
Marvel Comics Timeline in Chronological Order (2025 Guide)
Table of Contents
Why the Marvel Comics Chronological Order Matters
The Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) is one of the most ambitious storytelling projects in modern entertainment. Spanning dozens of interconnected films and series, it has introduced an evolving web of characters, conflicts, and cosmic stakes that stretch across space and time. But with all that complexity comes a fundamental question for both newcomers and longtime fans:
What’s the best way to watch the Marvel Universe unfold?
While many fans choose to experience the MCU in release order—the way the films premiered in theaters—others prefer a different route: chronological order. This method follows the actual sequence of events within the MCU timeline, starting from World War II and leading all the way into the multiverse and beyond. Watching this way offers a more linear, immersive understanding of how Marvel’s universe evolved—from the rise of Captain America to the fall of Thanos and the birth of the multiverse.
What This Guide Covers
This blog is your comprehensive map to the MCU timeline in chronological order. It doesn’t follow the release dates of the movies and shows. Instead, it aligns everything by in-universe events, giving you the clearest possible path through the story as it unfolds across decades—from 1943 to the present (and sometimes far beyond).
We’ll walk through:
- The early origins of key heroes like Steve Rogers and Carol Danvers
- Major crossovers and pivotal battles, like the Battle of New York and the Snap
- Post-Endgame developments that reshape the future of the MCU
- And how newer series and specials fit into the evolving timeline
Scope of This Timeline
For clarity, this guide focuses exclusively on the Marvel Cinematic Universe—that means the official movies and Disney+ shows produced by Marvel Studios. We won’t be diving into the Marvel comic book timeline here, as it exists in a separate continuity with its own complex chronology.
If you’re looking to experience the MCU the way its characters lived it, this is the guide for you. Let’s begin—at the very start of the timeline.
Full Chronological Order of MCU Events

1.World War II and the Origins of Heroes
Captain America: The First Avenger (1943–1945)
The story begins during World War II, where Steve Rogers volunteers for a super-soldier program and becomes Captain America. He battles Red Skull, confronts HYDRA, and ends up frozen in ice for decades.
Agent Carter (1946)
In the post-war era, Peggy Carter works to establish the foundations of S.H.I.E.L.D. while navigating a male-dominated intelligence community and continuing Howard Stark’s legacy.

2.Cosmic Encounter in the 1990s
Captain Marvel (1995)
Air Force pilot Carol Danvers is caught in an intergalactic conflict and gains immense powers from the Tesseract. She helps stop the Kree-Skrull war and becomes Earth’s first cosmic-level protector, long before the Avengers initiative.
3.The Dawn of Iron Heroes (2008–2010)

Iron Man (2008)
Tony Stark’s kidnapping leads to the creation of the first Iron Man suit. His return as a hero (and a weapons manufacturer turned pacifist) marks the modern start of superhero activity on Earth.
Iron Man 2 (2010)
Stark battles legacy, government pressure, and a new villain—Whiplash—all while dealing with the declining health caused by his arc reactor.
The Incredible Hulk (2010)
Bruce Banner is on the run from the U.S. government while trying to cure himself of his gamma-induced transformations. It ends with a Hulk who’s more in control—but still volatile.
Thor (2010)
Thor is banished to Earth by Odin after his arrogance threatens Asgard’s peace. His encounter with humans reshapes his character and ties him directly to Earth’s future struggles.
4. Assembling for the First Time (2012–2013)

The Avengers (2012)
Loki’s invasion of New York forces Nick Fury to unite Iron Man, Thor, Captain America, Hulk, Hawkeye, and Black Widow. The Battle of New York cements the Avengers as Earth’s main defense.
Iron Man 3 (2013–2014)
Haunted by the events in New York, Tony battles PTSD and confronts a new terrorist threat—the Mandarin—while questioning the meaning of Iron Man without the suit.
5. Expanding the Universe (2013–2014)
Thor: The Dark World (2013)
Thor faces Malekith and the Aether (later revealed to be an Infinity Stone). The film dives deeper into cosmic threats and Asgardian lore.
Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014)
Steve Rogers uncovers a conspiracy within S.H.I.E.L.D. and discovers his best friend Bucky Barnes is now the brainwashed assassin known as the Winter Soldier.

Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 1 (2014)
A misfit team—including Star-Lord, Gamora, Rocket, Drax, and Groot—band together to stop Ronan the Accuser from using the Power Stone to destroy planets.
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 (late 2014)
Set shortly after Vol. 1, the team confronts Peter Quill’s celestial parentage and learn the cost of power, family, and loyalty.
6. Rise of New Heroes (2015)

Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015)
Tony Stark and Bruce Banner accidentally create Ultron, an AI bent on human extinction. The fallout introduces new heroes like Scarlet Witch and Vision.
Ant-Man (2015)
Scott Lang, a reformed thief, becomes Ant-Man after being recruited by Hank Pym. The film scales down the superhero formula—literally—and introduces quantum mechanics to the MCU.
7. Heroes Divided (2016–2017)
Captain America: Civil War (2016)
The Sokovia Accords divide the Avengers into factions led by Steve Rogers and Tony Stark. Friendships fracture, secrets surface, and the MCU changes forever.
Black Widow (2016)
Set immediately after Civil War, Natasha Romanoff goes off-grid and confronts her painful past in the Red Room.

Black Panther (2016)
T’Challa ascends the throne after his father’s death and must defend Wakanda from the vengeful Erik Killmonger, challenging isolationism and legacy.
Spider-Man: Homecoming (2016–2017)
Peter Parker balances high school life and superhero duties under Tony Stark’s reluctant mentorship, battling Vulture and proving he’s more than just a kid in a suit.
Doctor Strange (2016–2017)
After a career-ending accident, neurosurgeon Stephen Strange discovers the mystic arts and battles Dormammu, setting up magic as a major force in the MCU.
8. Cosmic and Earthly Crises (2017–2018)

Thor: Ragnarok (2017)
Thor and Hulk reunite in a cosmic arena before returning to Asgard to stop Hela. Asgard is destroyed, setting the stage for a major shift in Thor’s arc.
Ant-Man and the Wasp (2018)
Scott Lang returns for a new quantum rescue mission, just as the Snap hits. A lighter tone masks its crucial setup for Endgame.
Avengers: Infinity War (2018)
Thanos collects all six Infinity Stones and, despite the Avengers’ resistance, snaps half of all life out of existence. It’s the MCU’s darkest moment yet.
9. The Five-Year Blip and Return (2023)

Avengers: Endgame (2023)
Five years after the Snap, the remaining Avengers execute a risky time heist to reverse Thanos’ destruction. The battle concludes with major sacrifices—and a new era for the MCU.
10. Post-Endgame Fallout and New Beginnings (2023–2025)
WandaVision (2023)
Wanda Maximoff creates a warped sitcom reality to cope with her grief, unintentionally creating a new being—Vision—and laying the groundwork for the multiverse.
The Falcon and the Winter Soldier (2024)
Sam Wilson wrestles with the mantle of Captain America and global unrest, while Bucky faces the consequences of his Winter Soldier past.
Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings (2024)
A new hero rises with mythical powers and familial baggage, connecting ancient lore to the post-Blip world.
Spider-Man: Far From Home (2024)
Peter Parker grapples with Tony Stark’s death, a world without the Avengers, and Mysterio’s illusions.
Eternals (2024)
Cosmic beings long hidden on Earth confront an existential crisis, revealing ancient secrets and cosmic threats.
Spider-Man: No Way Home (2024)
A botched spell opens the multiverse, leading to cross-universe chaos and the arrival of familiar faces from other cinematic Spider-Man sagas.
Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (2024)
Strange dives into the chaos Wanda unleashed and faces consequences from the multiverse unravelling.
Hawkeye (Dec 2024)
Clint Barton trains a new archer—Kate Bishop—while cleaning up the messes of his Ronin past during a snow-dusted New York Christmas.
Moon Knight (2025)
Marc Spector battles his dissociative identities and Egyptian gods in one of the MCU’s most psychological stories yet.

