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Home » The 30 Best TV Shows on Peacock Streaming Now: October 2025
Entertainment

The 30 Best TV Shows on Peacock Streaming Now: October 2025

Savannah HeraldBy Savannah HeraldNovember 25, 202514 Mins Read
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The 30 Best TV Shows on Peacock Streaming Now: October 2025
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From Hollywood to Home: Black Voices in Entertainment

The Paper.
Photo: Aaron Epstein/Peacock

This post is updated frequently as TV shows leave and enter Peacock. *New additions are indicated with an asterisk.

When Universal jumped into the streaming game in 2020, right as the pandemic was locking people into their devices, they boasted one of the strongest TV line-ups in the game, buoyed by decades of NBC programming and a few interesting originals. They’ve arguably lagged in the latter department, but recent years have been promising for Peacock with the premiere of buzz-worthy hits Poker Face and The Traitors. They’re on here, of course, along with 28 other shows to dominate your free time.

Years: 2025-
Length: 1 season, 10 episodes
Creators: Greg Daniels, Michael Koman

Billed as a semi-sequel to The Office, this mockumentary suffers by comparison to one of the most beloved comedies of all time, but it has its own charms and gets better as the freshman season goes along. Domhnall Gleeson is particularly excellent as the new editor of the Toledo Truth Teller, an optimistic guy who actually rallies his new colleagues to do their best. He’s kind of the anti-Michael Scott.

Years: 2012-present
Length: Various
Creators (Chicago Fire): Derek Haas, Michael Brandt 

All three of the currently running NBC series about crisis units in the Windy City are on Peacock – Chicago Fire, Chicago Med, and Chicago P.D. Case-of-the-week shows like this are often derided by critics but the industry that drives these shows is actually pretty impressive, producing elaborate disaster mini-movies every week. And they’re incredibly, consistently popular for a reason. The first, Fire, is still the best.

Years: 1968-1978
Length: 10 seasons, 69 episodes
Creators: Richard Levinson, William Link

Maybe it was the success of the Natasha Lyonne hit Poker Face, but there was a recent revival in the pop culture universe for the best trenchcoat-wearing crime solver of all time. Peter Falk plays the title character, an average guy with a brilliant mind for solving crimes. It’s been fun to watch people discover the simple charms of one of the best mystery shows of all time.

Years: 1993-1999
Length: 7 seasons, 122 episodes
Creator: Paul Attanasio

Long unavailable on any streaming service (and costing a fortune on physical media), Homicide finally dropped on Peacock in late summer 2024. One of the most masterful network TV dramas of all time, it’s held up remarkably well, even if Peacock is tragically missing some of the original needle drops. Watch this for so many reasons, but most of all Andre Braugher, who redefined the way police officers are played on TV.

Homicide: Life on the Street

Years: 1990-present
Length: Various
Creator: Dick Wolf

What would a streaming service from NBC be without its tentpole franchise, the Dick Wolf juggernauts that have been on most of our lives? The collection right now isn’t exactly complete — you can watch every single episode of Criminal Intent and Special Victims Unit, but you’ll have to start the original series at season 13 for some reason. That’s still a whole lot of ripped-from-the-headlines crime solving for one streaming service.

Year: 1989
Length: 1 season, 4 episodes
Creators: William D. Wittliff, Simon Wincer

There was a time, young readers, when a network mini-series could set the world on fire. Such was the case with this masterful CBS adaptation of the hit novel of the same name by Larry McMurtry, with a script written by the author and the great Peter Bogdanovich. A stunning ensemble that includes Robert Duvall, Tommy Lee Jones, Danny Glover, Diane Lane, and Anjelica Huston lead a Western that was so acclaimed that it won seven Emmys.

