
Best history podcasts of 2026
Best history podcasts of 2026
History podcasts have quietly become one of the strongest genres in audio. The gap between the best history shows and the average ones is wider than in almost any other category — the good ones are exceptional, and the mediocre ones are hard to sit through. Here are the shows in 2026 that are worth putting in the queue.
TL;DR — quick picks
- Best narrative epic: Hardcore History
- Best weekly conversation: The Rest Is History
- Best short-format academic: In Our Time
- Best for ancients: The Ancients
- Best comedy history: You're Dead to Me
- Best contrarian read: Revisionist History
Hardcore History
Dan Carlin's Hardcore History is the show most other history podcasts get compared to. His episodes routinely run four to six hours. His topics — Ghengis Khan, the Persian empire, World War I — are treated with a novelist's sense of drama and a journalist's sense of proportion. There's not a lot in the podcast world that lands like it.
- Best for: Long-form listeners who want history that reads like a great book
- Standout features: Dan's narration; the sheer scope of each episode; his willingness to hold a moment and let its weight land
- Considerations: Episodes are massive. New episodes come out slowly. Save them for road trips or several sessions.
The Rest Is History
Tom Holland (the historian, not the actor) and Dominic Sandbrook cover history topics twice a week in a conversational, funny, unfailingly well-informed format. Their range is enormous — Alexander the Great one week, Watergate the next — and their chemistry is what makes the format work.
- Best for: The historically curious listener who wants regular company on their commute
- Standout features: Two working historians talking to each other; deep archive; consistent output
- Considerations: Very British. Some listeners find the tone hard to warm to initially. Give it three episodes.
In Our Time
Melvyn Bragg's Radio 4 series is fifty minutes, weekly, and picks one topic — anything from the Peasants' Revolt to the mathematics of chaos — and brings three academic experts to discuss it. It's the most concentrated dose of academic knowledge you can get in podcast form.
- Best for: Listeners who want serious academic content in an accessible weekly format
- Standout features: Bragg's chairing; the depth of the guest expertise; the enormous archive going back decades
- Considerations: The pace is unhurried and the tone is BBC-formal. Not for the drive to the shops if you want to catch every word.
The Ancients
Tristan Hughes hosts The Ancients as part of the History Hit network. Each episode focuses on ancient civilisations through interviews with archaeologists, classicists, and museum curators. It's what you'd want the History Channel to be, in podcast form.
- Best for: Listeners with a specific interest in the ancient world (Egypt, Rome, Greece, or lesser-covered civilisations)
- Standout features: Regular access to leading academics; production values that stand out in the history genre
- Considerations: Narrow scope by design — if you're interested in modern history, this isn't the show.
You're Dead to Me
Greg Jenner hosts Radio 4's You're Dead to Me, which pairs a comedian with a historian for a conversation about a historical figure or event. The premise sounds thin. In practice, it's the most consistently listenable history podcast around, and it manages to be genuinely educational without feeling like a lecture.
- Best for: The listener who wants their history entertaining as well as informative
- Standout features: Clever pairings of comedians and historians; production quality; broad range of topics
- Considerations: Comedy-first. If you find comedians distracting from the history, the format won't work for you.
Revisionist History
Malcolm Gladwell's series takes something from the past and asks whether we got the story right the first time. Some episodes work beautifully. Some are Gladwell being Gladwell, which is a specific taste. Either way, it's a distinctive show.
- Best for: Listeners who enjoy contrarian takes and don't mind Gladwell's narrative style
- Standout features: Excellent production; genuinely original angles on stories you thought you knew
- Considerations: Gladwell's style divides listeners. Try one episode before deciding.
Dan Snow's History Hit
Dan Snow has been making television and radio programmes about history for over two decades. His podcast covers a wide swathe of history through interviews with historians, and it's an easier daily habit than some of the denser shows on this list.
- Best for: Listeners who want variety and a regular listen without a huge time commitment per episode
- Standout features: High-frequency production, broad topic range, Snow's connections mean he books strong guests
- Considerations: Less depth per episode than the narrative-epic shows. Some listeners find that a virtue.
Empire
William Dalrymple and Anita Anand host Empire, which takes a long look at how empires — chiefly the British, but not only — were built, run, and unravelled. It's serious history done in a two-host conversation format, and it's found a huge audience.
- Best for: Listeners interested in imperial and post-colonial history
- Standout features: Dalrymple is one of the sharpest historians of the British empire; Anand's presence gives the show a genuinely two-way conversation
- Considerations: Political implications thread through most episodes. Some listeners will find that clarifying and others will find it distracting.
History Extra
Produced by BBC History Magazine, History Extra brings historians into conversation with the magazine's editorial team. It's less consistently structured than some of the other academic-format shows, but the guest list is strong.
- Best for: Listeners who want an academic historian's voice without the classroom feel
- Standout features: Range of topics, access to serious scholars, deep archive
- Considerations: Production is functional rather than polished. Focus on the guest, not the format.
The History of Rome
Mike Duncan's completed series covering 179 episodes and the entire history of Rome from foundation to the sack of Constantinople in 1453 for the eastern half. It's from 2007-2012, but the whole archive is still there, and it's one of the great achievements in podcasting.
- Best for: Listeners who want to genuinely learn a single subject in depth over months
- Standout features: The completeness; Duncan's clarity; the fact that once you start it, you can just keep going
- Considerations: A single-topic archive rather than a live weekly show. Great if that's what you want.
How we chose
We looked for shows that release consistently (or, in the case of complete archives, are large enough to keep a listener going for months), have hosts who understand what they're covering, and treat listeners as intelligent adults. We also mixed formats deliberately — narrative epics, conversational shows, academic panels, and comedy history — so this list is useful whether you want to be entertained or educated (or both). For a broader look at learning-focused podcasts, see our best podcasts for learning list.
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