She-Hulk (2025)
Jennifer Walters navigates life as a lawyer and a Hulk, offering a comedic and meta take on the superhero formula.
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (2025)
Wakanda mourns the loss of T’Challa and confronts new threats, while a successor to the Black Panther mantle rises.
Ms. Marvel (2025)
Kamala Khan, a Jersey City teen and mega-fan of Captain Marvel, discovers she has light-based powers—and a connection to the wider universe.
Thor: Love and Thunder (2025)
Thor faces Gorr the God Butcher while dealing with love, loss, and the unexpected return of Jane Foster as Mighty Thor.
Werewolf by Night (2025)
A Halloween special that introduces monsters, magic, and Marvel’s darker corners.
Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special (Dec 2025)
A festive, offbeat interlude that delivers character-driven moments ahead of the team’s next major journey.
Bonus: Events Outside the Main Timeline
Not every Marvel story takes place on the main path. Some series explore alternate realities, branch timelines, or entirely hypothetical scenarios. While they don’t always follow the core MCU continuity, they expand the mythology and deepen our understanding of the multiverse—a concept that’s becoming increasingly central to Phase Four and beyond.
Loki and the Multiverse
Loki (2021) doesn’t just take place after Avengers: Endgame—it breaks away from the timeline entirely. The story begins when the 2012 version of Loki escapes with the Tesseract during the Avengers’ time heist. This act splinters the timeline and brings him face-to-face with the Time Variance Authority (TVA)—a bureaucratic organization that monitors and “prunes” unauthorized branches of reality.
Through Loki’s journey, we learn about the Sacred Timeline, the existence of multiversal variants, and the eventual shattering of temporal order. The show ends by unleashing the multiverse—directly setting up chaos for Spider-Man: No Way Home, Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, and beyond.
Where it fits: Technically post-Endgame, but the moment Loki escapes creates a divergent timeline. It’s better viewed as a multiverse origin story than a direct continuation.
What If…?
What If…? is Marvel’s first animated anthology, exploring alternate realities within the multiverse. Each episode presents a divergent scenario: What if Peggy Carter took the super-soldier serum? What if T’Challa became Star-Lord? What if Ultron won?
While these tales don’t impact the core Sacred Timeline, they’re not throwaways. Many of the characters and realities introduced in What If…? appear elsewhere in the multiverse saga, including Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. Some may even become canon down the line.
Where it fits: Outside the main timeline, but closely tied to the concept of multiversal branching introduced in Loki. Think of it as Marvel’s multiverse in sandbox mode.
Beyond Phase Four and What’s Next
The Marvel Cinematic Universe didn’t slow down after Endgame. It evolved. With Phase Four came a flood of new faces, Disney+ series, and a deeper dive into cosmic, magical, and multiversal storytelling. But what lies ahead is even more ambitious.
Disney+ Expansions and the Rise of New Heroes
Phase Four reshaped the MCU not just with movies, but with television. Disney+ became a core delivery system for storytelling, introducing complex character arcs and setting up major future threads. Shows like WandaVision, Moon Knight, Ms. Marvel, and She-Hulk brought in fresh perspectives and laid narrative groundwork you won’t find in the films alone.
This shift means future heroes won’t just debut in blockbuster features—they’ll arrive on streaming screens first, often with stories that are deeply personal, experimental, or thematically bold.
The Multiverse Saga Takes Shape
Phases Four, Five, and Six now form what Marvel calls The Multiverse Saga, with the focus shifting from Infinity Stones to infinite realities. The events of Loki, No Way Home, and Multiverse of Madness cracked open the core timeline. New threats aren’t just cosmic—they’re existential.
Expect multiversal war, variant versions of iconic characters, and reality-threatening villains like Kang the Conqueror, who is poised to become the next big bad across multiple timelines.