Years: 2023-present
Length: 1 season, 10 episodes
Creator: Rian Johnson

The writer/director of Knives Out and Star Wars: The Last Jedi brought his skill to TV in his smash-hit mystery-of-the-week series that recasts the Columbo template with Natasha Lyonne. The star of Russian Doll plays Charlie Cale, a human lie detector on the run from a shady casino enforcer (Benjamin Bratt). Every episode drops her into a different murder mystery with a great revolving door of guest stars that includes Adrien Brody, Judith Light, Tim Meadows, Nick Nolte, and many more.

Years: 2023-
Length: 2 seasons, 22 episodes
Creator: Michael Jonathan Smith

Few shows have ever taken a leap quite as high from its first to its second season as Peacock’s adaptation of the Sony video game about murderous vehicles. A show that didn’t quite know what it wanted to be found its identity in year two, which is funny, thrilling, and unexpected. It helps to add an MVP like Barry’s Anthony Carrigan.

Years: 2018-present
Length: 5 seasons, 47 episodes
Creators: Taylor Sheridan, John Linson

This Kevin Costner Western slowly became one of the biggest shows on television. Starting life on the Paramount Network, it now airs original episodes on Paramount+, but the catalog of its first four seasons remains on Peacock — TV rights are weird. Yellowstone has grown to become a legitimate franchise with four spin-offs — 1883 and 1923 are over on Paramount+ and 6666 and 1944 are in development. They love their numbers.

Year: 2023
Length: 1 season, 8 episodes
Creators: Tara Hernandez, Damon Lindelof

The creator of The Leftovers and Watchmen teams with one of the writers of The Big Bang Theory for this truly original show about religion, mythology, and artificial intelligence. Betty Gilpin rocks as a nun named Sister Simone, who basically finds herself tasked with a quest that will end with the destruction of a powerful Siri-esque A.I. named Mrs. Davis. As you can imagine, it’s surreal, funny, and sometimes brilliant.

Years: 1987-2002, 2008-2010
Length: 16 seasons, 602 episodes
Creators: John Cosgrove, Terry Dunn Meurer

Netflix may have the reboot, but Peacock has the archive, dozens of hours of serial killers, UFO sightings, and paranormal phenomena. These are the Robert Stack-hosted originals, the show that broke new ground in terms of viewer involvement through tips and some of the most unforgettably cheesy crime re-creations ever produced. Note: They also have the Dennis Farina version that aired on Lifetime for the completists out there.

Years: 2006-2013
Length: 7 seasons, 139 episodes
Creator: Tina Fey

Tina Fey turned her experience on Saturday Night Live into one of the most critically acclaimed comedies of all time. How much did people love 30 Rock? It was nominated for the Emmy for Best Comedy for all seven seasons that it ran, winning three of them. Its legacy has been a little controversial recently, but it remains one of the sharpest shows on network TV of the modern era.

Years: 2013-2021
Length: 8 seasons, 153 episodes
Creators: Dan Goor, Michael Schur

What were you thinking, FOX? After canceling this beloved comedy, Jake Peralta and the 9-9 jumped over to NBC, where it now looks like they could air for years. This is another comedy that started off on shaky ground but became one of the best ensemble comedies after about a year or two. It’s now as consistently funny as anything on network TV. Prediction: You know how everyone watched The Office over and over again on Netflix (before it jumped to Peacock)? This show will be like that in about a decade.

Years: 2009-2015
Length: 6 seasons, 110 episodes
Creator: Dan Harmon

While 30 Rock and The Office were winning awards, the outsiders at Greendale Community College were building an incredibly loyal fan base. With some of the smartest writing on television, Community told the story of a group of students at Greendale, led by the egocentric Jeff Winger (Joel McHale). The leading man was always underrated, but this show was its best when the whole ensemble clicked, including Alison Brie, Gillian Jacobs, Danny Pudi, Yvette Nicole Brown, Donald Glover, Jim Rash, and Chevy Chase. There’s some rocky stuff in the back half — creator Dan Harmon skipped the fourth season and was re-hired for the fifth — but it never completely sank. There’s a reason fans are excited for the upcoming movie.

