Every story arc in One Piece — canon and anime-only filler — mapped between manga chapters and anime episodes. Canonical 11-saga structure and Netflix's 20-season layout side-by-side. Plus the films, slotted into the timeline.
Arcs grouped by saga, with the manga chapter range and the anime episode range. Anime-only filler arcs are interleaved in episode order with Filler Arc in the manga column. Chapter and episode counts are approximate at arc boundaries (different sources draw the line one chapter earlier or later).
These tables use the canonical 11-saga structure — the same one the One Piece Wiki and Wikipedia use — not Netflix’s season numbering. Netflix splits the same content into roughly 20 numbered “seasons” that don’t map cleanly onto saga names; if you’re watching there and the labels feel inconsistent or unlabeled until partway through, that’s why. The saga concept is a fan-canonical layer Toei never imposed, so Netflix doesn’t surface it. Toggle below to view the same content laid out either way — canonical sagas (default) or Netflix’s 20 numbered seasons. Both views identify which arcs are manga adaptations and which are anime-only filler.
Netflix splits the same anime into 20 numbered “seasons” of varying length, often using its own arc-pairing labels (some of which don’t appear anywhere else — e.g. “The Foxy Pirate Crew,” “Goodbye Going Merry,” “TV Original 2”). Episode ranges below match the canonical arc episodes from the saga view; the Type column tells you whether each season is mostly manga-adapted, mostly filler, or a mix. Netflix is still backfilling content past Marineford — see the note below the table.
Season
Netflix title
Episodes
Manga arcs covered
Filler
Type
1
East Blue
1–61
Romance Dawn, Orange Town, Syrup Village, Baratie, Arlong Park, Loguetown
Warship Island (54–61)
Mostly manga
2
Entering the Grand Line
62–77
Reverse Mountain, Whiskey Peak, Little Garden
—
Manga
3
Enter Chopper at the Winter Island
78–91
Drum Island
—
Manga
4
Alabasta
92–130
Alabasta
—
Manga
5
Filler
131–143
—
Post-Alabasta, Goat Island, Ruluka Island
All filler
6
Skypiea
144–173
Jaya, Skypiea (start)
—
Manga
7
The Golden Bell
174–195
Skypiea (rest)
—
Manga
8
The Naval Fortress
196–207
Long Ring Long Land (Ep. 207 only)
G-8 (196–206)
Mostly filler
9
The Foxy Pirate Crew
208–228
Long Ring Long Land (rest)
Ocean’s Dream, Foxy’s Return
Mixed
10
Water 7
229–263
Water 7
—
Manga
11
Enies Lobby
264–284
Enies Lobby (start)
—
Manga
12
CP9
285–306
Enies Lobby (rest)
—
Manga
13
Goodbye Going Merry
307–325
Post-Enies Lobby
—
Manga
14
TV Original 2
326–336
—
Ice Hunter (Lovely Land)
All filler
15
Thriller Bark
337–381
Thriller Bark
—
Manga
16
Sabaody Archipelago
382–405
Sabaody Archipelago (385–405)
Spa Island (382–384)
Mostly manga
17
Filler
406–407
—
Boss Luffy Historical specials
All filler
18
Island of Women
408–421
Amazon Lily
—
Manga
19
Impel Down
422–458
Impel Down
Little East Blue (426–429, Strong World tie-in)
Mostly manga
20
Marineford
459–498
Marineford, Post-War (start)
—
Manga
Past Season 20: Netflix US has been backfilling post-Marineford content steadily — Fish-Man Island (Jul 2024), then Z’s Ambition + Punk Hazard + Caesar Retrieval (Nov 2024), Dressrosa + Silver Mine (Feb 2025), Zou + Marine Rookie + early Whole Cake Island (Nov–Dec 2025), more Whole Cake Island (May 2026, through ~Ep. 835). The numbered-season labels for these are inconsistent across regions and aren’t always surfaced in the UI; the saga view above is the more reliable navigational map for anything past Marineford.
