Bleach Watch Order (2026): Complete Guide to Every Arc, Movie & the Final TYBW Part
Watch Order Guide · Updated June 2026

Bleach Watch Order: The Complete Guide to Every Arc, Movie & the Final TYBW Part

📅 June 20, 2026 · ⏱ 11 min read · ⚔️ 406+ Episodes Covered

Start Reading Jump to Filler Guide

Bleach has had one of the strangest journeys of any major shonen anime — a beloved 366-episode run that ended in 2012 without ever animating its final arc, a decade of silence, and then a triumphant return with Thousand-Year Blood War. With the fourth and final part, The Calamity, confirmed for July 2026, there’s no better time to get fully caught up.

This guide covers everything: the correct watch order, exactly which arcs are filler and which are canon, where each of the four movies fits, and a complete breakdown of the Thousand-Year Blood War saga part by part.

Quick Answer

Watch Bleach (Ep. 1-366) → TYBW Part 1 → Part 2: The Separation → Part 3: The Conflict → Part 4: The Calamity. Skip the five major filler arcs listed below — they cut zero canon content and save you dozens of hours.

406
Episodes Aired So Far
~35%
Original Series Filler Rate
4
Theatrical Movies
4
TYBW Parts (Total)

The Complete Filler Skip Guide

Bleach’s original run is famous for five major filler arcs that exist entirely outside the manga. None of them are required, and skipping all five takes you from 366 episodes down to roughly 230–240 canon episodes without losing a single real plot beat.

Ep. 1–63
Agent of the Shinigami → Soul Society: Rescue. All canon. The full origin story through the rescue of Rukia. Don’t skip anything here.
Ep. 64–109
Bount Arc + Bount Assault on Soul Society. Entirely anime-original filler. Skip the whole block.
Ep. 110–167
Arrancar: The Arrival → Hueco Mundo Arc. All canon. Introduces the Arrancar and the rescue of Orihime.
Ep. 168–189
Amagai Arc (New Captain). Filler centered on an anime-original captain. Skip.
Ep. 190–229
Arrancar vs. Shinigami → Fake Karakura Town (Part 1). Canon. The war against Aizen’s forces escalates.
Ep. 230–265
Zanpakuto: Unknown Tales Arc. A full filler arc giving the Zanpakuto spirits human forms. Fun concept, but entirely skippable.
Ep. 266–316
Fake Karakura Town (Part 2). Canon. The climactic fight against Aizen concludes here.
Ep. 317–342
Gotei 13: Invading Army Arc. Filler. Skip.
Ep. 343–366
The Lost Substitute Shinigami Arc. Canon. The final arc of the original series before the decade-long hiatus.
⚠️
Good news for TYBW: Thousand-Year Blood War has zero filler across all of its parts so far — every episode adapts manga content directly. The only filler you’ll ever need to think about is in the original 366-episode run.

Where Each Movie Actually Fits (Movie Placement Guide)

All four Bleach films are non-canon, but if you want to watch them, here’s exactly where each one slots into the timeline rather than just “whenever.”

#MovieYearBest PlacementWorth It?
1Memories of Nobody2006After Ep. 117 (Arrancar arc)Optional
2The DiamondDust Rebellion2007After Ep. 125 (Arrancar arc)Optional
3Fade to Black: I Call Your Name2008After Ep. 215 (Fake Karakura Town)Recommended
4Hell Verse2010After Ep. 342 (post-Invading Army)Recommended
💡
Two OVAs worth knowing about: “Memories in the Rain” (watch after Ep. 9) and “The Sealed Sword Frenzy” (watch after Ep. 63) are short Jump Festa specials. Both are non-canon but well-liked by longtime fans for extra character moments early on.

Thousand-Year Blood War: Every Part Explained

TYBW is structured differently from the original series — it’s split into four “cours” (parts) released over several years rather than one continuous broadcast. Here’s what each part covers.

⚔️

Part 1 (2022)

13 episodes. The Wandenreich’s first invasion of Soul Society. Captains fall, Yhwach is revealed as the true threat, and the scale of the final arc becomes clear immediately.

