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The Marvel timeline is a particularly complicated beast, thanks to the sheer number of MCU projects there are to sort through. Plus, the MCU doesn’t release its movies and TV shows in chronological order, and the universe is a few years ahead of our own, actual timeline. Now that Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania has kicked off Marvel Phase 5, the Multiverse Saga has blown wide open and things are surely about to get a whole lot more complicated.
But that’s where we come in. We’ve got the only Marvel timeline you’ll need below, with every single project in chronological order. We’ve also got all the Spider-Man movies, including Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield’s, along with shows that may or may not be canon, like Agents of SHIELD. We’re also up to date with Quantumania.
Note: A* means multiverse or timeline shenanigans that might not be part of the main timeline. And if you just want to watch the Marvel movies in order, click through the link.
Marvel timeline: 1931-1995
- Agents of Shield season 7 (1931-2019)*
- Captain America: The First Avenger (1943-45)
- One Shot: Agent Carter (1944)
- Agent Carter season 1 (1946)
- Agent Carter season 2 (1947)
- Captain Marvel (1995)
Things are relatively simple – for now. The tale of Steve Rogers does, admittedly, take place partly in 2011 thanks to the First Avenger’s post-credits scene. Yet the vast majority of the story takes place during World War 2 in 1943-1945, so we’ve included it here for clarity’s sake (this will become a running theme).
After that, the Agent Carter One Shot (which charts the foundation of S.H.I.E.L.D) begins and ends in 1944. Both season of Agent Carter take place after that. Then, some 50 years later, Captain Marvel crashes into Blackbuster and meets Nick Fury. After that, there’s a big time gap until a certain Iron Man shows up.
Confusingly, Agents of Shield season 7 saw the team travel back to 1931 and then eventually work their way back to 2019, via some pitstops in decades along the way. It still hasn’t been canonically confirmed whether that’s now part of the Marvel timeline or one from the multiverse, though the show seemingly cut all ties with the wider MCU in favor of a more streamlined storytelling approach. For all intents and purposes, it’s essentially another multiverse running parallel to the main timeline.
Marvel timeline: 2010-2012
- Iron Man (2010)
- Iron Man 2 (2011)
- The Incredible Hulk (2011)
- One Shot: The Consultant (2011)
- One Shot: A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Thor’s Hammer (2011)
- Thor (2011)
- Avengers (2012)
- One Shot: Item 47 (2012)
- Iron Man 3 (2012)
This is where things in the Marvel timeline begin to ramp up a bit. Iron Man, according to Marvel’s 10 Years of Marvel Studios book, actually takes place in 2010, not 2008. Iron Man 2 comes a year later, as do The Incredible Hulk and Thor, which both, incredibly, take place that same week .
Tucked in-between the Jade Giant’s solo movie and Thor’s arrival on Earth, however, are a pair of One Shots (which were very in vogue at Marvel during the early 2010s and meant to be an added incentive for fans to buy the DVDs). Of course, Avengers tops it all off with the Battle of New York in 2012. And then comes Iron Man 3, which, despite being a Phase 2 film, takes place later that same year. Still with me? It only gets tougher from here on out.
Marvel timeline: 2013-2015
- One Shot: All Hail the King (2013)
- Agents of Shield season 1, episodes 1-7 (2013)
- Thor: The Dark World (2013)
- Agents of Shield season 1, episodes 8-16 (2014)
- Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014)
- Agents of Shield season 1, episodes 17-22 (2014)
- Daredevil season 1 (2014)
- Guardians of the Galaxy (2014)
- Guardians of the Galaxy 2 (2014)
- Agents of Shield season 2, episodes 1-19 (2015)
- Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015)
- Agents of Shield season 2, episodes 20-22 (2015)
- Ant-Man (2015)
- Jessica Jones season 1 (2015)
- Daredevil season 2 (2015)
- Luke Cage season 1 (2015)
- Agents of Shield season 3 episodes 1-10 (2015)
Are you sitting comfortably? The All Hail the King One Shot comes several months after the events of Iron Man 3, firmly placing it in 2013. Meanwhile, Thor: The Dark World is directly mentioned after the eighth episode of the first Agents of Shield season. A similar thing happens with The Winter Solder (this was when Marvel TV were trying to tie their series into the movie events, something they later stopped doing). Everything from episode 17 right through to the end of the first season takes place after Hydra’s plan is uncovered in Winter Soldier.
