn't published the exact algorithm, but the factors generally understood to influence ranking: snaps sent and received, chat messages, story engagement, call frequency, and overall consistency.

The ranking is relative, not absolute. You could be someone's Mercury with 10 snaps a day if their other friends send fewer. It measures your interaction compared to their other connections.

Interestingly, snap streaks likely play a role, but the exact weight isn't confirmed. According to Wikipedia's Snapchat article, the platform has over 800 million monthly active users. Some users report that chat-heavy friendships rank higher than expected, suggesting the algorithm weighs message content alongside snap volume.

Common Misconceptions

Your planet and theirs don't have to match. You could be their Mercury while they're your Jupiter. Rankings are independent in each direction.

You can't see your position in someone's solar system unless you're in their top eight. If you're not in the top eight at all, no planet appears.

The feature is private — only visible to you. Your friends don't see what planet they are in your system unless they check from their end.

Conclusion

Snapchat planets rank your top eight friends from Mercury (#1) to Neptune (#8) in a solar system. It's a Snapchat+ feature that updates dynamically as your interaction patterns change.

FAQs

What are Snapchat planets?

A Snapchat+ feature ranking your eight closest friends as planets in a solar system based on interaction level.

Do I need Snapchat+ to see planets?

Yes. Only Snapchat+ subscribers can access the Friend Solar System feature.

What does Mercury mean on Snapchat?

You're their #1 closest friend based on interaction frequency — the highest ranking in the system.

Can my planet position change?

Yes. Rankings update dynamically based on recent interaction patterns across snaps, chats, and engagement.

Can friends see their planet in my system?

Only if they also have Snapchat+ and check your profile. The feature is private to each user.