Saturn
No, four planet has no rings they are inner planets
No planet has a ring around it. What appears to be rings are lots of small particles orbiting the planet and the number of "rings" depends on how finely they are viewed. All four outer planets, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune have rings. Each ring has patches that are more or less dense: these may be considered as ringlets or rings in their own right. It is not possible, therefore, to arrive at a sensible count of rings.
SATURURN
All of the Gas Giants have rings, even Jupiter. Except for Saturn, they are very thin and, well not small but comparitivley small in reference to the planet.
The rings of the planet Saturn are made up of a countless number of small particles. Most of these particles are ice with a small amount of rocky material.
Saturn is the outer planet that has rings. Its rings are composed of ice, rock, and dust particles ranging in size from small grains to boulders.
Mercury, Venus, Mars and Earth has no rings. All the inner planets don't. Although Pluto is a planet, it is too small to be considered a planet so it is a dwarf planet. But Pluto also have no rings.
Saturn has rings. But the rings aren't actually rings, they just appear as so. The rings are an accumulation of ice and other space rock debris that is stuck in the gravitational orbit of Saturn. It encircles the planet and appears as rings. Saturn's moons are also in its rings.
Saturn has rings that are divided into hundreds of small ringlets. These ringlets are created by the gravitational interactions between the planet's moons and the ring particles.
The four inner [terrestrial] planets: Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars.
Saturn is believed to have a new moon and scientists know it has rings. The moon appears as a small, icy object within its rings.
Because it has the most rings . . other planets have a few small rings but only Saturn has rings that can be seen from Earth.