Not enough information: It isn't clear at what SPEED you want to travel to the planet. With current technology, the farthest known planet in the Solar System would take a few years to reach (at most 10-15 years or so); planets in other solar systems would take thousands of times more to reach.
The planet with the nearest orbital time is Uranus. That takes about 84 Earth years.
The planet you are referring to is the dwarf planet Pluto, which takes just over 248 years to orbit the Sun.
If it takes as long as that it must be an outer planet.
The planet Mars, which is the fourth planet from the sun, takes 1.88 Earth years to make one full orbit around the sun.
The dwarf planet Pluto. No "planet" takes that time.
Jupiter
There is no planet that revolves around the Sun with a period of 288 years.
No planet in our solar system takes 88 years to orbit the Sun. Uranus orbits in 84 years and Mercury orbits in 88 days.
Neptune, the furthest planet from the sun, takes around 164 years to make one orbit of the sun (164.79132 years).
The dwarf Planet Pluto
The dwarf planet that takes 252 years to orbit the sun is called Pluto. It was reclassified as a dwarf planet in 2006.
Neptune takes approximately 165 years to orbit the sun, while the planet Uranus has an orbital period of about 84 years. Jupiter, on the other hand, takes around 12 years to complete one orbit around the sun.