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50+ Shows on Netflix, Hulu, and Other Streaming Sites With More Than 5 Seasons Each
Looking for something to binge-watch that’s a little longer than your average weekend watch? Between all the major streaming services, there are quite a few long-running TV shows that are sure to keep you occupied for as long as you need to be. Every single one of the shows recommended here has run for at least five seasons – most of them have run for even longer – so they’re perfect for quarantine viewing or just a long-term investment in a good story. There’s something for everyone here, from superhero action thrillers to prestige dramas and heartwarming comedies. Keep reading for dozens of our favorite long-running shows that you can watch on Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime, and HBO right now!
The Wire
In this acclaimed series, characters from all walks of life struggle with (and against) the drug trade in Baltimore. Instead of focusing on just one “side” of things, the show famously tackles it from all angles, presenting us with characters who are cops, drug dealers, addicts, politicians, families, and more, who are all trying to build lives for themselves in whatever ways they know how.
Curb Your Enthusiasm
It’s almost a Seinfeld-esque “show about nothing,” in which creator Larry David plays a fictionalized version of himself struggling with all the little annoyances and quirks of life.
Poldark
After being presumed dead in the American Revolution, a soldier returns home to rural England to find that his family land is in shambles and his long-lost love has married his cousin. With the help of a motley crew of tentative allies, he has to rebuild his family’s legacy and find a way to heal his heart – but both are easier said than done.
The Americans
During the Cold War, a pair of KGB spies are assigned to a long-term, deep cover mission, posing as an ordinary married couple in the American suburbs. Over the years, they build a life and a family in their new home, but as they’re called back into action, the lines start to blur between what’s real and what’s just part of the mission.
Downton Abbey
The British period drama breathed fresh life into the historical genre without taking a dark and dreary approach. Focusing on the lives and loves of the aristocratic Crawley family and their servants, the series spans the restrictive decorum of the Edwardian era through World War I and the fast-arriving changes of the 1920s, forcing everyone to adapt as they fight for their families, loves, and way of life.
Arrow
Superhero TV shows are everywhere right now, so it’s easy to forget that, when Arrow debuted, it was still a big risk. After spending five years shipwrecked, billionaire playboy Oliver Queen returns to his corrupt city with a secret vigilante identity, determined to right wrongs – and he slowly learns that he doesn’t have to go it alone.
Breaking Bad
Facing a cancer diagnosis, a mild-mannered chemistry teacher begins cooking meth in hopes of leaving enough money behind to take care of his family. It’s only a matter of time before he gets sucked deeper and deeper into the criminal underworld, turning into a full-fledged drug lord.
Call the Midwife
In 1950s London, a group of midwives work to help the women of an impoverished district, all while dealing with personal crises of their own from time to time.
Community
When a lawyer finds out his degree was revoked, he’s stuck going back to school at a community college. He starts a “study group” to impress a pretty girl in one of his classes, but instead ends up launching a real study group full of colorful characters.
Watch Community on Netflix beginning Apr. 1.
The Flash
Geeky forensic scientist Barry Allen becomes a superhero speedster when he’s struck by lightning in a lab. From then on, he works to balance his investigations on the police force with his newfound double life as a superhero – plus some scary scientific conspiracies.
Gilmore Girls
A mother raises her overachieving teenage daughter in a small New England town filled with quirky characters. When her daughter gets into an elite – and expensive – school, Lorelai is forced to reopen her relationship with her stern, wealthy parents, kicking off several years of drama and humor (and lots of coffee).
Glee
At the beginning, this risky comedy was a scrappy, darkly humorous satire of a high school glee club and the outsize personalities that make up that not-always-merry band of misfits. While later seasons became increasingly off-the-wall, the sweet heart of the show remained steady.
The Great British Baking Show
Looking for some TV comfort food? Look no further than this cozy, quippy baking competition that challenges a dozen amateur bakers to create delicious and sometimes unusual treats, all in a low-key and fun environment that stays far away from the usual reality show intensity.
Grey's Anatomy
Sixteen seasons in and Grey’s is still going strong – who’d have thought? Since 2005, we’ve been eagerly watching the medical careers and personal exploits of a group of (remarkably attractive) doctors in Seattle, all connected to Meredith Grey, the ambitious and messy daughter of a surgical legend.
Jane the Virgin
A young aspiring writer finds out that she’s a pregnant virgin, thanks to a medical mix-up. With the help of her parents, grandmother, and an assortment of loved ones, Jane tackles the challenges of motherhood while finding ways to pursue her own dreams.
Mad Men
The stylish drama is set at an advertising firm in the 1960s, where Don Draper and his colleagues brainstorm ideas, pursue success ruthlessly, and hide an awful lot of secrets.
Merlin
It’s a new twist on the legends of Camelot you’ve heard dozens of times before. In this Camelot, where magic is banned, the young sorcerer Merlin is a servant to arrogant Prince Arthur and must keep his magic a secret. As he learns more about his and Arthur’s destinies, Merlin fights to save the future king and the future of Camelot.
New Girl
A quirky, just-dumped young woman moves into a loft with three mismatched roommates. What starts out as a goofy fish-out-of-water premise turns into a warm and still goofy comedy about an unlikely group of friends figuring out life, love, and growing up.
The Office
It’s become an iconic piece of modern TV comedy for good reason. Filmed in the “mockumentary” style before it was cool, The Office follows the hijinks of the quirky workers at a Pennsylvania paper company office that’s far from dull.
Schitt's Creek
When they lose everything to a bad business manager, the uberwealthy Rose family is forced to relocate to the tiny town they bought as a joke. Although it takes them a while to adjust to their new lives, each of them slowly begins to discover the things they never knew their lives were missing.
