List of awards and nominations received by Doctor Who

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Doctor Who awards and nominations
David Tennant July 2009.jpg
Multi-awarded contributors to the series in 2009 (left to right): producer and writer Russell T Davies, critically acclaimed actor David Tennant (Tenth Doctor), director of several episodes Euros Lyn and executive producer Julie Gardner.
Totals[a]
Wins162
Nominations404
Note

Anglophile Awards[]

Year Category Nominee(s) Result
2016 Best Actor in a Television Series Peter Capaldi Nominated

Audie Awards[]

The Audie Awards are annually presented by the American Audio Publishers Association for audiobooks and spoken-word entertainment.

Year Category Nominee(s) Result Ref.
2015 Best Package Design Doctor Who: The Light at the End Won [1]
2017 Best Audio Drama Doctor Who: Death and the Queen Nominated [2]
Doctor Who: The War Doctor: Only The Monstrous Nominated
2021 Doctor Who: Stranded 1 Won [3]

Audio and Radio Industry Awards[]

The Audio and Radio Industry Awards are annually presented by the Radio Academy to award excellence in UK radio and audio presenting and production.

Year Category Nominee(s) Result Ref.
2021 Best Fictional Storytelling Doctor Who: Out of Time Nominated [4]

BAFTA[]

In 2006 Doctor Who was nominated for the British Academy Television Awards (BAFTA), shortlisted in the "Drama Series" category. Doctor Who was also nominated in several other categories in the BAFTA Craft Awards, including Writer (Russell T Davies), Director (Joe Ahearne), and Break-through Talent (production designer Edward Thomas). However, it did not win any of its categories at the Craft Awards.

Steven Moffat has been praised for his writing inventiveness in Doctor Who, in particular for the 2006 episode "The Girl in the Fireplace" and the 2007 episode "Blink", for which he won a BAFTA TV Award and a BAFTA Cymru Award. The episodes both won the Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation.

On 22 April 2006, the programme won five categories (out of 14 nominations) at the lower-profile BAFTA Cymru awards, given to programmes made in Wales. It won Best Drama Series, Drama Director (James Hawes), Costume, Make-up and Photography Direction. Russell T Davies also won the Siân Phillips Award for Outstanding Contribution to Network Television.[5] At the BAFTA Cymru awards the following year the programme won eight of the 13 categories in which it was nominated, including Best Actor for David Tennant and Best Drama Director for Graeme Harper.[6]

On 7 May 2006, the winners of the British Academy Television Awards were announced, and Doctor Who won both of the categories it was nominated for, the Best Drama Series and audience-voted Pioneer Award. Russell T Davies also won the Dennis Potter Award for Outstanding Writing for Television.[7] Writer Steven Moffat won the Writer category at the 2008 BAFTA Craft Awards for his 2007 Doctor Who episode "Blink".[8]

The series also won awards at the BAFTA Cymru ceremony on 27 April 2008, including "Best Screenwriter" for Steven Moffat, "Best Director: Drama" for James Strong, "Best Director Of Photography: Drama" for Ernie Vincze, "Best Sound" for the BBC Cymru Wales Sound Team and "Best Make-Up" for Barbara Southcott and Neill Gorton (of Millennium FX).[9]

In March 2009, it was announced that Doctor Who had again been nominated in the "Drama Series" category for the British Academy Television Awards; however, it lost to the BBC series Wallander at the Awards on Sunday 26 April.[10] The series picked up two BAFTAs at the British Academy Television Craft Awards on Sunday 17 May. Visual Effects company The Mill won the "Visual Effects" award for the episode "The Fires of Pompeii" and Philip Kloss won in the "Editing Fiction/Entertainment" category.[11]

In 2011 Matt Smith was nominated for best television actor at the 2011 Bafta Television Awards, but eventually lost out to Daniel Rigby from Eric and Ernie. It was the first time an actor portraying the Doctor had received such a nomination.

