Skip to main content

10 best Doctor Who episodes ever, ranked

David Tennant peers out of the TARDIS in Doctor Who.
BBC Studios

Doctor Who recently returned for its 14th season for the revival series that began in 2005. However, the legacy of the show extends back to 1963, when it debuted on British television and ran for 27 seasons. There was a nearly two-decade gap between the end of the first Doctor Who series and its successor, which continued in May even though BBC and Disney+ insist on calling it “Doctor Who season 1″ as if it were a third series.

Recommended Videos

Ncuti Gatwa starred in the newest season of Doctor Who alongside Millie Gibson, who plays the Doctor’s latest companion, Ruby Sunday. It’s their time to add to the lore of the series, hopefully with stories that can earn their place on this list in the future. In the meantime, we’ve chosen the 10 best Doctor Who episodes of the revival series, which you can see below.

10. The Husbands of River Song (2015 Christmas Special)

Peter Capaldi and Alex Kingston in Doctor Who.
BBC

There have been some terrific Doctor Who Christmas specials since the series returned in 2005, but The Husbands of River Song made this list because it brought closure to a long-running storyline that began in season 4 when Alex Kingston made her first guest appearance as River Song. Through most of her time on the show, River knew more about the Doctor’s future than he did. Peter Capaldi’s Twelfth Doctor flipped the switch on River, in part because she had never met his incarnation of the Doctor before.

This time, the Doctor got to play the role of the companion to River, who missed some obvious clues about his true identity. The Doctor was clearly having a blast, even though he didn’t always approve of River’s tactics. When River recognized the man she loves, the Doctor finally showed River how much he loves her as well.

9. School Reunion (season 2, episode 3)

Matt Smith and Elisabeth Sladen in Doctor Who.
BBC

The first season of the revival series didn’t bring back anyone from the original version of Doctor Who. Season 2 quickly rectified that with a guest appearance by Elisabeth Sladen as Sarah Jane Smith, the Doctor’s companion during some of the peak years of the series in the ’70s. Sarah Jane’s return was beautifully handled, as her hard feelings about being abandoned by the Doctor gave way to the joy of seeing him again. The Doctor was also clearly proud of the woman that Sarah Jane had became.

Sarah Jane’s return was more than just an emotional link to the past. It allowed Sladen to finally get a spinoff series, The Sarah Jane Adventures, which was something that almost happened decades earlier.

8. A Good Man Goes To War (season 6, episode 7)

Matt Smith in Doctor Who.
BBC

The Doctor is many things, but rarely as angry he was in A Good Man Goes To War. Madame Vastra (Neve McIntosh) and her forces kidnapped the Doctor’s companion, Amy Pond (Karen Gillan), and forced her to give birth in captivity. The Doctor and Amy’s husband, Rory Williams (Arthur Darvill), responded by putting together a small army from across time and space to storm the Demon’s Run space station in order to save Amy and her newborn daughter.

This episode was also one of the rare occasions where the villains got the last laugh, and the Doctor’s triumph became a bitter defeat. Regardless, the final moments of the story were a revelation that there might be a happy ending at the end of this difficult time.

7. The Stolen Earth/Journey’s End (season 4, episodes 12 and 13)

The cast of Doctor Who.
BBC

The Stolen Earth and Journey’s End pulled off a massive Doctor Who crossover story a decade before Avengers: Infinity War did the same thing for the MCU on the big screen. Every single companion from the revival series to that date returned for this two-part season 4 finale, which also featured guest appearances by the casts of the two spinoff series: The Sarah Jane Adventures and Torchwood.

Watching the Doctor’s friends rally around him was exciting and rewarding. Yet the episode’s emotional stakes came to rest on the Doctor’s bond with Donna Noble (Catherine Tate), who was perhaps his best friend among the companions. Donna saved the universe, and all it cost her was the chance to live a life of adventure with the Doctor and all the memories that went with that. It’s a good thing that the 60th anniversary specials gave the Doctor and Donna some much-needed resolution and a joyous reunion. We had to wait a long time to see that.

6. The Name of the Doctor (season 7, episode 13)

Jenna Coleman and Matt Smith in Doctor Who.
BBC

The second half of Doctor Who season 7 revolved around the mystery of the Doctor’s new companion, Clara Oswald (Jenna Coleman), who somehow simultaneously existed in multiple time periods. The Name of the Doctor peeled away the secrets of Clara’s purpose just as the Doctor discovered his final resting place in the future. There were also several callbacks to previous versions of the Doctor, both within the revival and the original series.