Guardians of the Galaxy and its sequel, Vol. 2, take place in 2014, immediately after each other. Meanwhile, Daredevil season 1 also takes place that year.
In 2015, Agents of Shield season 2 deals with the fallout from Age of Ultron post-episode 19. From there, it’s a fairly straightforward run to the end of the year: Ant-Man, Jessica Jones season 1, Daredevil season 2, Luke Cage season 1 (as per Luke Cage actor, it takes place “a few months” after Jessica Jones), and the first 10 episodes of Agents of Shield season 3 – because there’s a slight time-jump after that.
Marvel timeline: 2016
- Agents of Shield season 3, episodes 11-19 (2016)
- Captain America: Civil War (2016)
- Agents of Shield season 3, episodes 20-22 (2016)
- Agents of Shield season 4, episodes 1-8 (2016)
- Agents of Shield: Slingshot (2016)
- Agents of Shield season 4, episodes 9-22 (2016)
- Iron Fist season 1 (opens in new tab) (2016)
- The Defenders (opens in new tab)(2016)
- Spider-Man: Homecoming (opens in new tab) (2016)
- The Punisher season 1 (opens in new tab) (2016)
- Doctor Strange (opens in new tab) (2016-2017)
As you can tell, 2016 was quite a wild ride in the Marvel universe. The Marvel timeline, though, is pretty easy to follow. Agents of Shield season 3’s eleventh episode has a bit of a jump, and Civil War is dealt with from episode 20 onward. Agents of Shield season 4 is only interrupted by the Slingshot web series (which is non-essential).
Spider-Man: Homecoming did its level best to mess up the MCU timeline, but it’s definitely in 2016, as explained by the director.
On the Marvel Netflix side of things, meanwhile, Iron Fist season 1 introduces the last of the Defenders, who then team up later that year in The Defenders. The Punisher season 1 takes place after all of those street-level shenanigans have concluded. Doctor Strange, of course, isn’t bound by time. His story starts in 2016 and continues into 2017. Speaking of which…
Marvel timeline: 2017-2018
- Agents of Shield season 5, episodes 1-19 (2017)
- Black Panther (2017)
- Black Widow (2017)
- Jessica Jones season 2 (2017)
- Inhumans season 1 (2017)
- Luke Cage season 2 (opens in new tab) (2017)
- Iron Fist season 2 (opens in new tab) (2017)
- Daredevil season 3 (opens in new tab) (2017)
- The Punisher season 2 (opens in new tab) (2017)
- Jessica Jones season 3 (2017)
- Runaways season 1 and 2 (2017)
- Cloak and Dagger season 1 and 2 (2017-2018)
- Runaways season 3 (2018)
- Thor: Ragnarok (opens in new tab) (2017-2018)
- Agents of Shield season 5, episodes 19-22 (2018)
- Ant-Man and the Wasp (opens in new tab) (2018)
- Avengers: Infinity War (opens in new tab) (2017-2018)
- Agents of Shield season 6 (2018*)
This is it. The year of the Snap.
The Marvel Netflix shows are much of a muchness at this point, though Luke Cage season 2 definitely comes before Iron Fist season 3, and Daredevil season 3 landing a little later on the timeline makes a bit more sense thematically. Then there are the Freeform shows, Cloak and Dagger along with Runaways, which also take place pre-Snap. The third season of Runaways muddies the waters by introducing a time skip that should technically take place during the Snap, but it’s never addressed. The season 3 finale also has a time skip which takes it up to around 2021.