Years: 1996-2005
Length: 9 seasons, 210 episodes
Creator: Philip Rosenthal

One of the best sitcoms of all time, the CBS juggernaut remains hysterical, and Peacock is now the exclusive streaming home of the Barone family. The ensemble here is so strong from top to bottom, but revisit it now for the timing of Peter Boyle and Doris Roberts as Ray’s parents. They make every single joke funnier than it is on the page.

Years: 2005-2007
Length: 2 seasons, 13 episodes
Creator: Ricky Gervais, Stephen Merchant

It’s been a little weird to see how the fire sale is sending HBO properties scattering across the streaming landscape. Take this BBC property which was once an HBO exclusive, and now is somehow on Peacock. The creators of The Office reunited for an incredibly funny look at the people on the fringe of Hollywood, featuring some amazing guest turns from stars like Ben Stiller, Patrick Stewart, Samuel L. Jackson, and an unforgettable Kate Winslet.

Years: 1988-1995
Length: 5 seasons, 101 episodes
Creator: Various

Starting life on the CBC in Canada in the late ‘80s, The Kids in the Hall would become one of the most beloved sketch comedy shows of all time. It holds up stunningly well three decades later, ahead of its time in terms of humor, representation, and general surreal insanity. The fact is that Dave Foley, Kevin McDonald, Bruce McCulloch, Mark McKinney, and Scott Thompson are just incredibly, hysterically smart, and their genius comes through in every episode.

Years: 2009-2018
Length: 9 seasons, 215 episodes
Creators: Eileen Heisler, DeAnn Heline

The most underrated family sitcom of the 2010s was this ABC series that starred Patricia Heaton as the matriarch of an average family in the Midwest who just tries to hold things together from day to day. Scrubs star Neil Flynn plays her husband with Atticus Shaffer, Charlie McDermott, and Eden Sher play the three Heck children in a show that’s equally heartfelt and humorous, anchored by characters who feel more genuine than this genre typically allows.

Years: 2009-2020
Length: 11 seasons, 250 episodes
Creators: Christopher Lloyd, Steven Levitan

Critics may not agree, but this is arguably the biggest comedy of the 2010s. It was a massive hit for ABC, especially for the first half of its run, in which it appeared in the top ten constantly and won 22 Emmys on the back of dozens of nominations. In fact, it won Best Comedy for its first five seasons with three of its performers — Ty Burrell, Eric Stonestreet, Julie Bowen — taking home multiple awards themselves. It’s a major chapter of TV comedy history that holds up for at least the first half of its run.

Years: 2005-2013
Length: 9 seasons, 201 episodes
Creator: Greg Daniels

In 2020, Peacock paid a fortune to get exclusive rights to what was then one of the biggest comedies on Netflix, and it reportedly helped drive subscribers. People simply love the comedy of Dunder Mifflin and rewatch this show as much as anything else on TV. It feels like it’s always on Comedy Central or Freeform nowadays, but with Peacock, you can find your favorites to rewatch whenever you want.

Years: 2009-2015
Length: 7 seasons, 125 episodes
Creators: Greg Daniels, Michael Schur

Sitcom television doesn’t get much better than Parks and Recreation, an NBC critical darling that took a little time to find its footing but became a modern classic by the third season. The writing on the show is as sharp as it gets, amplified by a fantastic ensemble led by Amy Poehler as Leslie Knope, the immensely likable head of the Pawnee Parks Department. Poehler rules, but everyone here makes a mark, including Nick Offerman, Aubrey Plaza, Chris Pratt, and Aziz Ansari. As of now, the show that was once everywhere in the streaming world has settled in on Peacock as an exclusive home.

