In this piece · 7 sections+

If somebody puts a gun to your head and says pick one show on Prime Video right now, you pick The Boys. That's the answer. It's the most-watched, best-rated, most-talked-about thing on the platform, it's the reason anyone still checks what Amazon is doing in television, and it's a show about corporate superheroes doing war crimes for brand partnerships — which, if you've paid attention to Amazon in the last five years, is basically a documentary. Everything else on this list is filler, nostalgia, or a pleasant surprise. The Boys is the answer. Keep reading for the other thirteen.
First, a word on Prime Video itself
Prime Video is the streaming service owned by the richest man on Earth, and somehow it still looks like a Best Buy kiosk from 2011. You open the app and it's four rows of stuff you already bought on DVD in 2008, two rows of shows you can't watch without paying an additional $8.99 to "MGM+," and a giant banner for a movie starring a guy whose name you don't know and will never learn.
Last year they started shoving ads into the base Prime subscription unless you paid extra to turn them off. A price hike disguised as a feature. Beautiful. The man has a rocket company and he's nickel-and-diming you for a pre-roll on Reacher. And the homepage still can't tell the difference between a show you're watching and a show you rage-quit in 2019. The algorithm over there is a golden retriever that keeps bringing you the same tennis ball. You liked The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel? Here's forty-six other shows set in the 1950s. Thanks, HAL.
Anyway. There's still good stuff on there. Not a lot. But some.
The best shows on Prime Video right now
The Boys (2019, 4 seasons)

The flagship. A gang of pissed-off civilians trying to take down a Justice League where Superman is a narcissist sociopath doing keynote speeches. It is gross, it is funny, it is the one time Amazon's content budget produced something that felt like it was made by humans. Eleven thousand people rated it an 8.4 and they were not lying. Start with: Season 1, Episode 1, "The Name of the Game." Watch on Prime Video.
Invincible (2021, 3 seasons)

Animated, which means nobody in your household who calls cartoons "cartoons" will watch it with you, and that's fine, because then you get the couch. A kid finds out his dad is the strongest superhero on Earth and also maybe evil. The first episode ends with a scene so violent your brain resets. Start with: Season 1, Episode 1, "It's About Time." Watch on Prime Video.
FROM (2022, 3 seasons)

A town in Middle America that you can't leave, and at night, monsters come out and eat everyone who doesn't lock their door. The show is on Prime via MGM+ and stars Harold from Lost, which, if you ever finished Lost, you know is either a warning or a promise. It rules. Nobody talks about it. Start with: the pilot. Watch on Prime Video.
Reacher (2022, 3 seasons)

A giant man walks into a small town, someone says something rude, and for the next eight episodes he breaks every bone in that town's body. The plots are procedural grout, the dialogue is written with a chisel, and that is the entire point. You want thought-provoking television, go read a pamphlet. You want to watch a 6'5" drifter throw a man through a wall? This is the product. Start with: Season 1, Episode 1. Watch on Prime Video.
Monarch: Legacy of Monsters (2023, 1 season)

Okay — this one's actually an Apple TV+ original, but it shows up in a lot of Prime Video searches because the Godzilla brand is confusing and Amazon's search bar is a toddler with a fever. If you have both and you like Kurt Russell playing his own son's father through flashbacks, you're in. It's the rare Godzilla spinoff where the humans are not actively a punishment.
Start a Prime Video free trial if you're not already locked into the Bezos ecosystem — although statistically you are, because the toothpaste under your sink came from the same company.
House (2004, 8 seasons)

Hugh Laurie as a pill-addicted diagnostician who hates his patients, his coworkers, and himself, solving medical mysteries with the bedside manner of a divorce attorney. It's lupus. It's never lupus. An 8.6 average from seventy-five hundred voters, which on the internet is the equivalent of a Nobel Prize. Start with: the pilot. Watch on Prime Video.
Supernatural (2005, 15 seasons)

Two brothers drive a 1967 Impala across America fighting demons for fifteen seasons, and by the end they've fought God and won a Daytime Emmy, probably. It is the longest-running dumb-beautiful show on television and its fans will unionize against you if you speak ill of it. I'm not stupid. Start with: Season 1, Episode 1, "Pilot." Watch on Prime Video.
Bones (2005, 12 seasons)

