Table of Contents >> Show >> Hide
- How This Gay TV Show Ranking Was Built
- The 40 Best Shows With Gay Main Characters, Ranked By Fans
- 1. Heartstopper
- 2. Schitt's Creek
- 3. The Last of Us
- 4. Young Royals
- 5. Our Flag Means Death
- 6. Pose
- 7. Queer as Folk (US)
- 8. The L Word
- 9. Sex Education
- 10. It’s a Sin
- 11. Will & Grace
- 12. Sense8
- 13. Modern Family
- 14. Looking
- 15. Elite
- 16. Glee
- 17. Brooklyn Nine-Nine
- 18. Shameless (US)
- 19. The Fosters
- 20. How to Get Away with Murder
- 21. Orange Is the New Black
- 22. Please Like Me
- 23. Love, Victor
- 24. Special
- 25. Six Feet Under
- 26. Queer Eye (Reboot)
- 27. RuPaul’s Drag Race
- 28. Noah’s Arc
- 29. Veneno
- 30. Grace and Frankie
- 31. Boots
- 32. Clean Slate
- 33. Overcompensating
- 34. The Hunting Wives
- 35. King of Drag
- 36. Euphoria
- 37. Somebody Somewhere
- 38. Hacks
- 39. Project Runway
- 40. Billions
- Why Gay Main Characters on TV Matter
- of Fan Experience: What It’s Like to Live in These Shows
- Conclusion: Finding Your Next Gay TV Obsession
Once upon a time, “the gay character” showed up for two episodes, delivered a heartfelt monologue,
and then mysteriously moved to another city. Now, queer fans are spoiled for choice: we have
full ensembles of gay protagonists, decade-defining romances, messy antiheroes, and
unapologetically queer worlds to binge for days.
This fan-powered list pulls from audience rankings, critic-approved LGBTQ+ TV lists, and
community buzz to highlight the 40 best shows with gay main characters. Whether you want
soft teen romance, pirate boyfriends, drag competitions, or heart-shredding prestige drama,
there’s something here that will make you laugh, cry, and aggressively spam your group chat
with “YOU HAVE TO WATCH THIS.”
How This Gay TV Show Ranking Was Built
Instead of one person shouting “my taste is law,” this ranking reflects what viewers come back
to over and over again:
- Fan-voted lists and popularity rankings on major entertainment sites.
- Critics’ roundups of essential LGBTQ+ TV and year-end “best of” lists.
- Queer media commentary, online fandom chatter, and long-term cult followings.
The result: 40 shows where gay main characters aren’t just side quests. They drive the story,
shape the emotional core, and often become cultural landmarks in their own right.
The 40 Best Shows With Gay Main Characters, Ranked By Fans
-
1. Heartstopper
A gentle British teen romance about Nick and Charlie that somehow feels like a warm
hug and a panic attack at the same time. It nails queer first love, friendship, and the
tiny, terrifying moments of coming out – all in pastel colors. -
2. Schitt’s Creek
David Rose didn’t just become a meme; he became a gold-standard example of a pansexual
lead whose queerness is fully accepted. His relationship with Patrick gives us one of TV’s
sweetest, softest slow burns, wrapped inside a small-town comedy. -
3. The Last of Us
A post-apocalyptic drama might not scream “romantic,” yet this series delivers some of
the most heartbreaking gay storytelling on TV, from Bill and Frank’s standalone love
story to Ellie’s queer journey as she grows into a central hero. -
4. Young Royals
A Swedish crown prince, a working-class choir boy, and enough teen angst to power an
entire palace. Wilhelm and Simon’s romance blends royal pressure, homophobia, and
tender vulnerability into one of fandom’s most passionately defended ships. -
5. Our Flag Means Death
What starts as a quirky pirate comedy turns into a fully committed gay love story
between Stede Bonnet and Blackbeard. It’s goofy, heartfelt, and proof that swashbuckling
and soft masculinity can coexist beautifully. -
6. Pose
Centered on Black and Latinx queer and trans characters in New York’s ballroom scene,
this drama spotlights gay men and trans women building chosen family amidst the AIDS
crisis. It’s stylish, political, and emotionally devastating in the best way. -
7. Queer as Folk (US)
Chaotic, dated, and iconic. This early-2000s series follows a group of gay men in Pittsburgh
navigating sex, love, politics, and Pride. It captured a moment in queer TV history and
still influences how gay ensemble stories are written. -
8. The L Word
Yes, it’s mostly about women who love women, but it’s impossible to talk about queer TV
without this show. It built a world where lesbians and bi women are the central heroes,
villains, and disasters – which helped normalize queer leads across the board. -
9. Sex Education
A British dramedy that treats its gay characters – especially Eric – with nuance and joy.