Years: 2006-2014 (plus specials after)
Length: 8 seasons, 120 episodes
Creator: Steve Franks

James Roday Rodriguez stars in this USA hit as Shawn Spencer, a crime consultant who is so attuned to details that he can pretend to be psychic. A clever, modern riff on Sherlock Holmes, another detective who was simply more observant than anyone else, Psych has a massive following, one so loyal to the show that it’s led to two follow-up films, including one that premiered with the launch of Peacock: Psych 2: Lassie Come Home.

Years: 1975-present
Length: 48 seasons, 945 episodes
Creator: Lorne Michaels

It’s almost all on there, finally. When Peacock launched, one of the draws was the potential of reliving comedy history through the most influential sketch comedy series of all time, but they only had best-of collections at first. Now, there are dozens of episodes from the five decades of the NBC late-night hit. It’s like a lesson in comedy history, watching how the sense of humor of the nation changed from the ‘70s through to the 2020s.

Years: 2024-present
Length: 1 season, 14 episodes
Creator: Eric Ledgin, Justin Spitzer

One of the best new network comedies is available streaming only on Peacock. From the creator of Superstore, this is basically a riff on that show’s office comedy structure, and it contains a similar vein of social commentary that elevates it, but the main draw is its undeniably talented cast: Allison Tolman, David Alan Grief, Wendy McLendon-Covey, and a group of sharp newcomers who should all become stars from this hit show.

Years: 2015-2021
Length: 6 seasons, 113 episodes
Creator: Justin Spitzer

The fact that no one watches network TV as much as they used to had this NBC Thursday night comedy slide further under the radar than it deserved. Not only was Superstore one of the funniest shows on TV, anywhere, but it became a smart commentary on class inequality. If this aired in the era of The Office, it would have been huge. Hopefully, life on streaming services like Peacock will get it the attention it merits now that it’s completed its consistently excellent run.

Years: 2005-2012
Length: 4 seasons, 23 episodes
Creator: Armando Iannucci

Before Veep, Armando Iannucci created this brilliant political comedy starring Peter Capaldi, and featuring the same razor-sharp, vicious wit that would define the HBO Emmy winner too. Like Veep, it pulls back the curtain on the selfish egos that control modern politics. It was such a critical darling that it was adapted into a feature film that ended up getting an Oscar nomination, In the Loop.

Years: 2021-present
Length: 1 season, 6 episodes
Creator: Nida Manzoor

Manzoor’s series might be the best comedy you probably haven’t seen. Anjana Vasan stars in the tale of an all-female Muslim punk band in the U.K. It started life as a Channel 4 pilot in its home country in 2018, expanded into a series in 2021 and exported to Peacock. It’s a moving, rich, character-driven piece about being yourself, even when your culture and your country doesn’t support you.

Years: 2004-present
Length: 20 seasons, 251 episodes
Creator: Eli Holzman

When the book is written on the prevalence of reality TV in the 2000s and the emergence of Bravo as a major player, this show will get its own chapter. Now running for 20 seasons, Project Runway may not have the cultural impact that it once did, but its fan base remains loyal and its impact on the industry — both TV and fashion — can’t be underestimated.

Years: 2006-present
Length: 20 seasons, 289 episodes
Creator: Various

Maybe the best reality competition show of all time, this Bravo original is exclusively on Peacock, where they’re also airing new episodes of the 20th all-star season the day after they air. Top Chef works so well because of how much it values skill, creativity, and passion. The winners of Top Chef have gone on to change the culinary world. And now you can watch their origin stories over hours of great reality TV.

Years: 2023-present
Length: 2 seasons, 23 episodes
Creators: Lee Gant, Christine Rose 

The biggest new reality TV hit of 2023 so far is this gem of a competition show with a delightful hosting job by Alan Cumming. He guides a fascinating array of reality TV stars from shows like Below Deck, Survivor, and Big Brother through a game with a simple premise — three of them are traitors. Can the contestants figure out who’s stabbing them in the back before they all end up eliminated? It’s a smartly crafted, fun show.

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