Mercury and Venus do not have any natural satellites.
The only planets in our solar system that do not have natural satellites are Mercury and Venus.
Within our solar system, planets other than Earth with natural satellites are Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. Other solar system objects also have moons; Mercury and Venus notably do not.
There are only two planets within our solar system that have no natural satellites (i.e. moons). They are Venus and Mercury; all other planets have at least one moon.
Of the eight true planets in the Solar System, only Mercury and Venus are lacking natural satellites.
As of early 2010, more than 265 natural satellites have been identified in the solar system, orbiting every planet except Mercury and Venus.
All the planets have satellites, except Mercury and Venus.Jupiter
earth, mars, Jupiter, Saturn, uranus, neptune, and Pluto
In my solar system ... the one I and my family live in ... there is one star, which we call the sun, and roughly 240 known natural satellites of the 8 known planets.
Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter,Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Earth's Moon is a natural Satellite, the other planet's moons are natural satellites.
Venus has no natural satellites. It does have two artificial satellites (space probes). Venus is one of the two planets in our solar system (together with Mercury) that have no moon/natural satellite.
Asteroids, meteors, planetesimals (Like Pluto), natural satellites (moons), and dust are part of the Solar system that are not planets.
There are 168 known natural satellites (moons) of the 8 major planets. There are also moons around 3 of the 5 dwarf planets (Pluto, Eris, and Haumea). There are more than 200 artificial satellites (or expired satellites) in Earth orbit or scattered throughout the solar system.