The Ten Longest-Running Sci Fi/Fantasy TV Shows of All Time (Updated)

[Update 11/10/2023]

The CW’s Supernatural wrapped up its historic fifteen-year run in Fall 2020, and now holds the record as the longest-running sci fi/fantasy television series in the United States. It is also the second longest-running genre entry worldwide, and with shows moving to shorter runs and fewer episodes per season, it will be a long time before another series catches up to it (though Futurama and American Horror Story are getting close on the season count). Following is a look at the Top 10 shows of all-time based on how long they have been running. This is for non-anime genre entries and they are ranked by seasons and then by total episodes.  I am including the upcoming season and estimated episode count for those shows that are confirmed to be returning for another year.  Moving up since I last updated this list is Futurama which is now at Number 3.

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Top 10 Longest-Running Sci Fi/Fantasy Shows

1. Doctor Who (1963-89, 2005-Present, BBC, 38 Seasons Totaling 871 Episodes Including the Upcoming 14th Revival Season)

This BBC staple is of course the longest-running sci fi show worldwide and possibly the longest-running non-soap opera series on television. But what is most impressive is that even if you break it up between its classic run and its revival, it still sets records. The original series ran for 26 seasons and 694 episodes which would still have it at the top of this list. The revival has fourteen seasons so far and 190 episodes (including specials and the upcoming fourteenth season), which would put it third on this list if it had its own entry. And Doctor Who is still going strong. Seeing as it reboots itself every few years with a new Doctor, this show could stick around for quite a while, and no other sci fi series will be able to match its output. (Read more about the series at this link.)

2. Supernatural (2005-20, The CW, 15 Seasons Totaling 327 Episodes)

This show never counted as a breakout hit in its broadcast run, but it developed a dedicated audience early on and was always a strong performer for its network. Series creator Eric Kripke originally wanted Supernatural to wrap up after its fifth season, but the network wanted it to keep going. When Season 1 thru 6 started streaming on Netflix prior to the seventh season premiere, it became a hit for that streamer, and that is likely what propelled it into its record-breaking run. Fewer and fewer shows have twenty-plus episodes per season these days, so even if another genre entry goes past fifteen seasons, it likely will not top Supernatural‘s episode count.

3. Futurama (1999-2003, 2008-13, 2023-Present, FOX/Comedy Central/Hulu, 12 Seasons Totaling 160 Episodes Including the Upcoming 12th Season)

This animated sci fi comedy just made a big jump up the list based on the season numbering that Hulu is using.  They are counting each of the direct-to-DVD releases as separate seasons which makes the season that just streamed its eleventh.  And the show has been renewed through its fourteenth year with the twelfth season set to premiere in 2024.  This one may stick around for a while, so it is possible that it could challenge Supernatural based on the number of seasons, but it seems unlikely it will match that show’s episode count.

4. American Horror Story (2011-Present, FX, 12 Seasons Totaling 132 Episodes Including the Current 12th Season)

This season-long horror anthology series is airing its twelfth season (the second half airs in 2024) and has been renewed through its thirteenth year. This may be as high as it goes, though, because even if it continues to fifteen seasons or more, it will not match the episode count of Supernatural or Futurama since it usually has only ten to thirteen episodes per season (sometimes even less). But its lengthy run has made AHS an important entry for genre television, and its impact will be felt for many years to come.

5. The Twilight Zone (1959-63, 1985-89, 2002-03, 2019-2020, CBS/UPN/CBS All Access, 11 Seasons Totaling 284 Episodes)

Since I combined a revival of Doctor Who with the original series above and will do that with other shows below, I am going to lump all of the seasons for The Twilight Zone together which brings it to eleven total and 284 episodes. The various incarnations are rarely run together, though, so if you don’t like the consolidated approach, I have extended the list to twenty below and you can reorder the Top 10 as you like. But The Twilight Zone has definitely been a resilient franchise that lends itself to reboots, and it may be one show that could eventually surpass Supernatural at the Number 2 slot. The revival at CBS All Access (now Paramount+) ended with two seasons, but don’t be surprised if the show pops up again somewhere down the road with yet another reboot. (Read more about the series at this link.)

6. The X-Files (1993-2002, 2016-18, FOX, 11 Seasons Totaling 218 Episodes)

This one now counts as the longest-running non-anthology science fiction series (it was more sci fi than fantasy) in the United States, but it had to have the two revival seasons to get there. After it wrapped up its original run in 2002, The X-Files had nine seasons totaling 202 episodes, and Stargate: SG-1 would surpass it a few years later. But with the short-lived (and much-maligned) revival that started in 2016, the series got two more seasons and sixteen more episodes, enough to get it to the Number 6 slot on this list.  Many people believe this show overstayed its welcome (even during its original run), but it still counts as a sci fi TV classic. (Read more about the series at this link.)

7. The Walking Dead (2010-2022, AMC, 11 Seasons Totaling 177 Episodes)

There was a time when it seemed like this show might go forever seeing as it went multiple years as the top-rated scripted show on all of television. But the Walking Dexit set in during the show’s seventh season, and viewership went on a steady decline.  This one was destined to hit its endpoint eventually unless it was going to go beyond the comics, but AMC is doing that with the spin-offs instead. TWD wrapped up with its extended eleventh season which brought it to a grand total 177 eps. And while it became the favorite genre show to hate around its seventh year, it still has had an impressive run and has marked its place in sci fi TV history.

