yes mars does have ice on its poles it also has water
At the poles and underground. It is ice.
The poles on Mars are primarily white in color. This is because they are composed mostly of frozen carbon dioxide (dry ice) and water ice. The combination of these frozen substances gives the poles their distinctive white appearance.
There is ice at the poles and in the soil.
This depends on what you mean by Ice and Cap. If you want an answer that covers ONLY H2O (water) then only the earth fits that definition. Otherwise ALL non Jovian (Gas Giant) planets in orbits past Earth from the Sun are cold enough to have frozen gas and liquid on their surfaces, even at the poles. And all of them do. Some like Neptune ( and some moons) may be completely covered.
Mars and Earth are the two obvious ones.
The white patches at the poles of Mars are the planet's permanent polar ice caps. Like Earth, Mars has ice at its poles.
The mars axis poles have ice caps, which is frozen water on mars.
I heard Mars has a bit of ice on its poles.
Earth & Mars
Mars
The planet s that have ice on their poles are earth mars, and no others that we know of now
Earth and Mars
Earth, Mars,
At the poles and underground. It is ice.
North and South poles.
not that we know of, the ice at the poles is mainly frozen Co2, or "dry ice".
One of mars's poles is frozen water and the other pole is dry ice (frozen co2)