Shameless
A messy, hard-drinking father of six struggles to raise his family, pawning off much of the responsibility on his eldest daughter. Through ups and downs, the family figures things out, albeit with a lot of mistakes and upheaval along the way.
Supergirl
Sent off-world as her planet was destroyed, Kara Danvers grew up pretending to be human, but knowing she was super. When she embraces her powers, she becomes Supergirl, a hero who fights injustices both mundane and supernatural alongside her friends and allies.
The Vampire Diaries
Vampire brothers Stefan and Damon battle each other and eternal forces of darkness in a small Virginia town. Along the way, they both fall in love with a human girl who mysteriously resembles the woman they both loved over a century ago.
The West Wing
Under the administration of the deeply decent President Bartlet, a group of White House staffers work to keep the country running smoothly. Nothing comes easily, though, especially keeping political agendas in check.
Bones
A forensic anthropologist-slash-crime novelist teams up with an FBI agent to solve bizarre crimes in this popular and long-running procedural. Of course, the biggest legacy of the show isn’t its mysteries; it’s the electric chemistry between Booth and Bones that gave rise to one of TV’s most popular ‘ships.
Brooklyn Nine-Nine
It’s a new spin on the old police show, with a group of quirky, quippy detectives solving crime and getting into shenanigans at their NYC precinct. More of a workplace sitcom than a police show, it’s definitely the source of at least one meme you know.
Family Guy
There are a whopping 18 seasons currently available of this long-running animation staple, which centers on the misadventures of a clueless dad and his oddball family and community.
Friday Night Lights
In small-town Texas, high school football means everything. A tough but fair coach and his compassionate school counselor wife try to guide their students through school, work, family troubles, first love, major tragedy, and so much more.
Homeland
A CIA officer struggling with mental illness raises the alarm about a newly-returned POW who she suspects might have turned traitor. What unfolds from there is a long and twisty tale of spies, politics, paranoia, and the struggle to figure out what’s true and what isn’t before the whole world pays the price.
Justified
A US Marshal takes a very Wild West approach to his job, leaving him with lots of enemies among the criminal underworld and very few allies among his colleagues. When he’s assigned to the rural Kentucky region where he grew up, he finds himself pulled into a string of crimes and conspiracies.
Law and Order: Special Victims Unit
The best-known of the Law and Order family follows a specialized squad of New York detectives who focus on solving sexually-based crimes. It’s been running for 21 seasons and counting!
Outlander
When a World War II-era nurse gets pulled through a magical circle of stones in Scotland, she has to build a new life for herself in the eighteenth century. Time travel, tense drama, and romance abound in this popular series based on Diana Gabaldon’s bestselling books.
Queer as Folk
In the early 2000s, a group of gay men (and their lesbian friends) deal with life, sex, and love in the best ways they know how. When a newly-out teenager falls into their group, it shakes everyone up and has them questioning what they’re really doing with their lives.
South Park
The infamously irreverent animated comedy is available in all its gleefully obscene glory. There are 23 seasons – and an infinite number of memrorable lines – to get through!
Shameless
The Gallagher family is a bit of a mess, and no one more so than the alcoholic, rough-around-the-edges patriarch. But despite it all, they manage to grow up and figure out how to live their lives, supporting each other along the way.
American Horror Story
Unlike most of the shows on this list, American Horror Story isn’t a single story spanning several seasons. Instead, each season of reboots with a (mostly) independent story in settings ranging from a circus to a haunted house to a literal apocalypse, resulting in one of modern TV’s best horror anthologies.
Cheers
It’s one of the most iconic sitcoms of all time, and for a good reason. At a Boston bar owned by a former baseball star, colorful patrons and workers come and go across eleven seasons, but at the center of it all is the classic will-they-won’t-they tension between bartender Sam and waitress Diane.
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia
Five mismatched misfits who own a bar get into all sorts of professional and personal messes, all while trying their best to actually act like adults. Although their schemes for success fail more often than not, they just keep trying and trying – often with hilariously disastrous results.
Lost
A plane crashes on a mysterious island, forcing the survivors to band together to survive until rescue arrives. As you might have heard, though, this is no ordinary island, and the show’s survival-centric drama soon shifts to trippy, philosophical, time-traveling twists that ask the big questions about science, fate, faith, and community.
The Shield
Politics and crime intersect in this drama about the moral ambiguity of law and law and enforcement. A group of corrupt cops also happens to be the best at what they do, leading to some major conflict with a captain who needs to clean up her district and politicians out to grab power for themselves.
The X-Files
The seminal sci-fi drama has sparked movies and a reboot, but you can catch up with the original on Hulu. Two federal agents – one a skeptic, one a believer – investigate weird, inexplicable, and sometimes downright terrifying happenings and try to discover if they’re all linked.
Younger
When a newly-divorced 40-year-old mom can’t get a foot in the door to restart her career, she impulsively lies about her age to get hired at a publishing company. What ensues is several seasons of relationship drama, parodies of the real literary world, hilariously spiraling lies on top of lies, and a surprisingly sweet heart about female friendship.
Buffy the Vampire Slayer
It’s the prototype for every supernatural teen drama of the past two decades. Buffy is a Slayer, the once-in-a-generation hero chosen to defend the world against demons, vampire, and other supernatural baddies. With the help of her loyal band of friends – and a couple of supernatural love interests – she saves the world over and over again, all while dealing with high school and college.
Seinfeld
The iconic sitcom is, famously, a show “about” nothing. At its core, the show focuses on a quartet of friends in the ’90s, struggling to get through all the little indignities and quirks of life and supporting (or laughing at) each other the whole way.