Keep reading for Diana Gabaldon’s favorite Outlander episodes, plus a few more from fans (unless otherwise noted, the picks are hers). Then go to starz.com to watch every episode of Season 6 when drops, starting on Sunday, March 6. Caution: light spoilers ahead as we go through the best episodes of Outlander.

Best Outlander episodes

Outlander Season 1 Episode 1, “Sassenach”

The first Outlander episode ever introduced viewers to the mystical setting of Scotland and the characters we’d come to love. Even though Claire (Caitriona Balfe) and Jamie (Sam Heughan) hadn’t yet begun their romance, how can fans—and Gabaldon herself—not be transported by Claire’s journey through the stones at Craigh na Dun and back in time to the 18th century? The episode is filled with so many iconic moments: Claire watching the Druidic women dancing among the stones, her first meeting with the evil Black Jack Randall (Tobias Menzies), healing Jamie’s wounds and their horseback ride to Castle Leoch—the ruins of which 1940s Claire had just been exploring with her husband, Frank (also Menzies). And let’s not forget Frank’s strange encounter with a Highlander in all his Scottish glory who, Gabaldon confirmed, is Jamie’s ghost.

Outlander Season 1 Episode 2, “Castle Leoch”

It’s sinking in for Claire that she really has traveled to the past as she, and viewers, get their first real glimpse of the world she’s entered into—which makes this one of Gabaldon’s favorite episodes. Castle Leoch is the home of the MacKenzie clan, and Claire’s not quite sure what to make of them. They’re not sure what to make of her, either. Claire and Jamie have their first heart-to-heart, as he reveals how he got the scars on his back and she tells him that her husband is “not alive” (totally true); we also enjoy the first of many feasts in the castle’s great hall. Claire’s talents as a healer come in handy, but that also means Jamie’s uncles, castle Laird Colum and his brother, Dougal, want to keep her there—but as a guest, or a prisoner?

Outlander Season 1 Episode 7, “The Wedding”

This one is on Gabaldon’s list, and most fans would include it on theirs, too. After all, it’s Claire and Jamie’s wedding, when they recite their now-famous wedding vows, “Blood of my blood, and bone of my bone.” Even though initially they only agree to marry to keep Claire safe from Black Jack Randall, on their wedding night the newlyweds can’t deny their mutual attraction. Viewers waited six and a half long episodes for the couple to consummate their love, as we see them progress from the awkwardness of their first time to their thorough enjoyment of each other.

Outlander Season 1 Episode 15, “Wentworth Prison”

The setup to the first season finale finds Jamie saved from execution by Black Jack Randall, who wants him for his own nefarious purposes, and throws him in the prison dungeon. Claire, meanwhile, is busy hatching a plan to break Jamie out—unfortunately, she too is caught by Black Jack after just a few fleeting moments alone with Jamie in his cell. Jamie makes a bargain—he won’t fight against Jack in return for Claire’s release. And in one of the most poignant moments of the season, before Black Jack lets her go, Claire tells him she is a witch and whispers in his ear the exact date of his death (which she knows because, time travel).

Outlander Season 1 Episode 16, “To Ransom a Man’s Soul”

This is not an easy episode to watch, but it’s so outstandingly done that it must make it onto anyone’s (including Gabaldon’s) “best” list. Having promised not to fight Black Jack, Jamie succumbs to the torture of his captor. Heughan and Menzies give unforgettable, heart-wrenching performances. The episode offers a bit of levity in Murtagh’s successful plan to use a herd of cattle to literally break down the back door of the prison. After Jamie recovers, he and Claire sail away to France—and Claire reveals she is pregnant.

Outlander Season 2 Episode 7, “Faith”

This episode is no doubt the best of the France-set half-season. After going into labor early, Claire loses her baby, which is named Faith, while Jamie is in jail for dueling Black Jack. When Claire sings to her lifeless child, it’s impossible not to feel the emotion of Balfe’s powerful performance. The episode later contains one of the most memorable sequences ever, as the King of France agrees to release Jamie in return for the help of “La Dame Blanche,” a.k.a Claire. She plays up her witchy persona in order to save an apothecary friend from a dark arts accusation. Add a serpent, a poison-detecting necklace and a mysterious “Star Chamber,” and you have a scene viewers aren’t likely to forget. Plus, Jamie and Claire tenderly reunite at the end of the episode, and Jamie places an apostle spoon on Faith’s grave.