A forensic anthropologist and an FBI guy solve murders where the victim is usually a skeleton that's been eaten by hogs. Great for folding laundry. Great for pretending to do your taxes. One of the most streamed shows in America for reasons no executive can explain, which is why it is still on every platform. Watch on Prime Video.
Criminal Minds (2005, 17 seasons)

A team of FBI profilers stares at crime scene photos and mutters "he's devolving" for two decades. If you have a mother, she has seen every episode. If you have an aunt, she's seen them twice. Start with: Season 2 — Season 1 is the warm-up. Watch on Prime Video.
Person of Interest (2011, 5 seasons)

The overlooked gem. A reclusive billionaire builds an omniscient surveillance AI that predicts crimes before they happen, then teams up with a shaggy ex-CIA hitman to go stop them. Made in 2011 and it now plays like a documentary about the next ten years. Nobody told you to watch this. I'm telling you. Start with: the pilot. Watch on Prime Video.
Columbo (1971, 10 seasons)

A rumpled detective in a trench coat bothers a rich guy to death. That's the show. Every episode. You already know who did it in the first ten minutes — the fun is watching Peter Falk pretend to leave the room and then turn around and say "just one more thing." The greatest television ever made about the quiet class war between working stiffs and the wealthy. Watch on Prime Video.
Monk (2002, 8 seasons)

Tony Shalhoub as a detective with OCD so severe he can't touch a doorknob but he can solve a murder by noticing the salad fork is two millimeters off. Warm, funny, comforting in a way almost nothing on TV is anymore. The second overlooked gem on this list and I will die on its hill. Watch on Prime Video.
Castle (2009, 8 seasons)

Nathan Fillion as a novelist who tags along with a lady cop because the mayor said it was fine. A premise so thin a light breeze would kill it, and yet — eight seasons. The will-they-won't-they is good, the cases are disposable. Folding-laundry TV with a charming lead. Watch on Prime Video.
Teen Wolf (2011, 6 seasons)

A teenager gets bit by a werewolf and the show is somehow 8.45 out of 10 with forty-six hundred votes, which means an entire generation grew up on this and I missed the boat. I'm not going to pretend I've done the homework. Your cousin has. Ask her. Watch on Prime Video.
The ones everybody streams that aren't actually that good
Look — Blue Bloods, Chicago P.D., Desperate Housewives. These are on the chart because millions of Americans have them on in the background while they eat dinner and argue about grout. They are not bad. They are also not good. They are the television equivalent of unsalted crackers, and if you're looking for "the best shows on Prime Video right now," they are not that. They are the shows on Prime Video right now. There is a difference.
Also — Grimm. Fine. Fourth-tier Supernatural with a badge. If you've run out of the other stuff, sure.
The one religious show on the list and I'm not going to be rude about it
The Chosen, a show about Jesus, has an 8.69 audience rating, which is higher than literally everything else on this list. The people who like it really like it. I'm not in the target demographic but I respect the hustle — it got funded by crowdsourcing, which is more than you can say for the latest $250 million Amazon fantasy show where a guy with a sword stares at a horizon for nine episodes.
Frequently asked questions
What's the best show on Prime Video right now?
The Boys. It's not close. Highest vote count on the platform, consistently great across four seasons, and it has the added benefit of making you feel smart for watching a superhero show.
What's worth subscribing to Prime Video for?
If you don't already have Prime (and if you don't, congratulations, you're one of eleven people), the reason to sign up is the trio of The Boys, Invincible, and Reacher. Three shows that cost real money to make and don't feel like content-farm slop.
Is Prime Video worth it in 2026?
Probably, because you're already paying for Prime for the free shipping and the streaming is included. If you're asking whether Prime Video alone is worth it — no. It's a bonus feature of a shipping service. Treat it that way and you'll be happier.
Why are all the old procedurals on Prime Video?
Because Amazon's licensing team realized that Americans age 45+ will watch eleven hours of Bones a day and never once complain about buffering. It's a perfect business. No notes.
The closer
Prime Video is an app running on a bookstore that also owns a rainforest and a grocery store and possibly your thermostat. The fact that anything on it is good at all is a miracle. The Boys is great. Invincible is great. FROM is better than it has any right to be. Everything else is a nap with a laugh track.
If you want a weekly rundown of what's dropping on Prime Video, Netflix, HBO Max, Hulu, Apple TV+, and Disney+ — without the press-release voice — subscribe to The Drop at thedropnewsletter.com. Free. Weekly. Mean in a fun way.