886 million miles
No. Saturn varies in distance from the sun between 838 million and 934 million miles.
On average, the distance between Saturn and the Sun is about 888 million miles. This distance varies due to the elliptical shape of Saturn's orbit around the Sun.
Saturn is the sixth planet from the Sun in our solar system, located between Jupiter and Uranus.
Saturn's orbit is between Jupiter and Uranus. But there are points when the closest large body to Saturn is the Sun.
Saturn stay in orbit because o the sun's gravitational effect. You may ask how, because the sun is enormous and the gravitational power is very large. Also it is in the gravitational range of the sun.
The planet that orbits the sun closer than Saturn but farther away than Mars is Jupiter. Jupiter is the fifth planet from the Sun and is located between Mars and Saturn in terms of its distance from the Sun.
Sun and Jupiter because Jupiter has more mass and it is closer to the sun.
The distance from the sun to the planet Saturn is 9.948 astronomical units. This is a distance equal to 924.7 million miles.
On average, Saturn is 79.69 light-minutes from the Sun, or 1.33 light-hours. *This is normally measured in astronomical units (AU), and the average orbital distance of Saturn is 9.58 AU (about 9.5 times as far from the Sun as Earth is. The range is from 9.02 AU (838,519,000 miles) at the closest to 10.05 AU (934,530,000 miles) at the farthest. (see related question)
The mean distance between Saturn and the Sun is 1,433,449,370 km, which equals approximately 5.6 x 1013 inches (56 trillion inches).
Uranus is the seventh planet from the sun in our solar system, located between Saturn and Neptune.
Since the satellite is in orbit around Saturn, it's farther from the sun than Saturn is for nominally half of the time, and closer to the sun for the other half. So its average distance from the sun is the same as Saturn's ... about 890.7 million miles, or about 9.6 times as far from the sun as the Earth is.