Outlander Season 2 Episode 10, “Prestonpans”

Now back in Scotland, Jamie and Claire have come up with a plan to change the outcome of the bloody Battle of Culloden, in which Scottish rebels were defeated by the English. In a nail-biting moment before their first battle, the real-life Prestonpans, Jamie’s uncle Dougal tests the marshy ground of the battlefield, just out of range of British guns. Then follows the first major battle of the series as Jamie fights and Claire tends to the wounded. This lead-up to Culloden shows viewers the sacrifice of war even in victory, as one of Jamie’s clansman is sadly killed.

Outlander Season 2 Episode 11, “Vengeance Is Mine”

This is the first Outlander episode Gabaldon wrote. One of the characters viewers love to hate, the slippery Duke of Sandringham, makes a final appearance in this episode. Claire first thinks she’s making a deal with the Duke to help them all get away from the Redcoats; but the scheming Duke is up to his old tricks, double-crossing Claire and holding her as bait to lure Jamie, who he plans to turn over to the British. Any episode with the Duke is full of twists and turns, but this one ends with his comeuppance, as Jamie’s godfather Murtagh slices his head clean off. Viewers also get to see Claire’s friend Mary Hawkins enact her revenge on her rapist, one of the Duke’s henchmen, with a knife to the gut.

Outlander Season 2 Episode 12, “The Hail Mary”

Jamie and Claire make last-ditch efforts to change the course of history and avoid the deadly encounter at Culloden. But this episode is more focused on the fates of two ailing men who meet their end: Jamie’s uncle Colum MacKenzie, the Laird of Castle Leoch and Dougal’s brother, and Black Jack Randall’s kind brother, Alex. Both dying men have moving deathbed conversations with their siblings. We also learn that Mary Hawkins is pregnant with Alex’s child, but in a surprising turn Black Jack agrees to marry her for his brother’s sake. This episode shows Outlander is all about character development—even those who aren’t Claire or Jamie.

Outlander Season 2 Episode 13, “Dragonfly in Amber”

As we head to the season finale, we’re also heading to the moment viewers have anticipated for two seasons, the Battle of Culloden. This episode wasn’t on Gabaldon’s list, but fans would surely include it for the heartbreaking moment when Claire must leave Jamie and travel back through the stones for her own safety—and the safety of her unborn child. Viewers already knew that Claire goes back to the future because we’d seen her in a flash-forward at the beginning of the season (and half of this episode also takes place in Claire’s present-day). But we didn’t know how or why it would happen, and have been secretly hoping it would somehow not come to pass. It’s a sad ending to the season: Not only are Claire and Jamie separated, but they realize they can’t change history, and the battle begins. In the present-day, though, Claire learns that Jamie did not die at Culloden, and decides she must go back.

Outlander Season 3 Episode 1, “The Battle Joined”

Those hoping for a swift reunion for Claire and Jamie would unfortunately have to wait through half of Season 3. But that’s not to say there weren’t some very strong episodes in the meantime, as they make their separate ways in separate worlds. And in this episode, we finally get to see the Battle of Culloden itself, in which Jamie has it out with Black Jack once and for all, killing him. Back in the 20th century, Claire finds herself in an unhappy marriage to her first husband, Frank, as she gives birth to her daughter, Brianna.

Outlander Season 3 Episode 4, “Of Lost Things”

Viewers ache for Jamie in this episode, as he must leave behind yet another child to be raised by another man. Working at an estate aptly named Helwater, Jamie is blackmailed into sleeping with the family’s daughter, Geneva, who’s about to marry an old, unattractive man. She becomes pregnant with Jamie’s child and dies in childbirth; when her husband, who knows the baby isn’t his, threatens to kill the child, Jamie shoots him. Jamie stays on with the family to be close to his son, Willie, forging a sweet bond. But eventually their resemblance is noticed, so Jamie must leave (Jamie’s friend Lord John Grey and Geneva’s sister, who are marrying, will raise Willie). Jamie rides away, forcing himself not to look back.

Outlander Season 3 Episode 6, “A. Malcolm”

It’s the episode fans have been waiting for! Fans remember fondly the long-awaited reunion between Claire and Jamie. Twenty years have passed (although neither one of them looks much older) before Claire takes the journey to the past again and steps foot into Jamie’s print shop in Edinburgh. Like their wedding night all those years ago, Jamie and Claire don’t rush into bed—they spend a lot of time talking first, because they have a lot to catch up on. But when they finally do make love, it’s worth the wait.

Outlander Season 4 Episode 4, “Common Ground”

After a detour to the Caribbean following his kidnapped nephew Ian, Jamie and Claire decided to settle in North Carolina in Season 4. In this episode (not a favorite of Gabaldon’s, but one of ours!) they find the spot of land that will be called “Fraser’s Ridge,” establishing what will become their home for the upcoming seasons. First, though, they must make peace with the Cherokee who are not exactly happy to see them. In the present-day, their grown-up daughter, Brianna (Sophie Skelton), is making plans of her own, unbeknownst to her on-again-off-again boyfriend, Roger MacKenzie (Richard Rankin). Roger finds out some important information about her parents’ fate in the 1700s—but it turns out, she may be on her way to the past to see them already.

