
Have you ever been crying your eyes out during the ending of your favorite TV show, hugging a pillow, and thought to yourself, “How could fictional characters make me feel so strongly?” Well, you’re not alone. The most memorable endings are those that don’t just wrap up the story; they rip your heart out, twist it around, and sometimes even put it back with a smile of sadness. Here’s our countdown of the top 10 TV series finales that totally got us, from number 10 down to number 1.

10. Dinosaurs – The Darkest Ending in Sitcom History
Who could have ever thought that a fun and lighthearted puppet-based sitcom could possibly conclude in this way? The final episode of the show features Earl Sinclair inadvertently causing an ecological disaster that leads to an ice age. As the snow falls around the Sinclair family, they hold onto each other in a last attempt at hope, but the audience cannot help but think of the eventual doom that awaits all of humanity. It is a tragic end that faces reality in the most brutal way possible.

9. One Day – Love Torn Apart
The show One Day focuses on the relationship between Emma and Dexter as they meet and reunite each year. They develop a relationship over time that feels destined. They have their ideal life until tragedy strikes when Emma dies in a bike accident. The finale focuses on their best moments as a couple as Dexter tries to come to terms with Emma’s death.

8. His Dark Materials – Bittersweet Farewell
But even with armored bears and daemons, His Dark Materials gives us heartbreak. Lyra and Will save the multiverse, but they learn they can never be together. Their final agreement to meet annually at the same bench, in their own worlds, is quiet, eternal, and utterly crushing.

7. The Americans – Love and Sacrifice
After six seasons of spy games, Philip and Elizabeth Jennings get exposed and have to flee to Russia, leaving their American-born son behind. The final shot of them together yet isolated captures the cost of duty and the price of secrecy-no action, just cold, aching silence.

6. Six Feet Under – Life and Death in Fast Forward
Few series finales are as haunting as Six Feet Under. A flash-forward montage shows the ultimate fate of each character, set to Sia’s “Breathe Me.” Watching their lives and deaths unfold in minutes is poetic, brutal, and unforgettable, a meditation on mortality that lingers long after the screen goes dark.

5. Better Call Saul – Redemption, But at a Cost
Jimmy McGill finally comes clean, not as an escape from punishment, but as an attempt to salvage his soul. Freedom is lost because of his honesty, but he regains his integrity. The final scene with Kim, separated by prison bars, is quiet, tragic, and achingly beautiful, the perfect full-circle ending.

4. Fleabag – Bittersweet Love
After two seasons of razor-sharp wit and visceral introspection, Fleabag falls in love with the Hot Priest only for him to follow his faith. The final scene, on that bus stop, with a tear-filled gaze and one final glance toward the audience, is heartbreak distilled, quietly devastating, and perfectly timed.

3. How I Met Your Mother – Heartbreak Realized
Nine whole seasons later, Ted finally meets Tracy, only to find she’s dead. The story he tells their children, to get their blessing to pursue Robin, really hits home. Sometimes the right person doesn’t get a happy ending, and this finale is a real wake-up call to that brutal truth.

2. Shameless – Chaos and Quiet Grief
Shameless doesn’t end with some grand gesture. Frank Gallagher dies alone from COVID-19, hallucinating his own eulogy, while his children remain unaware. Life goes on, and it’s this lack of closure that makes the ending raw, messy, and painfully real.

1. The Good Place – The Beauty of Letting Go
Not every tearjerker is about loss. The Good Place leaves us crying for hope, peace, and acceptance. Eleanor, Chidi, Jason, and Tahani each make the heart-wrenching decision to move on, finding closure and serenity. It’s a finale that balances emotion and philosophy perfectly, leaving us both heartbroken and uplifted.

TV finales remind us that the strongest stories don’t just entertain, they make us feel deeply, sometimes painfully. These endings stay with us long after the credits roll, because the best shows touch the heart in ways only fiction can.