🏯

Part 2: The Separation (2023)

13 episodes. Ichigo trains at the Soul King’s palace while a second, larger invasion devastates the Seireitei. Ends on one of the franchise’s darkest cliffhangers.

🌀

Part 3: The Conflict (2024–2025)

13–14 episodes. The race to the Soul King’s palace, major character showdowns, and the long-teased confrontation between Yhwach and Ichibei Hyosube.

🏁

Part 4: The Calamity (July 2026)

The final part of the entire Bleach saga, confirmed at Jump Festa 2026. This will bring Tite Kubo’s manga to its full animated conclusion after more than two decades.

Quick Reference Table: Every Entry in the Franchise

TitleTypeEpisodesYearsStatus
BleachTV Series3662004–2012Complete
Bleach Movies (4 films)Films4 films2006–2010Complete · Non-Canon
TYBW Part 1TV Series132022Complete
TYBW Part 2: The SeparationTV Series132023Complete
TYBW Part 3: The ConflictTV Series13–142024–2025Complete
TYBW Part 4: The CalamityTV SeriesTBAJuly 2026Coming Soon

Frequently Asked Questions

What order should I watch Bleach in? +
Watch the original Bleach (episodes 1–366), then Bleach: Thousand-Year Blood War Parts 1 through 4 in order. Movies can be slotted in at specific points along the way, but they’re entirely optional and don’t affect the main story.
How much of Bleach is filler? +
The original series is roughly 35% filler out of 366 episodes, concentrated in five major arcs: Bount, Amagai, Zanpakuto Unknown Tales, and Gotei 13 Invading Army. All five are safely skippable. Thousand-Year Blood War, by contrast, has no filler at all.
When does Bleach TYBW Part 4 release? +
Bleach: Thousand-Year Blood War Part 4, subtitled The Calamity, was confirmed at Jump Festa 2026 to premiere in July 2026. It will be the final part of the series, bringing the manga’s story to its complete animated conclusion.
Do I need to watch the Bleach movies? +
No. All four Bleach films — Memories of Nobody, The DiamondDust Rebellion, Fade to Black, and Hell Verse — are non-canon side stories that exist outside the main continuity. They’re enjoyable extra lore but aren’t required to understand Thousand-Year Blood War.
Is Thousand-Year Blood War a separate show from Bleach? +
It’s marketed and listed separately on some streaming platforms, but it is a direct continuation of the original series. It adapts the final arc of Tite Kubo’s manga, which was never animated during the show’s original 2004–2012 run.
Where can I watch Bleach and Thousand-Year Blood War? +
In the US, the full original series and Thousand-Year Blood War stream on Hulu and Disney+. Internationally, Disney+ under the Star content hub carries the complete saga in most regions, and Crunchyroll also carries TYBW in several territories.
Is Bleach appropriate for kids? +
Bleach is generally suited to older kids and teens, with stylized sword violence and some intense, dark themes around death and loss given its premise. It’s typically rated similarly to Naruto and other major shonen titles, so parental discretion is reasonable for younger viewers.

Final Verdict: What’s the Best Way to Watch Bleach?

For most viewers, the smartest path is simple: watch the original 366 episodes using the filler skip guide above, then move straight into Thousand-Year Blood War Parts 1 through 3, and you’ll be perfectly caught up before Part 4: The Calamity arrives in July 2026.

If you’re short on time, the filler skip guide alone saves well over 50 hours without cutting a single canon moment — Bleach’s story holds together completely even with all five filler arcs removed.

And if you’re a returning fan who stopped after the original series ended in 2012, know this: the wait was worth it. Thousand-Year Blood War has been one of the most acclaimed anime returns in years, and its conclusion is finally just weeks away.

Ready to Start Watching?

Bookmark this page — we’ll update it the moment Part 4: The Calamity gets an exact premiere date and episode count. And if this guide helped, check out our other watch order guides below.

View All Watch Order Guides

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