All Marvel Disney+ shows in order (and how to watch them)

Marvel, Marvel Cinematic Universe, Disney+
Marvel Disney+ shows (Image via marvel.com)

The Marvel Cinematic Universe is Hollywood’s most ambitious crossover event ever. The roots can be traced back to 1939, when Timely Comics started dropping heroes. Later, they switched things up, became Atlas, and finally landed on Marvel in the ’60s.

Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, and Steve Ditko gave us Spider-Man, the X-Men, Fantastic Four, and the Avengers. Fast-forward to 2008: Iron Man blasts onto the scene with Robert Downey Jr. redefining the “billionaire genius playboy philanthropist” vibe. That was MCU's first real shot at building their connected universe—and it paid off hugely.

They made them all tie together, just like in the comics where Spider-Man and the Hulk randomly crash each other’s stories all the time.

Marvel even bet the house on this plan, grabbing a $525 million loan in 2005. After Iron Man, they rolled out The Incredible Hulk, Iron Man 2, Thor, and Captain America—each movie dropping new heroes and breadcrumbs that all led to the first Avengers movie. When that finally hit in 2012, it was a game-changer.

And then Disney shows up with a $4 billion check in 2009 and scoops up Marvel. Now they’ve got Mouse Money™ behind them. By 2015, Marvel Studios was running full throttle inside Disney, and Kevin Feige got even more power.

Before all this, Marvel had sold off movie rights left and right (which is why early X-Men and Spider-Man flicks don’t fit in the Marvel Cinematic Universe). But once the MCU got rolling, Marvel kept things super tight—one big, happy family.

Then came Disney+ in 2019, and suddenly the MCU isn’t just a movie thing. They’re dropping shows like WandaVision, Falcon and the Winter Soldier, and Loki—all incorporated into the main story. And these are crucial. Miss them, and you’re probably gonna be super confused when you see the next movie.

So, the MCU isn’t just a bunch of superhero flicks—it’s a pop culture juggernaut with Easter eggs.


All Marvel Disney+ shows: Release order (2019–2025)

Marvel Cinematic Universe (Image via Disney UK)
Marvel Cinematic Universe (Image via Disney UK)

If you want to keep it simple, just watch everything in release order—because that’s the way Marvel Studios meant for you to binge it.

Marvel's Phase 4 is marked by the introduction of the Disney+ series. It kicked off with WandaVision in January 2021. We barely had time to process that before The Falcon and the Winter Soldier dropped in March.

Then Loki showed up in June and straight-up broke the multiverse (again).

August brought What If…?, which had alternate realities everywhere. And then Hawkeye wrapped up 2021 in November.

2022 was packed. Moon Knight landed in March with a heavy dose of Egyptian myth and mental health—Oscar Isaac just doing the most. June gave us Ms. Marvel, young hero energy, and a direct link to future movies.

Groot got his own adorable shorts in August—pure serotonin, totally skippable if you’re a cynic. She-Hulk dropped right after, breaking the fourth wall and making lawyer jokes. Then, in October, we got Werewolf by Night. And to cap it all off, the Guardians showed up with a goofy holiday special in November.

In 2023, Secret Invasion hit in June. Nick Fury, Skrulls, paranoia—trust issues everywhere. Loki came back for round two in October, just making the multiverse even messier. And What If…? season two dropped in December, doing its animated anthology thing again.

Phase 5 is still going. Echo spun out of Hawkeye in January 2024—gritty, street-level stuff. Later that year, we’re getting Agatha All Along.

Daredevil: Born Again drops in March 2025, finally bringing Charlie Cox’s Daredevil back into the MCU fold. Ironheart dropped in June 2025.

There’s also this animated Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man series in January 2025, which is like Peter Parker—but not the one you know. Plus, Eyes of Wakanda in August.

And for the zombie fans, Marvel Zombies is coming in October 2025. The year ends with Wonder Man in December.

Good luck keeping up.


