Yes, it is but it is the farthest from the sun. It is the farthest and last planet from the moon.
It is an outer planet.
The orbits of Pluto and Neptune cross, so sometimes Pluto is inside Neptune's orbit.
Neptune is a planet in our solar system and is located outside the orbit of Earth. It is the eighth planet from the Sun.
Neptune is always the outermost planet. For about 10% of the time the dwarf planet Pluto crosses inside of Neptune's orbit.
Pluto
Neptune has always been the farthest planet, but we didn't always know that. On August 24, 2006, when the International Astronomical Union (IAU) defined what it means to be a "planet", Neptune earned it's badge as the most distant (from the sun) planet in our solar system. Prior to that, when Pluto was referred to as a planet, it last crossed inside of Neptune's orbit on February 7, 1979 leaving Neptune as the most distant planet until February 11, 1999. Pluto's orbit crosses inside of Neptune's orbit for 20 years out of every 248.
Planet Neptune is the eighth planet from the sun.
Its the 8th planet in the solar system however, when Pluto (which was 9th planet) until it was demoted to dwarf planet, passes inside the orbit of Neptune; Neptune then becomes the outer most planet making it the 9th. I do not know if this still counts now because of Pluto's new status.
Uranus and Neptune, although Pluto's orbit sometimes goes inside Neptune's orbit.
Neptune's vision is blue and it is the 8th planet. There is Neptune because it is a planet.
Within our Solar System, Pluto was until it was dubbed a dwarf planet. The current farthest planet is Neptune. Since Pluto has an orbit so eccentric that it is sometimes inside the orbit of Neptune, the identity of the "outermost planet" was previously time-dependent.
Neptune is the eighth and furthest planet from the Sun.