Within our Solar System, no planet has more moons than Jupiter. [See related question]
Outside of our Solar System, it is any ones guess.
Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and Uranus all have more than ten moons.
No, some planets like Mercury and Venus don't have any moons. Earth has one moon, Mars has two moons, and the outer planets have lots of moons. Jupiter has more than 60.
Jupiter
None have exactly 59, Jupiter and Saturn both have more than 59; the rest of the planets have less. Jupiter has 63 known moons, and Saturn has 61 .
Objects that orbit a planet are called moons or satellites, they are not planets. Both Mars and Jupiter have moons; Jupiter has a lot more than Mars does, and some of them are quite large, too. The two moons of Mars, Phobos and Deimos, are relatively small, perhaps even tiny.
None no planets have more moons than jupiter and jupiter has atleast 63 moons more than any other planet
Saturn has more moons than Venus. Saturn is second to Jupiter.
Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and Uranus all have more than ten moons.
Neptune has 11 moons. That's the nearest, but it has 13 known moons.
No moons . . . Mercury and Venus One moon . . . Earth Two moons . . . Mars Each of the other planets has more than two moons. Jupiter leads with more than 60 !
Yes
No, some planets like Mercury and Venus don't have any moons. Earth has one moon, Mars has two moons, and the outer planets have lots of moons. Jupiter has more than 60.
Jupiter, Saturn, and Uranus all have more than 16 known moons. Neptune has 14 known moons and probably more that have not yet been discovered.
Jupiter
All of our Solar Systems gas giants have more moons than the terrestrial planets. Jupiter (63), Saturn (62), Uranus (27) and Neptune (13).
None have exactly 59, Jupiter and Saturn both have more than 59; the rest of the planets have less. Jupiter has 63 known moons, and Saturn has 61 .
Io and Titan are moons because they orbit planets (Jupiter and Saturn respectively).