Despite the title of the episode, the Doctor’s biggest secret isn’t his name. It’s the chapter of his past that he kept hidden from everyone, which played out in The Day of the Doctor six months after this season finale aired.

5. Blink (season 3, episode 10)

Carey Mulligan in Doctor Who.
BBC

Many Doctor Who fans point to Blink as the greatest episode of the series despite the fact that the Doctor barely appears in it. It also has a much scarier tone than most of the show’s episodes. This is a great standalone story featuring guest star Carey Mulligan before she went on to become an Oscar-nominated actress. Mulligan plays Sally Sparrow, a young woman who has never met or heard of the Doctor before.

Much to Sally’s surprise, she comes to realize that the Doctor is attempting to contact her from the past because he needs her help to send his TARDIS back in time to retrieve him. Standing in Sally’s way are the Weeping Angels, an alien race who look like statues whenever anyone lays eyes on them. But the second that their victims look away, the Angels move with startling speed. There’s only one solution: “don’t blink.”

4. Army of Ghosts/Doomsday (season 2, episodes 12 and 13)

David Tennant and Billie Piper in Doctor Who.
BBC

The Doctor Who revival upped the stakes with its two-part season 2 finale, Army of Ghosts and Doomsday. The Doctor’s two greatest enemies, the Daleks and the Cybermen, came face-to-face before immediately declaring war against each other. Since both forces were invading Earth at the same time, that could have meant the end of humanity.

Thankfully, the Doctor and his companion, Rose Tyler (Billie Piper), come up with a solution… with an unintended consequence that forces them to say goodbye forever. This was Piper’s final episode as a regular cast member of the series, and at the time, it really did seem like the Doctor and Rose were parting for good just when they were about to acknowledge that they loved each other. The heartbreak in their farewell is unmatched.

3. The Eleventh Hour (season 5, episode 1)

Arthur Darvill, Matt Smith, and Karen Gillan in Doctor Who.
BBC

The fifth-season premiere, The Eleventh Hour, may be the most perfect pilot episode that isn’t actually a pilot. Matt Smith’s first full episode as the Eleventh Doctor completely reset the board for the show, even as the Doctor was still wearing the rags of his previous incarnation.

After crashing to Earth in the past, the Doctor meets and befriends a young girl named Amelia Pond (Caitlin Blackwood). One slight time travel mishap later, the present day Amelia now goes by Amy, and she is understandably upset because she thinks the Doctor abandoned her. But they have much bigger fish fingers and custard to fry because the Doctor has to save the world without his TARDIS or his sonic screwdriver. And he’s got less than an hour to pull it off. Keep an eye out for Oscar-winner Olivia Colman as she makes a cameo late in the episode.

2. Heaven Sent (season 9, episode 11)

Peter Capaldi in Doctor Who.
BBC

Peter Capaldi is one of the best actors to ever play the Doctor, and several of his episodes fell just outside of our top 10. However, Heaven Sent is in a league of its own, and it was all on Capaldi’s shoulders. For almost the entire episode, Capaldi is the only actor on screen as the Doctor finds himself a prisoner in a strange castle where he is stalked by a ghoulish creature known as the Veil.

This story took place immediately after the Doctor witnessed the death of one of his closest friends and companions. That left Capaldi with a lot of emotions to convey, including anger and grief, as the Doctor tried to come up with a way to escape. With no one else around to speak with, Capaldi essentially plays off of himself, and he gives an incredibly compelling performance. The ending is also up there with the all-time shocking cliffhangers in the history of the series.

1. The Day of the Doctor (50th Anniversary Special)

Matt Smith, David Tennant, and John Hurt in The Day of the Doctor.
BBC

Anniversary specials are often where the Doctors of the past meet the Doctors of the present. In the modern era, David Tennant and Matt Smith were the two most popular incarnations of the Doctor when they teamed up for the 50th anniversary special, The Day of the Doctor. Fans had impossibly high expectations for this special, and the episode surpassed them.

Since the Ninth Doctor actor, Christopher Eccleston, declined to return, showrunner Steven Moffat cast film veteran John Hurt as the War Doctor, a previously unknown incarnation of the Doctor who was physically older and more mature than his much younger versions from his personal future.