From queer friendship to homophobia, religion, and gender expression, it captures the
messy reality of being young and figuring everything out at once. -
10. It’s a Sin
This limited series about a group of gay friends in 1980s London during the AIDS crisis
is gorgeous, joyful, and brutal. It honors a generation who fought for their lives and
their right to love openly. -
11. Will & Grace
A foundational sitcom for mainstream gay representation. Will, a gay lawyer, and Jack,
his chaotic best friend, helped millions of viewers see gay men as complex, funny, and
fully human – not just punchlines. -
12. Sense8
This sci-fi epic features multiple queer leads, including gay actor Lito. The show blends
psychic bonds, global storytelling, and unapologetically queer intimacy into a love letter
to chosen family and radical empathy. -
13. Modern Family
Mitchell and Cameron, a gay couple raising their daughter Lily, became a staple of
network TV. The show leans into sitcom antics while quietly normalizing a gay family
on primetime for over a decade. -
14. Looking
A grounded dramedy about gay men in San Francisco navigating work, relationships, and
identity. It’s quieter than many queer shows but beloved for its realism and messy,
believable characters. -
15. Elite
This Spanish teen thriller gives us Omar and Ander – one of queer TV’s favorite couples –
set against murders, secrets, and class warfare. It’s campy, stylish, and wildly addictive. -
16. Glee
Kurt and Blaine’s romance made a whole generation sob into their homework. While the
show is tonally chaotic, it gave queer teens musical numbers, big emotions, and proof
that the gay kid gets love, too. -
17. Brooklyn Nine-Nine
Captain Holt, a dry, openly gay Black police captain, and Rosa, a bi detective, both play
major roles in this workplace comedy. The show balances absurd humor with thoughtful
arcs around identity and acceptance. -
18. Shameless (US)
Ian Gallagher’s long-running arc – including his turbulent relationship with Mickey –
gives this gritty dramedy some of its most powerful emotional moments. It’s not always
tidy, but it feels raw and real. -
19. The Fosters
Centered on a family led by a lesbian couple, this series explores adoption, foster care,
and the highs and lows of raising teens. Gay and bi characters are woven into the core
of the story, not sidelined. -
20. How to Get Away with Murder
Connor Walsh and Oliver Hampton anchor one of TV’s twistiest legal thrillers with a
fully realized gay relationship. Between shocking murders and courtroom drama, their
love story gives the show its beating heart. -
21. Orange Is the New Black
A women’s prison dramedy with a central queer love story between Piper and Alex, plus
a wide spectrum of LGBTQ+ characters. It proved that audiences would happily follow
complex, morally messy queer leads. -
22. Please Like Me
An Australian dramedy where Josh realizes he’s gay right as his life falls apart.
Awkward, darkly funny, and surprisingly tender, it captures the offbeat realities of
mental health, friendship, and queer adulthood. -
23. Love, Victor
A spin-off of Love, Simon, this series centers on Victor’s journey coming to
terms with his sexuality in a religious, Latinx family. It’s heartfelt, hopeful, and ideal
for viewers who want a reassuring, feel-good narrative. -
24. Special
This short-form series follows a gay man with cerebral palsy rewriting his life on his
own terms. It’s sharp, self-aware, and refreshingly honest about disability, dating, and
the pressure to appear “normal.” -
25. Six Feet Under
A funeral-home drama with one of TV’s most compelling gay couples, David and Keith.
Over five seasons, their relationship survives family pressure, internalized homophobia,
and the daily weirdness of working with death. -
26. Queer Eye (Reboot)
Part makeover show, part therapy session. The Fab Five – mostly gay men plus a non-binary
icon in later seasons – bring style, food, and emotional renovations to people’s lives,
showing queer empathy as a life skill. -
27. RuPaul’s Drag Race
A reality competition that turned drag into a global TV phenomenon. Gay and queer
contestants bring charisma, uniqueness, nerve, and talent, along with deeply personal
stories about identity, rejection, and resilience. -
28. Noah’s Arc
One of the first series focused on gay Black men, following four friends in Los Angeles.
It tackles love, sex, HIV, and community with a mix of soap, humor, and heartfelt
conversations that were rarely seen elsewhere at the time. -
29. Veneno
A Spanish biographical series about Cristina “La Veneno” Ortiz and the queer community
around her. While centered on trans women, it weaves in gay characters and tells a story
about media, identity, and survival. -
30. Grace and Frankie
The title duo reacts when their husbands, Robert and Sol, come out as a couple. The show
uses older gay characters to explore coming out later in life, divorce, and building new
forms of family after everything changes. -
31. Boots
Based on a memoir about a gay Marine, this series dives into homophobia and secrecy in
the military. It pairs emotional honesty with boot-camp drama, examining what it costs
to hide – and what it costs to finally be seen. -
32. Clean Slate
A warm comedy about a trans woman returning home to her conservative father. While
focused on trans identity, it sits alongside other queer family stories and shows how
coming out evolves over a lifetime, not just one big moment. -
33. Overcompensating
A college football comedy about a closeted quarterback trying to hold his hyper-masculine
world together. It explores how homophobia and locker-room culture collide with the
simple desire to fall in love without hiding. -
34. The Hunting Wives
A twisty, sapphic drama of secrets, affairs, and obsession in high society. It plays like
a juicy thriller while putting queer desire at the center instead of treating it as a
scandalous side plot. -
35. King of Drag
A competition series focused on drag kings, finally giving the spotlight to masculine
drag performers. Many of the contestants are gay or queer, and the show expands what
televised drag – and queer masculinity – can look like. -
36. Euphoria
A visually striking teen drama that includes intense queer storylines, especially around
Rue and Jules. It doesn’t shy away from addiction, trauma, and identity, and it resonated
strongly with queer Gen Z viewers. -
37. Somebody Somewhere
A quiet, heartfelt series about a woman finding her people in small-town Kansas. The show’s
queer characters, including a gay best friend who’s essentially a co-lead, embody the joy of
building community in unlikely places. -
38. Hacks
A dark comedy about an aging comedian and her young queer writer. Their push–pull dynamic
showcases generational differences in queer life, ambition, and what it means to take up
space in a deeply sexist industry. -
39. Project Runway
While technically an ensemble reality competition, gay designers have been central to its
drama and heart for years. The show highlights queer creativity while normalizing LGBTQ+
talent at the top of the fashion world. -
40. Billions
A high-stakes financial drama that weaves in queer and non-binary characters alongside its
ruthless power players. It proves that prestige TV can give us gay and gender-diverse leads
without sacrificing complexity or grit.