Future Releases to Watch For (Updated as of August 2025)
Note: This section can be updated regularly as new projects are announced or rescheduled.
- Deadpool & Wolverine (2025) – First Fox–MCU crossover, officially multiverse canon
- Fantastic Four (TBD) – A long-awaited MCU reboot introducing Marvel’s first family
- Avengers: The Kang Dynasty (2026) – A new Avengers lineup faces the multiversal menace
- Avengers: Secret Wars (2027) – Inspired by the legendary comic event; potentially universe-resetting
- Armor Wars, Ironheart, Daredevil: Born Again, and more Disney+ shows expanding Earth-based narratives
- Blade, Thunderbolts, Wonder Man, and mutant-related teases (X-Men reboot incoming?)
The MCU is no longer just one story told in linear fashion—it’s a living, breathing multiverse, stitched together by gods, scientists, mystics, mutants, and mortals. And if Phase Four was the spark, the next phases will be the wildfire.
Common Confusions and Continuity Notes
Even in a meticulously crafted universe like the MCU, timeline hiccups happen. With dozens of interconnected stories spanning over a century (and several realities), a few cracks are inevitable. Here’s how to understand and navigate them without losing the plot.
Continuity Gaps
One of the most talked-about timeline errors in the MCU comes from Spider-Man: Homecoming. The film claims to take place eight years after the events of The Avengers (which occurred in 2012), placing it around 2020. However, by all other accounts—especially Captain America: Civil War and Infinity War—it should be set in 2016, just months after Civil War.
This mislabeling caused confusion across the fandom and sparked debates about whether the entire MCU timeline needed revision. It didn’t—but it highlighted how tricky keeping a shared universe clean can be.
Other minor inconsistencies pop up in overlapping Disney+ shows or between theatrical and streaming storylines, especially when the in-universe timeline isn’t explicitly stated.
How to Handle Timeline Inconsistencies
Marvel addressed many of these issues in the 2023 book The Marvel Cinematic Universe: An Official Timeline. Developed in collaboration with Marvel Studios, this guide attempts to lock down the chronology, resolve contradictions, and explain events using the logic of the MCU itself—including how multiverse theory can “forgive” some misalignments.
If you’re a casual viewer, the good news is this: most inconsistencies won’t affect your enjoyment. Marvel does an excellent job making each film or series self-contained enough to follow.
But if you’re a timeline purist or a content creator trying to map the universe precisely, using the Official Timeline book, along with tools lik Marvel Fandom Wiki and curated watchlists, is your best bet.
Pro Tip: Watching chronologically (rather than by release) helps smooth over most of the visible bumps—especially in the post-Endgame landscape where events overlap in unpredictable ways.
Comics Timeline vs. MCU Timeline
The Marvel Cinematic Universe may take inspiration from the comics, but make no mistake—they operate on completely separate timelines.
Marvel Comics began in the late 1930s and has since built a continuity that spans thousands of issues, alternate realities, time loops, and reboots. Unlike the MCU, which tells a streamlined, curated version of events, the comic timeline is messy by design—and proudly so. Characters can age in slow motion, die and return repeatedly, and exist in multiple forms across different titles.
Major Comic Events vs. Movie Adaptations
Many of the MCU’s biggest storylines are adaptations or reinterpretations of comic book arcs, but often with massive differences in characters, tone, and outcome.
- Infinity Gauntlet (1991)
The comic event that inspired Infinity War and Endgame, but with deeper cosmic stakes, different character rosters (including Silver Surfer and Adam Warlock), and a more philosophical Thanos. - Secret Wars (1984 and 2015 versions)
A massive multiversal battle where entire worlds collapse and combine. It’s one of Marvel’s most ambitious comics events and is expected to inspire Avengers: Secret Wars (2027). - Civil War (2006)
While the film version pitted Cap vs. Iron Man over the Sokovia Accords, the comic involved dozens of heroes, mutant rights, and much darker turns.
