HD 114386 is a star with a pair of orbiting exoplanets in the southern constellation of Centaurus. It has an apparent visual magnitude of 8.73, which means it cannot be viewed with the naked eye but can be seen with a telescope or good binoculars. Based on parallax measurements, the system is located at a distance of 91 light years from the Sun. It is receding with a radial velocity of 33.4 km/s. The star shows a high proper motion, traversing the celestial sphere at an angular rate of .
The spectrum of HD 114386 yields a stellar classification of K3 V, matching a K-type main-sequence star, or orange dwarf. It has 76% of the mass of the Sun and 73% of the Sun's radius. HD 114386 is a much older star than the Sun with an estimated age of roughly nine billion years. The abundance of iron in the stellar atmosphere, a measure of the star's metallicity, is nearly solar. It is rather dim compared to the Sun, radiating just 28% of the luminosity of the Sun from its photosphere at an effective temperature of 4,926 K.
In 2004, the Geneva Extrasolar Planet Search Team announced the discovery of an extrasolar planet orbiting the star. The preliminary data for a second exoplanet was released in 2011.