X

Join or Sign In

Sign in to customize your TV listings

Continue with Facebook Continue with email

By joining TV Guide, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy.

8 Shows Like The Umbrella Academy to Watch Since You Love The Umbrella Academy

Young people with superpowers are always entertaining

tim.jpg
Tim Surette
Justin H. Min, The Umbrella Academy

Justin H. Min, The Umbrella Academy

Netflix

A formula for television that always works is the ol' "cool teens with superpowers" story, because it combines two of everyone's favorite things: incredibly dangerous abilities that come with extreme responsibilities and hormonally imbalanced people whose still-developing frontal lobes encourage them to engage in reckless behavior. What a cocktail! And nobody mixes it up better than Netflix's The Umbrella Academy, which recently completed a wild third season.

We're still waiting for details on a fourth season, but you might be looking for another show to watch to tide you over until then. We've assembled a list that fans of The Umbrella Academy will love, and spoiler alert, a lot of them feature young people with special powers.

The Umbrella Academy Watch on Netflix


More recommendations:


The Imperfects

Morgan Taylor Campbell and Iñaki Godoy, The Imperfects

Morgan Taylor Campbell and Iñaki Godoy, The Imperfects

Netflix

If it's one show about teens grappling with their superpowers that you want to watch, then obviously watch The Umbrella Academy. If it's two shows about that very same thing, then may I suggest checking out Netflix's The Imperfects? The angsty Canadian supernatural series follows a trio of teens who get superpowers — well, more like monstrous powers as they're turned into a werewolf, succubus, and a banshee — through medical experimentation. And while they're not a superhero fighting source like The Umbrella Academy, a lot of the tone is the same even if the fate of the world isn't at risk and the gore is dialed down.


Deadly Class

Lana Condor and Benjamin Wadsworth, Deadly Class

Lana Condor and Benjamin Wadsworth, Deadly Class

SYFY, Katie Yu/SYFY

Another comic book adaptation about troubled young people with special powers, Deadly Class is based on a series by Rick Remender (who also created the show) and Wesley Craig and follows a street punk named Marcus (Benjamin Wadsworth) as he enrolls at King's Dominion, an elite boarding school for the children of the world's top crime families. It's steeped in '80s nostalgia and has a slick sheen to its darkness and violence. It features To All the Boys I've Loved Before's Lana Condor in a very different type of role as Saya Kuroki, a sword-slinging, heavily tattooed yakuza scion. The girl's got range. Unfortunately, the show was canceled after one season, but that one season packs a lot into it. -Liam Mathews 


Misfits

Nathan Stewart Jarrett, Antonia Thomas, Robert Sheehan, Lauren Socha, and Iwan Rheon, Misfits

Nathan Stewart Jarrett, Antonia Thomas, Robert Sheehan, Lauren Socha, and Iwan Rheon, Misfits

E4

Misfits should be one of your first stops if you're looking for something to watch that is similar to The Umbrella Academy, because not only does the five-season British dramedy also follow a number of young adults with different and surprising powers, but the show also stars Robert Sheehan. The set up is this: A group of young adults (Sheehan, Antonia ThomasIwan RheonLauren Socha, and Nathan Stewart-Jarrett) who have been sentenced to community service for various offenses gain special abilities that mirror who they are after being caught in a freak electrical storm on their first day. Afterwards, they become friends through their many secrets and shared experiences, and they even manage to save the day (and each other) every once in a while. There was a lot of cast turnover beginning with the third season, but Joseph Gilgun (PreacherBrassic) really made the final three seasons memorable. -Kaitlin Thomas


The Magicians

Olivia Taylor Dudley, The Magicians

Olivia Taylor Dudley, The Magicians

Syfy

For a show about young adults with special powers who go to an actual academy to hone their skills, wave your magic wand (remote control) and make The Magicians appear out of thin air (turn on Netflix). The Syfy series, based on the book series some describe as "Harry Potter for adults" and adapted for television by You's Sera Gamble, is set in a world where magic is real and those with an aptitude for it are invited to attend the mystical college Brakebill's University for Magical Pedagogy. But don't expect these kids to pull never-ending handkerchiefs out of their sleeves or turn your ears into change dispensers. These students get involved in some really dark, apocalyptic arts, and the series features one of the most shocking deaths in television in the last several years. 


Sense8

Jamie Clayton, Miguel Ángel Silvestre, Max Riemelt, Brian J. Smith, Toby Onwumere, Tina Desai, Bae Doona and Tuppance Middleton, Sense8

Jamie Clayton, Miguel Ángel Silvestre, Max Riemelt, Brian J. Smith, Toby Onwumere, Tina Desai, Bae Doona and Tuppance Middleton, Sense8

Murray Close/Netflix

Unlike most other superhero team-ups, The Umbrella Academy bathes in a real sense of connection between its characters. Maybe it's because they were all adopted by the same father figure or because they've formed a dysfunctional family with the common thread being their powers... or maybe it's something more ethereal. The idea of a unique connection between people with special abilities is at the heart of Sense8, a Netflix series from Lana and Lilly Wachowski, the creators of The Matrix, when a small group of people from all over the world discover that they're specifically in tune with one another. They don't have traditional superpowers, but they can share a consciousness, which also mean that they share any abilities they know. Thankfully, one of them is a pretty damn good kickboxer. There's even a fan-favorite dance and singalong by all the main characters even when they're far apart, just like Umbrella Academy did a few times.


Marvel's Runaways

Marvel's Runaways

Marvel's Runaways

Hulu

There are a number of shows featuring young adults with special powers -- this list is obvious proof of that -- but Marvel's Runaways is almost certainly the only show that features a young adult with a telepathic connection to a genetically engineered dinosaur, and that's more than enough reason to watch. But if you need to know more about the show, the Hulu series, which ran for three seasons, follows a group of teens from different backgrounds who band together to face off against Pride, an evil organization that includes all of their parents. It's a fun twist on the superhero genre, and even though not all the characters themselves have what you'd call "superpowers," they all have unique abilities in their own right, making them key members of the team. -Kaitlin Thomas 


Titans

Brenton Thwaites, Titans

Brenton Thwaites, Titans

Photo by Ken Woroner ©2018 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc.

Just because The Umbrella Academy doubles as a coming-of-age story for its many young characters, it doesn't mean it's meant for young viewers. The show is as beloved for its absurd, over-the-top violence as it is for its dysfunctional heroes, and while most of the shows on this list keep it fairly mellow when it comes to putting bad guys down, Titans has no such filter. The series, originally an exclusive on the DC Universe streaming service before moving to HBO Max starting with its second season, is based on the Teen Titans comics and follows youthful superheroes Robin, Starfire, Wonder Girl and more as they seek to form their own identities. And part of that process involves stabbing baddies in the face and setting them on fire, apparently. 


The Gifted

Grace Byers; The Gifted

Grace Byers, The Gifted

Annette Brown/FOX

You've made it to the end of the list and you're getting one more show about young people with superpowers. Sorry! It's been a hot trend! But it's one that was used surprisingly well in this Fox series that ran for two seasons from 2017 to 2019. It's also the only show on this list that is officially connected to the X-Men universe, so you know what the story's going to be: Young mutants, shunned by society, go on the run from a government that wants mutants put in cages, which is the plot of every X-Men thing ever. But with the angle of parents protecting their superpowered kids, who include young versions of Blink, Thunderbird, and Polaris, it has a slightly unique spin on it and a thematic connection to The Umbrella Academy