In 2012 the production team was nominated for the BAFTA Craft Awards Visual Effects category.[12]

BAFTA Cymru Awards[]

Year Category Nominee(s) Episode Result
2006 Best Drama Series/Serial Phil Collinson Won
Best Actor Christopher Eccleston Nominated
Best Actress Billie Piper Nominated
Best Director – Drama James Hawes "The Christmas Invasion" Won
Best Screenwriter Russell T Davies Nominated
Best Original Music Soundtrack Murray Gold "The Christmas Invasion" Nominated
Best Sound Ian Richardson Nominated
Best Director of Photography – Drama Ernest Vincze Won
Best Costume Lucinda Wright Won
Best Make-Up Davie Jones and Neill Gorton Won
Best Design Edward Thomas "The Christmas Invasion" Nominated
Siân Phillips Award for Outstanding Contribution to Network Television Russell T Davies Won
2007 Best Actor David Tennant "Doomsday" Won
Best Actress Billie Piper Nominated
Best Screenplay Russell T Davies Won
Best Costume Louise Page Won
Best Make-Up Neill Gorton and Sheelagh Wells "The Girl in the Fireplace" Won
Best Editor Cripspin Green "Tooth and Claw" Won
2008 Best Drama Series/Serial Phil Collinson "Voyage of the Damned" Won
Best Director James Strong Won
Best Screenwriter Steven Moffat "Blink" Won
Best Sound BBC Wales sound team "Voyage of the Damned" Won
Best Director of Photography – Drama Ernest Vincze Won
Best Costume Louise Page "The Shakespeare Code" Nominated
Best Make-Up Neill Gorton and Barbara Southcott Won
2009 Best Drama Series/Serial Phil Collinson Nominated
Best Director – Drama Euros Lyn "Silence in the Library" Won
Best Screenwriter Russell T Davies "Midnight" Won
Best Original Music Soundtrack Murray Gold Nominated
Best Sound Julian Howarth, ​Tim Ricketts, ​Paul McFadden ​and Paul Jefferies Won
Best Director of Photography – Drama Rory Taylor "Silence in the Library" Nominated
Best Make-Up Barbara Southcott "The Next Doctor" Nominated
Best Editor Philip Kloss "Midnight" Won
2010 Best Drama Series/Serial Tracie Simpson "The End of Time: Part One" Nominated
Best Make-Up Barbara Southcott Won
Best Design Edward Thomas "The Waters of Mars" Won
2011 Best Sound Tim Ricketts "A Christmas Carol" Won
Best Make-Up & Hair Barbara Southcott "The Vampires of Venice" Nominated
Best Editing: Fiction William Oswald "The Time of Angels" Nominated
Best Lighting Mark Hutchings "The Eleventh Hour" Won
2012 Best Television Drama Marcus Wilson "The Impossible Astronaut" Nominated
Best Sound The Doctor Who sound team "The Wedding of River Song" Nominated
Best Digital Creativity & Games BBC Wales interactive team, Sumo Digital & Revolution Software "Doctor Who: The Adventure Games – The Gunpowder Plot" Won
2013 Best Sound The Doctor Who sound team Nominated
Best Editing William Oswald "The Snowmen" Nominated
2014 Best Sound The Doctor Who sound team Nominated
Best Special Effects The Doctor Who Effects team Won
Best Music and Entertainment Programme Doctor Who at the Proms Nominated
2015 Best Actor Peter Capaldi "Dark Water" Nominated
Best Actress Jenna Coleman "Kill the Moon" Nominated
Best Editing Will Oswald "Dark Water" Nominated
Best Special and Visual Effects Doctor Who Production Team "Last Christmas" Nominated
Best Titles and Graphic Identity Doctor Who Production Team "Deep Breath" Nominated
2016 Technical Achievement Commendation BBC Cymru, ​BBC Digital Creativity, ​Aardman Animations Doctor Who Game Maker Nominated
Sound & Music Commendation Nominated
Best Editing Will Oswald Nominated
Best Special and Visual Effects, Titles and Graphic Identity Doctor Who Production Team "The Magician's Apprentice" Won
2019 Best Special and Visual Effects Doctor Who Production Team "The Doctor Falls" Nominated
Outstanding Actress Jodie Whittaker Nominated
Excellence in Production Design Arwel Wyn Jones Nominated
Outstanding Television Drama Nominated
2020 Best Director Lee Haven Jones "Spyfall Part 2" Nominated
Best Editing Rebecca Trotman Won

BAFTA Scotland Awards[]

Year Category Nominee(s) Result
2008 Best Writer Steven Moffat Nominated
2009 Best Actor David Tennant Nominated
2015 Best Actress Michelle Gomez Nominated
Best Writer Steven Moffat Nominated
2016 Best Actor Peter Capaldi Nominated

BAFTA TV Awards[]