Marvel Disney+ shows in chronological order

Marvel Cinematic Universe (Image via marvel.com)
Marvel Cinematic Universe (Image via marvel.com)

If you’re trying to watch the Marvel Disney+ shows in the order it actually “happens” (not by release date, but in-universe timeline), buckle up—because it’s kind of twisted.

You start off right after Endgame with WandaVision. It’s Wanda having a full-on meltdown—grief, magic, and sitcoms. It messes with your head in the best way.

Then you jump a few months forward to The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, where Sam is wrestling with the Captain America legacy. And Bucky’s just… well, doing his moody Bucky thing.

Loki s next, but it’s sort of its own thing. He’s off with the TVA, jumping around outside the main timeline, so you can watch it whenever—but technically, it’s post-Endgame.

What If…? is just pure madness—cartoon alternate universes, zombies, Peggy as Cap, you name it. Not really tied down to any timeline, just Marvel letting loose.

Back to “reality,” you get Hawkeye at Christmas after Endgame—Clint Barton trying to chill with his family, but trouble finds him.

Moon Knight is floating around somewhere after that, but Marvel’s super vague about when. It’s got gods, split personalities, and Oscar Isaac going full eccentric.

Ms. Marvel follows Hawkeye, with Kamala fangirling her way into actual superhero-dom. I Am Groot is just Baby Groot being adorable after Guardians 2. No need to overthink it.

She-Hulk: Attorney at Law slides in after Shang-Chi. Werewolf by Night is just its own spooky thing—nobody’s really sure where it fits. The Holiday Special with the Guardians comes after Vol. 3, so definitely wait on that one.

Echo is straight after Hawkeye, focusing on Maya Lopez. Secret Invasion is sandwiched between She-Hulk and The Marvels.

Coming up, you’ve got Agatha All Along (WandaVision sequel vibes), Daredevil: Born Again (after Echo, more Matt Murdock lawyering and punching), and Ironheart (about six months after Wakanda Forever, so get ready for more Wakanda tech).

The animated stuff gets even messier—Spider-Man: Freshman Year isn’t even canon, Eyes of Wakanda is all over the place, and Marvel Zombies goes full apocalyptic what-if.

And Wonder Man? Who knows. Marvel’s keeping that one mysterious for now.

With all these twists and timeline shenanigans, you just gotta pick your poison: chronological order for “story flow,” or release order for intended surprises.


How to watch Marvel Disney+ shows

Marvel Cinematic Universe (Image via Marvel.com)
Marvel Cinematic Universe (Image via Marvel.com)

Release order (If you’re new to the MCU)

Watching in release order keeps all those jaw-dropping moments, surprise team-ups, and epic entrances exactly where MCU wanted them. It preserves the magic. If you want to do it right, kick things off with WandaVision, then just roll through the list as it came out.

Heads up—everything’s on Disney+ (except the Spider-Man stuff…).

Chronological order (For the timeline obsessives)

If you’re one of those people who need everything in perfect order, then chronological is your jam. It lines up events by when they happen in the universe, not when they dropped IRL.

Just a warning: shows like Loki and What If...? are kind of wildcards. They hop timelines or mess with alternate realities, so things get weird fast.

Also, not every animated series or random special is crucial. You can skip the filler unless you’re a total completionist.


Key tips for watching

Marvel Cinematic Universe (Image via Marvel.com)
Marvel Cinematic Universe (Image via Marvel.com)

All those Marvel shows on Disney+ are tangled up with the MCU movies—sometimes more than you’d expect. If you haven’t seen the big hitters, you’re going to be a little lost. Sure, you can jump in, but you’ll be missing some “Ohhh, that’s why” moments.

Now, the animated stuff—What If…?, Marvel Zombies, I Am Groot—they’re mostly just side quests. Fun, but you can skip them if you’re just trying to keep up with the main story. Unless you’re a multiverse maniac, then by all means, dive in.

Some shows are must-watches, such as Loki and WandaVision. If you want to make sense of all that trippy magic and multiverse chaos, don’t skip these.

Disney+ has this timeline thing you can pull up in the Marvel section. It gets updates, so you won’t have to play guessing games about what order to watch stuff in.

Edited by Ritika Pal