Outlander Season 4 Episode 6, “Blood of My Blood”

Whenever Lord John Grey shows up, viewers cheer—he’s a definite fan favorite. But that’s not all: This episode features some major character development as he and Jamie play chess and talk, just like old times; and later, as Lord John and Claire have an intimate fireside chat while she nurses him during an illness. Lord John also brings an expected guest: Willie, who doesn’t know Jamie is his biological father. Jamie and Willie spend time together reconnecting, although Jamie doesn’t reveal the truth about their relationship. There’s so much hidden pain here, and the actors deliver poignant performances.

Outlander Season 4 Episode 9, “The Birds & The Bees”

This one’s not on Gabaldon’s list, but many fans love the episode for the sheer reason that it’s the first time Jamie meets his daughter Brianna, who’s traveled back in time to find him. The moment is soft, sweet and touching. She also reunites with her mother, and Claire is overjoyed to see her. The new family, though, struggles a bit to connect; after all, the father who raised Bree was Frank, who’s now deceased. Jamie, though, says he doesn’t want to replace Frank, and tells Bree to call him, “Da.” Aww!

Outlander Season 5 Episode 3, “Free Will”

This season had some great episodes, as the Frasers developed a community of settlers and built a big house to live in. But this episode makes a slight departure from the rest of the season and is almost a self-contained story, with Jamie and Claire investigating an isolated cabin right out of Deliverance where something is not quite right. They find a pregnant woman inside and a near-dead body, but all is not as it seems. As we learn what went down, viewers are drawn in by the moral questions the episode presents: When is it OK to torment a tormentor? And what mercy or justice should be shown to such a person as they lay dying?

Outlander Season 5 Episode 7, “The Ballad of Roger Mac”

What might be the best episode of this season has echoes of the Battle of Culloden, as Claire, Jamie, Roger and Brianna try to alter history and prevent a skirmish that sparked that American Revolution. Jamie’s godfather, Murtagh, is on the other side of it, and Jamie definitely doesn’t want to fight his kin. But as before, they can’t change the past, and the battle ensues. In a shocking and emotional moment, Murtagh is shot and dies in Jamie’s arms.

Outlander Season 5 Episode 9, “Monsters and Heroes”

Heughan gives another outstanding performance this season when Jamie is bitten by a snake and must face his own mortality—and his own pride, as he asks Claire to let him die rather than amputate his leg, which has become infected. But his nephew Ian brings him back around, reminding him that his own father (Jamie’s brother-in-law) is also missing a leg, and Jamie’s adopted son Fergus is missing a hand. As Jamie nears death, he asks Claire to touch him, and she presses her naked body to his. He says he chose to stay with her and live, and that he will always love her.

Outlander Season 5 Episode 11, “Journeycake”

This emotional episode written by Gabaldon is all about family. Bree and Roger discover their baby, Jemmy, can time travel, and make the difficult decision to go back to the future for their family’s safety. Revelations abound in this episode as well: Jamie reveals to Bree that he had a son, so she has a brother; and Ian learns that Claire, Bree and Roger are from the future. Before the bittersweet goodbye, the family gathers for a final meal. In a nod to the future, Claire presents them with “journeycakes,” otherwise known as peanut butter and jelly sandwiches.

Outlander Season 5 Episode 12, “Never My Love”

The season finale presented yet another act of sexual assault, this time on Claire by a group of odious fellow settlers. To the episode’s credit, the focus is kept almost solely on Claire as she endures the horrific experience by disassociating her mind. She imagines a 1960s Thanksgiving complete with Jamie, Fergus, Marsali, Ian, the deceased Murtaugh and Aunt Jocasta. Seeing all the 1700s characters in groovy garb is totally surreal—but noticeably absent are Brianna and Roger. In the meantime, the real Bree and Roger have shockingly not been able to travel back to the actual ’60s, and instead return to Fraser’s Ridge. Claire is rescued by Jamie and company, and she vows not to be shattered by the attack. Later in a tender scene we see her safe in Jamie’s arms, as they cradle each other’s naked bodies. What was your favorite Outlander episode? You can also look back on the best Outlander love scenes to ever steam up your small screen—caution, NSFW!

21 Best  Outlander  Episodes   Diana Gabaldon s Favorite  Outlander  Episodes - 43