Why the labels feel weird: Netflix’s season titles are inherited from Toei’s original Japanese broadcast season divisions, which were arc-by-arc rather than saga-by-saga. That’s why you get “The Golden Bell” (the Skypiea climax beats) and “CP9” (the Enies Lobby climax beats) as standalone seasons — they’re broadcast splits, not story splits. The saga view collapses those splits back into the story-level unit.
Fifteen theatrical films, mostly slot-anywhere side stories. Four of the modern ones (Strong World, Z, Gold, Stampede) had Eiichiro Oda directly involved — those slot more precisely into specific points in the canon. Two films (Episode of Alabasta, Episode of Chopper Plus) are anime-recap retellings of arcs you’ve already seen, not new content. Film: Red is the structural odd one out: post-Wano character work but a pre-Wano in-canon timeline because Big Mom appears alive.
The “Watch after” column is the conventional placement that aligns with the cast and abilities the film assumes you know. None of the non-recap films advance manga canon — the one exception is Strong World’s Episode 0 OVA, a 30-minute prequel Oda wrote that’s slot-canon-adjacent.
#
Title
Year
In-canon era
Watch after
Canon tier
1
One Piece: The Movie
2000
East Blue
Ep. 67
Non-canon side story
2
Clockwork Island Adventure
2001
Early Grand Line
Ep. 67
Non-canon side story
3
Chopper’s Kingdom on the Island of Strange Animals
2002
Post-Drum Island
Ep. 130
Non-canon side story
4
Dead End Adventure
2003
Post-Alabasta, pre-Skypiea
Ep. 130
Non-canon side story
5
The Cursed Holy Sword
2004
Post-Alabasta, pre-Skypiea
Ep. 130
Non-canon side story
6
Baron Omatsuri and the Secret Island
2005
Skypiea era
Ep. 224
Non-canon (cult fan favorite)
7
The Giant Mechanical Soldier of Karakuri Castle
2006
Post-Skypiea, pre-Water 7
Ep. 228
Non-canon side story
8
Episode of Alabasta: The Desert Princess and the Pirates
2007
Alabasta retelling
Ep. 130 (after Alabasta)
Recap film
9
Episode of Chopper Plus: Bloom in Winter, Miracle Sakura
2008
Drum Island retelling
Ep. 91 (after Drum)
Recap film
10
One Piece Film: Strong World
2009
Post-Thriller Bark, pre-Sabaody
Ep. 381
Semi-canon — Oda-written original story; villain Shiki referenced in main canon
11
One Piece 3D: Straw Hat Chase
2011
Post-timeskip short
Anytime post-Ep. 405
Non-canon (3D promo short)
12
One Piece Film: Z
2012
New World, between Punk Hazard and Dressrosa
Ep. 578 (after Z’s Ambition tie-in)
Semi-canon — Oda-supervised; Z’s Ambition filler arc directly leads in
13
One Piece Film: Gold
2016
Post-Dressrosa
Ep. 750 (after Silver Mine tie-in)
Semi-canon — Oda-supervised; Silver Mine filler leads in
14
One Piece: Stampede
2019
Pre-Wano (20th anniversary film)
Ep. 896 (after Cidre Guild tie-in)
Semi-canon — Oda-supervised; treats Worst Generation roster as canonical
15
One Piece Film: Red
2022
Pre-Wano-end (Big Mom alive ⇒ before her Wano fall)
Ep. 1029 (Uta backstory tie-in)
Semi-canon — Uta’s backstory enters wider lore; main plot does not
Key dependencies:
Strong World — has a 30-minute Episode 0 OVA that’s the only Oda-written prequel material in the films. Watch the OVA before the movie.
Z — Z’s Ambition filler arc (Ep. 575–578) is required setup. Skipping it makes the cold open opaque.
Gold — Silver Mine filler arc (Ep. 747–750) is light setup; you can skip it without losing much.
Stampede — Cidre Guild filler arc (Ep. 895–896) is the lead-in; watch it.
Red — Episode 1029 establishes Uta and her tie to Shanks; watch it before the film.