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8. Smallville (2001-11, The WB/The CW, 10 Seasons Totaling 217 Episodes)

This Superman prequel series proved to be popular on its original network The WB and later on The CW even though it came before the big superhero boom. And perhaps it can be credited with sparking interest in the superhero sub-genre before Marvel, DC, and others took it to the bank. Before The Walking Dead and Supernatural surpassed this show’s ten seasons, it was neck-and-neck with Stargate: SG-1 as the longest-running genre entry in the States, but it managed to beat that one out by three episodes (SG-1 had 214 total). The ten-season run for Smallville is quite impressive, and even though the Arrow-verse has produced more total seasons across multiple shows, no one entry in that franchise has matched Smallville‘s run (The Flash came closest at nine seasons and 184 episodes).

9. Stargate SG-1 (1997-2007, Showtime/Sci Fi Channel, 10 Seasons Totaling 214 Episodes)

This series stood as the longest-running genre entry in the U.S. for several years before Smallville managed to overtake it. And even if you included the two movies in its episode count (which I did not above), it will still come up short of tying the superhero series by one ep. Regardless, Stargate: SG-1 had a very notable run, delivering intelligent science fiction throughout its ten seasons. And it currently ranks among the classics of sci fi TV. (Read more about the series at this link.)

10. Mission: Impossible (1966-73, 1988-90, CBS/ABC, 9 Seasons Totaling 206 Episodes)

This super-spy series crossed several genres and definitely brought in a fair amount of sci fi elements over its many seasons. One of the few ’60s genre entries to carry over into the ’70s, this show kept audiences on the edge of their seats for seven seasons during its original run.  It also included crossover actors from other major sci fi shows such as Leonard Nimoy, Martin Landau, and Barbara Bain. It was brought back in the ’80s for a short-lived sequel series that saw Peter Graves return in the same role he made famous in the original run while leading a new group of spies. And later this one would be rebooted as a major film franchise.

>Keep up with the sci fi and fantasy TV shows airing each week with the Weekly Listings

The Next Ten

To round out this list, I am including the next ten longest-running sci fi and fantasy shows in case you want to throw out any entries I have above and create your own Top 10. I should also make mention of the long-running comedy series Mystery Science Theatre 3000 which I have not included here. That one has run for thirteen seasons and 230 episodes (so far), but it is more of a movie-riffing show than a full-on sci fi series, so I did not include it on the list. But if you want to count it with the other sci fi shows, it would find itself at the Number 3 slot. It was running new episodes on Netflix, but the streamer has chosen not to do more seasons of the series. Joel Hodgson has since done another crowd-funding campaign to produce more seasons on his own platform Gizmoplex, so MST3K is not done yet.

11. The Outer Limits (1963-65, 1995-2002, ABC/Showtime/Sci Fi Channel, 9 Seasons Totaling 201 Episodes)

12. The Flash (2014-Present, The CW, 9 Seasons Totaling 184 Episodes)

13. Charmed (1998-2006, The WB, 8 Seasons Totaling 178 Episodes)

14. Vampire Diaries (2009-2017, The CW, 8 Seasons Totaling 171 Episodes)

15. Arrow (2012-20, The CW, 8 Seasons Totaling 170 Episodes)

16. Game of Thrones (2911-2019, HBO, 8 Seasons Totaling 73 Episodes)

17. Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987-94, Syndication, 7 Seasons Totaling 178 Episodes)

18. Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993-99, Syndication, 7 Seasons Totaling 176 Episodes)

19. Star Trek: Voyager (1995-2001, UPN, 7 Seasons Totaling 172 Episodes)

20. Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997-2003, UPN/The WB, 7 Seasons Totaling 144 Episodes)

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Sci Fi/Fantasy TV Shows With the Most Episodes

It is also worth noting several early genre entries that tallied over one thousand total episodes, though that was across six seasons or less. Captain Video and His Video Rangers pioneered the genre on television, first arriving on the now-defunct DuMont network in 1949. That show aired daily for six years until 1955 and amassed over 1,500 episodes (nobody knows the exact number). Only a couple of dozen still survive, and only a handful are available on home video. Competing space opera series Space Patrol also ran daily and it totaled 1,110 episodes across five seasons during the first half of the ’50s. Considerably more of those survived, though not the entire run. Supernatural soap opera Dark Shadows debuted in 1966 and it had a run of 1,225 episodes across its six seasons. That entire series is still available and you can stream it on Amazon’s Prime Video.



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Author: johnnyjay

10 thoughts on “The Ten Longest-Running Sci Fi/Fantasy TV Shows of All Time (Updated)

  1. ST: Voyager actually aired two years later than what’s listed above, ending in 2001, it didn’t start until after TNG concluded.

  2. It s odd to think that, once upon a time, a TV show set in space — one that declared, in its opening narration, as the cosmos being the final frontier — was considered the pop-cultural equivalent of an unwanted party-crasher. Yes, a concept like

    1. Please forgive me Johnny. I didn’t read the article properly. A perfect example of the downfalls of speed-reading

      1. An argument could be made that Dark Shadows is the longest-running sci fi/fantasy show of all-time at 1,225 eps. I did it by seasons, but DS produced a ton of episodes over its six years.

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