How Many Moons Does Saturn Have?

Saturn is the solar system's "Moon King" with 274 confirmed satellites, categorized into regular icy worlds and captured irregulars. Key highlights include Titan’s thick atmosphere and Enceladus’ subsurface ocean plumes, both of which are primary targets in the search for extraterrestrial life.

The ringed giant Saturn has 274 known moons, more than any planet, including the largest, Titan who is bigger than Mercury, to potato-shaped irregularities. These frozen worlds provide evidence of planetary formation, the life of rings and even the life of other worlds fascinating students by their variety.

How were these Moons Discovered?

  • The moons of Saturn had their first view in the 17th century by astronomers using the primitive telescopes. The first known is Titan, the discovery of which was made in 1655 by Christian Huygens, and four more (Tethys, Dione, Iapetus, Rhea) were discovered (by Giovanni Domenico Cassini) by 1672.
  • In 1789 William Herschel included Mimas and Enceladus. The Voyager 1 and 2 (1980-1981) gave NASA an opportunity to image dozens of shepherd moons, and they spotted shepherd moons such as Prometheus. This was found in 13 new ones on Cassini-Huygens mission (2004-2017), with the Enceladus and Daphnis plumes.
  • Ground surveys only required less time to discover: 2000s Norse/Inuit groups were also included. March 2025 IAU with Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope confirmed 128 tiny moons, bringing the total to 274.

Moon Categories

Saturn moons are divided into regular (prograde, inner orbits around the disk of the planet) and irregular (retrograde/distant, presumably were captured asteroids). 

  • Regulars are clumped around rings, irregulars are organized into clans using myth names.
  • In/out rings Inner Shepherd Moon’s circle, and gather particles: Pan (ring-dividing), Atlas, Prometheus, Pandora, Daphnis (wave-maker).
  • Medium Icy Moons are co-orbitals: the orbits of Janus/Epimetheus intersect; the orbits of Trojan Helene/Telesto/Calypso intersect; the orbits of Dione/Tethys.
CategoryOrbit TraitsExamplesSize Range
Inner ShepherdClose, eccentricPan, Daphnis10-40 km
Medium IcyPrograde, resonantEnceladus, Mimas100-500 km
Large RegularCircular, closeTitan, Rhea400-5000 km
Irregular NorseRetrograde, distantSkathi, Siarnaq3-15 km

Major Moons Spotlight

Focus on eight key moons with unique features, ideal for student visuals.

  • Titan (VI): Saturn is the largest planet (5,150 km diameter), but its atmosphere is thicker than Earth’s (containing nitrogen-methane) with lakes/rivers of liquid methane; organic dunes. Huygens probe landed 2005; Dragonfly will hit 2034.
  • Enceladus (II): 504 km (wide); underlying ocean below 20-25 km of ice globally; south pole tiger stripe geysers expel water/organisms at 400 m/s, sustaining E-ring. Hydrothermal vents imply possibility of life; majority of reflective body.
  • Mimas (I): 396 km; huge Herschel crater (130km ( 1/3 moon size)) like the Death Star.
  • Rhea (V): 1,528 km; ice, with potential thin rings (first not Kuiper moon).
  • Dione (IV): 1123km; thin land as a result of tectonics.
  • Tethys (III): 1,062 km; Ithaca Chasma canyon; Odysseus crater.
  • Iapetus (VIII): 1,470 km; equatorial ridge (20 km high); one black, one white hemisphere.
  • Hyperion (VII): sponge-like, chaotic rotation.

What is the Scientific Importance of These Moons?

The planets are named by moons: Saturn made rings by shepherds, geology run by tidal heating (e.g., Encycladus-Dione resonance). 

Enceladus/Titan top astrobiology targets- plumes contain water, salts, organics, energy sources that are similar to those found in the Earth vents.

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