No. Uranus is farther from the sun. The farther from the sun a planet is, the longer it's "year".
Neptune, Uranus, or Saturn.
Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune have years longer than one Earth year. Jupiter's year is about 12 Earth years, Saturn's is about 29 Earth years, Uranus's is about 84 Earth years, and Neptune's is about 165 Earth years.
Uranus See related questions
The order of the planets by longest year is the normal order (Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune). The farther away a planet's orbit is from the Sun, the longer the year.
The planet Saturn is between Jupiter and Uranus.
mercury,venus,earth,mars,jupiter,saturn,uranus,neptune,pluto
Jupiter has a longer year than mercury because it takes longer for it to revolve around the sun.
Jupiter has a longer year than Earth. It takes about 12 Earth years for Jupiter to complete one orbit around the sun.
Out of Mercury, Earth, Mars, and Jupiter, Jupiter has the longest year.
A day on Uranus is shorter than a day on Jupiter. Uranus rotates on its axis once in about 17 hours, while Jupiter rotates once in about 10 hours.
Jupiter isn't farther than either. Jupiter is the 5th planet from the Sun, Saturn is the 6th planet from the Sun, & Uranus is the 7th planet from the Sun.
Jupiter