The Black Widow movie may be part of Marvel Phase 4, but it’s actually tucked in-between Civil War and Infinity War. As the third Avengers movie ends in 2018, it’s a safe guess to predict that Natasha Romanoff’s standalone movie takes place in 2017.
Black Panther is perhaps the hardest to place. The death of T’Challa’s father in Civil War is still raw by the time his movie rolls around but, according to Marvel’s own official timeline to mark the ten-year anniversary of the MCU, Black Panther is set in 2017, not 2016. Send your complaints to Kevin Feige.
Finally, when it comes to Ant-Man and the Wasp and Thor: Ragnarok, both take place immediately before Infinity War, so can be watched in either order. Ant-Man and the Wasp’s post-credits scene, though, runs simultaneously alongside Thanos’ Snap, while Ragnarok’s post-credits only take us to the beginning of Infinity War. Yes, that’s confusing. Thor: Ragnarok before Ant-Man and the Wasp is probably your best bet.
Things don’t stop there, though. There’s the conundrum of Agents of Shield season 6. With season 5 explicitly leading into Thanos’ big moment, fans were slightly confused when season 6 failed to feature half the world disappearing. The showrunners have since reasoned that they simply couldn’t deal with the Snap as they – at the time of writing season 6 – were not aware of how Endgame and Spider-Man: Far From Home would deal with “the Blip”. In-universe, the snap takes place in 2018 even though there’s absolutely no reference to Thanos wiping out half the world in Agents of Shield season 6. Try not to think about it.
Marvel timeline: 2018-2026
- Avengers: Endgame (opens in new tab) (2018-2023)
- Agents of Shield season 7 finale (2019*)
- WandaVision (2023)
- Loki (Sort of 2023, sort of 2012)
- Shang-Chi and The Legend of the Ten Rings (2023)
- The Falcon and the Winter Soldier (2023/2024)
- Spider-Man: Far From Home (2024)
- Spider-Man: No Way Home (2024)
- Eternals (2024)
- Hawkeye (December 2024)
- Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (2025)
- Moon Knight (2025)
- She-Hulk (2025)
- Ms. Marvel (2025)
- Thor: Love and Thunder (2025)
- Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (2025)
- Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania (2025)
- Werewolf By Night (2025)
- Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special (Christmas 2025)
Avengers: Endgame has a clear five-year-jump after the Snap (dubbed “the Blip” in Far From Home), meaning much of the movie takes place in 2023, five years after the end of Infinity War. WandaVision sees Scarlet Witch trap an entire town in a force field following the death of Vision. Despite the sitcom antics taking place seemingly in multiple time periods, this all happens post-Endgame.
Loki, meanwhile, takes place outside of our conception of time. The primary Loki Variant of the show is technically snatched from 2012. But theorists hold that Kang the Conqueror witnesses the timeline being broken – therefore unleashing the multiverse – just as Wanda looks into the Darkhold during the WandaVision finale. Loki really is a confusing one – but if you’re tackling the MCU, this is probably the place it makes sense to watch, otherwise you’ll be waiting years for more multiverse shenanigans.
Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings likely takes place in 2023. It definitely comes after Avengers: Endgame, and Bruce Banner’s cameo shows that he hasn’t recovered from his universe-fixing snap just yet, plus everyone’s still talking about The Blip. That places the movie at a few weeks or months out from Endgame, but with no fixed date.
The Falcon and the Winter Soldier takes place six months after Endgame, which, depending on which month the events Endgame happens in, means the Captain America spinoff is set sometime in late 2023 or early 2024. Meanwhile, Spider-Man: Far From Home is set eight months after Endgame with Peter Parker mourning the loss of Tony Stark. That places it at just around the 2024 summer holidays, hence the European vacation.
Eternals takes place after Avengers: Endgame, and most likely just after Spider-Man: Far From Home. With the movie seeing a giant Celestial pop out of the ocean, it would be hard for that not to have an effect on the MCU going forward.