Why Gay Main Characters on TV Matter
These shows do more than entertain. For queer audiences, they offer mirrors: proof that your
story is worth centering, not just pushing to the margins. For straight audiences, they act
as windows into lives that might not look like their own – but feel deeply familiar in their
hopes, fears, and relationships.
Over time, fan-favorite gay characters have helped shift public opinion. When you spend
multiple seasons rooting for a gay couple, the old stereotypes start to feel ridiculous.
Suddenly, “the gay neighbor” isn’t a punchline; he’s that guy whose breakup you cried over
at 2 a.m. because the writing was just that good.
From a cultural standpoint, these series mark milestones: first same-sex kisses on network
TV, the first major trans and gay ensembles, and storylines that tackle homophobia, AIDS,
marriage equality, and chosen family with nuance rather than after-school-special speeches.
of Fan Experience: What It’s Like to Live in These Shows
If you talk to fans of these series, a pattern pops up immediately: people remember exactly
where they were when a particular scene aired. Maybe it was watching Heartstopper on
a laptop, volume at 2, hoping your parents didn’t walk in during that first kiss. Maybe it
was sitting on a couch with your roommates, everyone silently wrecked after an episode of
It’s a Sin, pretending you just had “allergies.”
For some viewers, seeing a gay main character is the first time they’ve thought, “Oh. That’s
me.” It’s not just about sexual orientation; it’s the way a character laughs nervously, avoids
eye contact, or overthinks every text message. Shows like Schitt’s Creek and
Sex Education capture those tiny details of queer life so accurately that people
describe feeling weirdly “called out” – in a good way.
Online fandom takes that recognition and magnifies it. Gay ships from Young Royals,
Our Flag Means Death, and Euphoria generate fan art, playlists, and endless
debates about who was more emotionally constipated in which episode. For closeted viewers,
these communities can be a lifeline: a place where you can scream about fictional characters
while quietly figuring out real feelings.
The impact hits differently depending on the show. A series like Pose or
Six Feet Under throws you into the history of queer communities and the weight of
loss they’ve carried. Watching them can feel like being handed a family photo album you never
knew existed. Meanwhile, Will & Grace or Modern Family might be the show
you put on with relatives, letting the sitcom format do some gentle education in the
background.
Even reality shows change things. RuPaul’s Drag Race and Queer Eye invite
viewers into queer spaces that were once underground or niche. Seeing gay men mentoring
straight dads, or drag performers talking candidly about rejection and chosen family, turns
“LGBTQ+ issues” from an abstract political talking point into a human, emotional reality.
And then there are the shows that quietly expand what a “gay story” can look like. A military
drama like Boots or a sports series like Overcompensating places gay men in
hyper-masculine environments that historically erased them. Instead of being the tragic side
character, they’re the lead – the one whose choices drive the entire plot.
If you’re deciding where to start, think about the experience you want. Need comfort and
reassurance? Try Heartstopper, Love, Victor, or Schitt’s Creek.
Want catharsis and ugly crying? Queue up It’s a Sin, Pose, or
Six Feet Under. Craving chaotic energy and memes? Glee, Shameless,
Orange Is the New Black, and RuPaul’s Drag Race have you covered.
However you watch, one thing is consistent: fans tend to carry these shows with them long
after the finale. The characters become shorthand in queer communities – “I’m such a David
Rose,” “We’re basically Mitch and Cam,” “That breakup was my Bill-and-Frank moment.” When gay
main characters are written with care and complexity, they stop being “representation” and
start feeling like old friends.
Conclusion: Finding Your Next Gay TV Obsession
You don’t have to watch all 40 shows – though if you do, please hydrate – but picking a few
from this list basically guarantees a front-row seat to some of the best queer storytelling
TV has to offer. From cozy romances to brutal dramas and sparkling reality competitions, these
fan-favorite series prove that gay main characters belong at the center of the screen, not
just in the background.
Start with the show that calls to you most, invite a friend (or three), and let yourself get
obsessed. The credits will roll, the group chat will light up, and somewhere out there, a
writer’s room will be cooking up the next queer story that deserves a place in rankings like
this one.