HD 39194 (Gliese 217.2; LHS 210) is a star located in the southern circumpolar constellation Mensa. It has an apparent magnitude of 8.07, making it readily visible in binoculars but not to the naked eye. The object is relatively close at a distance of 86 light years but is receding with a heliocentric radial velocity of .
HD 39194 has a general stellar classification of K0 V, indicating that it is a K-type main-sequence star. Houk & Cowley found a slightly warmer class of G8 V, instead making it a G-type main-sequence star. Nevertheless, it has 71% the mass of the Sun and an effective temperature of, giving an orange hue. It radius of yields a luminosity only 38% that of the Sun. HD 39194 is estimated to be 11.7 billion years old and is extremely chromospherically inactive. Despite being a planetary host, it has an iron abundance only 24% that of the Sun. HD 39194's projected rotational velocity is similar to the Sun's, with the value being .
Three planet candidates around this star were first reported in a 2011 preprint. After 10 years of observations, a team of astronomers confirmed 3 super-Earths circling HD 39194 in eccentric orbits; none of the planets are in the habitable zone. HD 39194 b and d have similar masses.
This star was selected as a potential candidate for future exoplanet imaging missions in 2015.