Snapchat Planets Explained (2026): A Friendly Guide to Your Best-Friend Rankings
Snapchat quietly turned friendships into a mini solar system. It looks fun, but it also raises questions: why am I Mercury for one friend but Earth for another? Why did I drop from Venus to Mars overnight? In this guide, you’ll learn how Snapchat Planets work, what each planet means, how the rankings update, and what actually moves your position—without any spammy tactics that risk your account.
Quick note: Snapchat Planets is a Snapchat+ feature. If your friend (or you) doesn’t have Snapchat+, you won’t see the planet badge.
What Are Snapchat Planets?
Snapchat Planets is a visual ranking of your top best friends with an astronomy theme. Each friend gets a planet, and the closer the planet is to the Sun, the higher that friend ranks on your list. You and your friend can see different planets because rankings are personal and one-sided: your #1 isn’t always their #1.
Basic idea:
- Sun = You (in your own solar system)
- Mercury = #1 best friend
- Venus = #2
- Earth = #3
- Mars = #4
- Jupiter = #5
- Saturn = #6
- Uranus = #7
- Neptune = #8
If you see a planet badge on a friend’s profile, that’s where you sit in their solar system.
What Each Planet Means (and how you likely got there)
- Mercury (#1): constant back-and-forth. Frequent snaps, fast replies, and chat activity.
- Venus (#2): daily activity with occasional dips—still very strong.
- Earth (#3): consistent snaps plus chats; may rotate with #2.
- Mars (#4): active but not daily; a couple of quiet days can push you here.
- jupiter (#5) and Saturn (#6): casual friends with periodic streaks.
- Uranus (#7) and Neptune (#8): you interact, but irregularly—often group-chat heavy or weekend-only friends.
Reality check: Snapchat doesn’t publish a full formula, but patterns across user reports suggest total volume + recency + reciprocity matter most. Streaks help, but chat messages and story interactions nudge rankings too.
Why Your Planet Changes?
Your planet is dynamic. Expect movement when:
- You pause for two or three days. Recency decays rank.
- Your friend talks to someone else more. Rankings are relative.
- Group chats spike. Bursts of replies can shuffle positions.
- You switch devices, clear data, or reinstall. Temporary data hiccups can delay updates.
Takeaway: don’t obsess over daily shifts—look at your trend over a week.
How to Move Up (Without Being Annoying)?
- Prioritize quality interactions: Send snaps that invite a response: quick selfie with a question, a poll, or a five-second “rate this fit?” video. One thoughtful snap beats five random ceiling shots.
- Mix chat + snaps + story replies: A healthy combo seems to rank better than snaps alone. If they post a story, react or add a short comment—lightweight engagement that signals interest.
- Keep it consistent (but breathable): Aim for steady daily touchpoints, not spammy bursts. Think “one morning snap plus one evening reply” cadence.
- Use Memories and stickers smartly: Memories that spark nostalgia (“one year ago today…”) tend to drive replies. Ask a question with it.
- Group chats help—but 1:1 matters more: Groups can bump activity, but you’ll climb planets faster with direct snaps and chats.
Planets vs Streaks vs Emojis—What’s the Difference?
- Planets (Snapchat+): a ranked list of your top friends shown as planets around your “Sun,” following the classic Snapchat planet order from Mercury (closest #1) to Neptune (#8). Personalized to each user.
- Streaks (fire emoji): count of consecutive days you both sent snaps. A streak can support a high planet rank, but it’s not required.
- Friend Emojis (hearts, smileys, etc.): default labels for best friends based on interaction; customizable in settings. Emojis are simpler; planets are the premium, visual version.
Pro tip: customizing your friend emojis doesn’t change your planet rank—just how emojis display.
Privacy and Etiquette (Read This Before “Chasing Mercury”)
- Don’t flood someone’s inbox to climb. That’s a fast way to get muted or blocked.
- Mind time zones. Late-night rapid snaps can feel intrusive.
- Ask before screen-recording. Some content is meant to disappear.
- Respect “Do Not Disturb.” If a friend mutes notifications, accept the boundary.
Quick Fixes for Common Planet Questions
“I had a streak but dropped a planet—why?”
A streak is only one signal. If your friend boosted activity with others, you can slide despite the streak.
“My planet disappeared.”
Either the friend left your top eight, they changed to a non-Snapchat+ setup, or there’s a sync delay. Give it a day.
“We snap daily but I’m still Neptune.”
Check reciprocity. If your friend opens but rarely replies, your rank may lag behind.
Action Plan to Reach Your Ideal Planet (7-Day Mini-Routine)
- Day 1–2: start a natural conversation—ask something specific (“worth watching this series?”).
- Day 3–4: share a memory or behind-the-scenes snap; reply to a story with a question.
- Day 5: send a quick video; keep it under 10 seconds.
- Day 6: react to their lens/filters; send one back that matches the vibe.
- Day 7: keep the rhythm—one quality 1:1 snap plus one chat reply.
Repeat weekly. If you still don’t climb, accept the relationship pattern and avoid forcing it.
Final Thoughts
Planets are a playful way to visualize friendships—but they’re not a relationship score. Focus on real, two-way conversations, respect boundaries, and let the ranking take care of itself. For a deeper dive—planet visuals, emoji breakdowns, and quiet indicators like the green and yellow dots—visit your preferred Snapchat tips hub.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q1: Do both people see the same planet?
No. Planets are personal to each user’s rankings.
Q2: Can I hide my planet from someone?
You can manage who sees story/content and tweak privacy settings, but there’s no separate “hide planet” toggle. Turning off Snapchat+ removes the feature on your end.
Q3: Do video calls and voice notes help?
Likely. They count as meaningful interactions and often correlate with higher placement.
Q4: Will mass-sending snaps help me climb?
It may bump volume temporarily, but low-quality snaps risk getting ignored—hurting reciprocity and long-term rank.
Q5: What if I don’t have Snapchat+?
You won’t see planets on profiles, but your underlying best-friend order still exists.