Hawkeye, we were told by the series’ director, takes place two years after Endgame. With its Christmas setting, however, that places the series just under the two year mark – at Christmas 2024.
Spider-Man: No Way Home picks up directly after Far From Home, which means the action takes place in 2024. The film leads us up to Christmas of that year, so the same time as Hawkeye. Moon Knight then takes place after Hawkeye, presumably in 2025. Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness follows No Way Home, which finishes in Christmas 2024, so we can assume that takes place in 2025 as well.
Ms. Marvel definitely takes place after Endgame, but beyond that specifics are hard to pin down, though Disney Plus puts it post-Moon Knight. Meanwhile, She-Hulk head writer Jessica Gao previously said that the show takes place shortly after Shang-Chi, so that puts the legal comedy in 2023, but the show goes on to reference No Way Home, placing it later than that. The official Disney Plus timeline has it as after Moon Knight but before Ms. Marvel, so we’ll stick to that for now. See? It’s confusing.
As for Thor: Love and Thunder, we know that the movie takes place eight years after Thor and Jane broke up. The breakup was referenced in 2017’s Thor: Ragnarok, so we can estimate that Love and Thunder is therefore set around 2025 or 2026. Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, meanwhile, was revealed by producer Nate Moore to take place at the same time as Love and Thunder and Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania. The movie takes place six years after Nakia left Wakanda, following Thanos’ arrival in Infinity War. Nakia most likely spent some time deliberating her departure, and considering Love and Thunder, we can put Wakanda Forever in 2025, along with Quantumania.
There’s some slight confusion with Quantumania, however, as Cassie Lang mentions being six when Yellowjacket attacked her, as seen in the first Ant-Man movie. That would make her only 16 in Quantumania, which doesn’t seem to be the case, so we can assume this is either a small retcon or an oversight, leaving Ant-Man 3 in 2025.
Then there are two more Marvel specials, which seemingly take place in 2025. Firstly, there’s Werewolf By Night, which may be emulating some of the best monster movies of the 1920s and 1930s, but actually takes place in modern times – at least, as far as we can tell. The key bit of evidence is a carafe of coffee seen in the background of one scene, which looks modern. Next up, we have The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special. Again, there’s not much here tying to an exact time, but given it is post-Endgame (Peter is sad about Gamora) and post-Thor: Love and Thunder, it seems a pretty safe guess it takes place during Christmas 2025.
As for Agents of Shield, which is maddeningly obtuse in its divergence of the Marvel timeline, they pretty much gave up on any semblance of being in the same universe as the MCU movies. Season 7 goes on a mad trip through time, heading back into the 40s, 50s, and 60s. The team then pop back into 2018, and it appears the finale ends in 2019, one year after the events of the sixth season (a time they’re eventually able to return to). This all happens, seemingly, on a different timeline, one where Thanos never fully invaded Earth. Some fans have reasoned that this could mean the non-Disney Plus TV shows happen on a completely different Marvel timeline to the movies – which is probably the easiest way of looking at it.
What about the Spider-Man movies?
Thanks to Spider-Man: No Way Home, the Spider-Man universe of movies are connected to the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield’s films do not, however, take place on the same Marvel timeline as the main MCU. They are stories told across the multiverse, and therefore do not fit into the core MCU timeline. If you do want a working order to watch those films, then check out our guide to how to watch the Spider-Man movies in order.
What about What If…?
What If…? is difficult to pin down, mainly because, like the non-Tom Holland Spider-Man movies, it’s set in the multiverse, and each episode takes a different Marvel movie as its jumping-off point. It gets its own section of the timeline for that reason, and the first season has ranged from an alternate version of Captain America: The First Avenger up to the Avengers: Infinity War era.
For more superhero goodness, check out our piece on all the new superhero movies coming to cinemas and streaming over the next few years.
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