Tennant and Smith were hilarious together, but pairing them with Hurt raised the dramatic stakes and allowed all three of the Doctors to come to terms with their collective past. This happened during a fast-paced story that was nearly the length of a movie, which also set the stage for the next decade of Doctor Who adventures in an emotionally satisfying and exciting way.

Watch the new season of Doctor Who on Disney+Doctor Who seasons 1-13 are available to stream on Max.

Blair Marnell
Blair Marnell has been an entertainment journalist for over 15 years. His bylines have appeared in Wizard Magazine, Geek…
5 best animated war movies, ranked
Seita and Setsuko in Grave of the Fireflies

War is a devastating force that has brought unimaginable horrors. When depicted through animated films, terrible stories from the battlefield take on a haunting power that differs from what live-action can capture. Animated war movies capture the brutality of conflict while offering unique artistic perspectives, immersing viewers in vivid worlds that can be full of gut-wrenching moments.

From the infamous tearjerker Grave of the Fireflies to the one-of-a-kind documentary Waltz with Bashir, the best animated war films blend artistry and profound storytelling to leave a lasting impact. Whether it's through surreal dreamscapes or stark realism, these visually arresting works have cemented their legacy as some of the greatest and most profound war movies ever made.
5. In This Corner of the World (2016)

Read more
The 10 best movies on Tubi right now (March 2025)
A woman hugs a man from behind in an image from Footloose.

Have you canceled one or more of your paid streaming services as a way to try and cut back? With the pricing going up, this wouldn't be surprising. Don't worry, though, as there's still lots of content available to watch for free. One such source is Tubi, a free ad-supported streaming (FAST) service that you can tap into and watch movies to your heart's content. The selection is limited, always changing, and you'll have to endure ads. But considering some of the great titles available at any given moment, you can enjoy them without paying a dime and use those ad periods for bathroom breaks and popcorn refills.
Now comes the question: What are the best movies on Tubi right now? As noted, that list is always changing as titles usually come to Tubi on one-month releases. For this month, here are some of the best films to check out, from a classic martial arts film to an iconic 1980s musical drama.
Need more recommendations? Then check out the best new movies to stream this week, the best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Hulu, the best movies on Amazon Prime Video, the best movies on Max, and the best movies on Disney+.

Enter the Dragon (1973)

Read more
10 best Apple TV+ original shows, ranked
Adam Scott holds blue balloons in Severance season 2.

Since its first series launched in 2019, Apple TV+ has quietly churned out some high-quality original shows that span many genres. While it may not have the sheer volume of content as some of its streaming competitors, Apple's approach is all about quality over quantity. It has built a reputation for sleek production values and genuinely unique storytelling, resulting in critically acclaimed shows that keep viewers coming back for more.
From Severance to Ted Lasso, the streamer has proven its ability to produce one-of-a-kind series that are reaching audiences around the globe. Its growing catalog includes psychological thrillers, feel-good comedies, crime dramas, and more, with most being hits rather than misses. Apple TV+ isn't just filling a content library with haphazardly created generic shows — it's curating must-see series that continue to establish it as a reliable source of entertainment. Many other well-crafted shows — Morning Show, Dark Matter, Little America, and more — don't make this list, a testament to the platform's several offerings. For those wondering where to start, these are the best Apple TV+ originals that deserve a spot at the top of any viewer's watchlist.
10. Foundation (2021–)

An ambitious adaptation of Isaac Asimov's seminal sci-fi saga, Foundation imagines a distant future where the once mighty Galactic Empire teeters on the brink of collapse. This is further reinforced by the predictions of Hari Seldon (Jared Harris), a brilliant mathematician who develops psychohistory—a science that accurately predicts societal downfall. To prevent the inevitable dark age, Seldon established the Foundation, a group tasked with preserving knowledge and guiding humanity toward a renaissance. Meanwhile, the ruling Cleons, a line of cloned emperors (all played in different eras by Lee Pace, Terrence Mann, and Cassian Bilton), cling to power as they face new threats.
Foundation immediately draws audiences in with its immersive world, made believable by breathtaking production values. The dazzling spectacle sometimes isn't enough to distract from pacing issues, with the show's non-linear storytelling requiring patience. For those who stick around, Foundation rewards fans with an interstellar epic that offers political intrigue and bold mysteries that have helped cement its spot as one of the most promising sci-fi series streaming right now.

Read more