These events may share names and themes, but the execution is unique to each medium.
Want to Read the Originals?
If you’re curious about where the MCU draws its inspiration, exploring the original comic arcs can be incredibly rewarding.
Check out our full reading guides:
Infinity Gauntlet Reading Guide
Secret Wars Reading Guide
Civil War Reading Guide
These guides walk you through what to read, what to skip, and how to enjoy these iconic events without getting overwhelmed.
Resources for Reference
Whether you’re a first-time viewer or a timeline purist, these trusted resources offer updated information, fan-friendly guides, and official confirmations to help you keep track of the ever-expanding Marvel Cinematic Universe.
Official and Studio-Affiliated Sources
- Marvel.com – Official MCU Timeline
Marvel Studios’ own timeline, updated with new releases and canonical placements. - [The Marvel Cinematic Universe: An Official Timeline (2023)]
A detailed, studio-approved book clarifying events, placements, and inconsistencies.
Fan-Favorite Guides and Databases
- Wikipedia – MCU Timeline
Frequently updated and sourced overview of the full timeline, including phases and dates. - IMDb – Chronological Order Lists
Community-curated lists showing where each film and series fits in order. - Rotten Tomatoes – Marvel in Chronological Order
Helpful for casual fans looking to binge in story order.
Deeper Analysis and Comic Connections
- Comic Book Herald
Excellent resource for both MCU timelines and the original comic event guides. - Marvel Cinematic Universe Wiki
Highly detailed fan wiki offering episode-level breakdowns of when and where events occur.
Streaming & Watch Guides
- Disney+ Marvel Hub
Includes in-platform ordering for films and shows on the streaming service. - GamesRadar – How to Watch the MCU in Order
Updated with every new release, plus summaries and FAQs.
FAQs
Should I watch the MCU in release order or chronological order?
Chronological order follows the events as they happen in-universe—from Captain America: The First Avenger (1943) to the latest multiversal entries.
Release order, on the other hand, preserves the original pacing and surprise reveals intended by Marvel Studios.
For first-time viewers, chronological order offers a smoother narrative flow. For returning fans, release order may help revisit story arcs with their intended buildup.
Are the Disney+ shows essential to the MCU timeline?
Yes. Post-Endgame, the Disney+ shows aren’t just side stories—they’re canon.
Series like WandaVision, Loki, The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, and Hawkeye introduce new heroes, plot threads, and multiversal consequences that carry directly into the movies.
Where does Loki fit in the timeline?
Loki escapes with the Tesseract during Avengers: Endgame’s 2012 flashback, creating a branch timeline.
The events of Loki happen outside the main Sacred Timeline, but the show is central to understanding the multiverse and the rise of Kang the Conqueror.
What’s the best order for new Marvel fans?
Want to follow events as they happen? → Go chronological.
Prefer to experience it the way audiences did? → Go release order.
Whichever you choose, be sure to include key Disney+ shows—especially Loki, WandaVision, and The Falcon and the Winter Soldier—for a complete experience.
Final Words
Watching the Marvel Cinematic Universe in chronological order isn’t just a novelty—it’s a richer, more immersive experience. It lets you witness the rise of heroes, the slow burn of interconnected storylines, and the gradual unveiling of cosmic stakes in the way the characters themselves lived it. Moments land harder. Motivations make more sense. The emotional payoffs—from Endgame to No Way Home—feel even more earned.
By following the timeline from the 1940s to the multiverse, you’re not just watching superhero stories—you’re watching a universe grow in real time.
The MCU is constantly evolving. New heroes emerge. Old ones return in unexpected ways. Timelines fracture and reweave. This guide will be updated regularly to keep up with it all.
Bookmark this page, share it with fellow fans, and revisit it anytime you need a refresher or a rewatch plan.
The Marvel Universe isn’t just a collection of movies—it’s a living narrative. And now, you’ve got the map.