The future of Doctor Who remains as cloudy as ever, but U.S. fans can at least look forward to a new streaming home that’ll house most of its recent past. Starting June 11, most of the show’s new era—over 150 episodes—will be available on AMC+. The asterisk on that, as the Hollywood Reporter notes, is that it’s 2005-2022 only. So the episodes will span Christopher Eccleston’s arrival as the Ninth Doctor, which brought the show back to the airwaves after almost a decade, through the Tenth Doctor (David Tennant), Eleventh Doctor (Matt Smith), Twelfth Doctor (Peter Capaldi), and Thirteenth Doctor (Jodie Whittaker). As THR writes, “the AMC+ acquisition is something of a homecoming for Doctor Who. BBC America, which like AMC+ is part of AMC Networks, was the U.S. home for the series from 2009-22 (Sci Fi Channel, the forerunner to Syfy, had the first few seasons).”
The series was also available on HBO Max for a time, as part of the then-newly launched streaming service’s offerings back in 2019. Not part of AMC’s streaming rights acquisition are any of Doctor Who‘s episodes created during the BBC’s since-ended production partnership with Disney, including the 60th anniversary specials that brought back Tennant (as the Fourteenth Doctor this time) and Ncuti Gatwa’s Fifteenth Doctor era that wrapped up in May 2025. Fret not, though: you can still watch all of those episodes on Disney+.