Year Category Nominee(s) Episode Result
1977 'Harlequin' (Drama/Light Entertainment) Philip Hinchcliffe Nominated
1978 Graham Williams Nominated
2006 Best Drama Series Phil Collinson, Russell T Davies and Julie Gardner Won
Best Director Joe Ahearne Nominated
Best Writer Russell T Davies Nominated
Audience Award Won
Break-Through Talent Edward Thomas Nominated
New Media Developer Jo Pearce and Andrew Whitehouse "Attack of the Graske" Nominated
Dennis Potter Award Russell T Davies Won
2007 Best Editing Fiction/Entertainment Crispin Green Nominated
Best Visual Effects The Mill Nominated
2008 Best Writer Steven Moffat "Blink" Won
Best Original Television Music Murray Gold Nominated
Best Sound Fiction/Entertainment BBC Wales sound team Nominated
2009 Best Drama Series Phil Collinson, Russell T Davies, Julie Gardner and Susie Liggat Nominated
Best Writer Russell T Davies "Midnight" Nominated
Best Editing Fiction/Entertainment Philip Kloss Won
2010 Best Visual Effects The Mill Nominated
2011 Best Actor Matt Smith Nominated
Best Visual Effects The Mill Nominated
2012 Best Visual Effects The Mill Nominated
2013 Best Visual Effects and Graphic Design The Mill Nominated
Best Original Television Music Murray Gold "Asylum of the Daleks" Nominated
2014 Radio Times Audience Award The Day of the Doctor Won
Best Special Effects Milk VFX, Real SFX, The Model Unit "The Day of the Doctor" Won
Best Entertainment Craft Team Alex Hartman, Saul Gittens, Dan Evans, Amer Iqbal Doctor Who at the Proms Nominated
2015 Best Visual Effects Milk VFX, Real SFX, BBC Wales VFX Won
2016 Best Supporting Actress Michelle Gomez Nominated
Best Visual Effects Milk VFX, Millennium FX, Real SFX, Molinare Nominated
2019 Virgin Media's Must-See Moment "Rosa refuses to move" "Rosa" Nominated

BBC[]

Auntie Awards[]

In 1996, BBC television held the "Auntie Awards" as the culmination of their "TV60" series, celebrating 60 years of BBC television broadcasting, where Doctor Who was voted as the "Best Popular Drama" the corporation had ever produced, ahead of such ratings heavyweights as EastEnders and Casualty.[13] All people involved into the last years of the series were rewarded, including actors Peter Davison (Fifth Doctor) and Sylvester McCoy (Seventh Doctor), who became the first actors to win an award for their role as the Doctor.

Year Category Result
1996 Best Popular Drama Series Won

BBC Audio Drama Awards[]

The BBC Audio Drama Awards is an awards ceremony created by BBC Radio to recognise excellence in the radio industry, in particular in audio dramas. The first awards were presented in 2012 and the ceremony has been located at BBC Radio's home Radio Theatre, Broadcasting House.[14] Two Doctor Who audio dramas produced by Big Finish Productions have won the Best Audio Drama Award, in 2014 and 2017 respectively.

Year Category Nominee(s) Title Result Ref.
2014 Best Online or Non-Broadcast Drama Doctor Who: Dark Eyes Won [15]
2015 Doctor Who: The Light at the End Longlisted [16]
Jago & Litefoot: Encore of the Scorchies Longlisted
2017 Best Online Only Audio Drama Doctor Who: Absent Friends Won [17]
Doctor Who: Death and the Queen Shortlisted [18]
2019 Best Actor Derek Jacobi The War Master: Beneath the Viscoid Shortlisted [19]

BBC's "Drama Best Of"[]

Doctor Who was extremely popular at the BBC.co.uk's online "Best of Drama" poll and swept all the categories (except "Worst Drama") in both 2005[20] and 2006,[21] the last two years it was made.

In 2005 it beat 29 other nominations with more than 50% of votes in every category, except Best Villain, especially winning Best Drama with 55.86% (ahead of the second-ranked series Bleak House with 15.95%). It also reached the second place in three categories it was nominated twice (Best Actor, Favourite Moment and Most Desirable Star, with the four highest ranks for the last one).

Billie Piper (Rose Tyler) was the highest rated in three BBC's "Best Of" lists: Best Actress in 2005 and 2006, and Most Desirable Star in 2005.

In 2005 Christopher Eccleston obtained 59.42% of votes as the Ninth Doctor and David Tennant was ranked second with 9.15% as the Tenth Doctor.

In almost every category of the BBC's list there were 30 nominations. However, only the five best ranked are finally presented (the others figure on a list). The Doctor Who nominees presented here are the ones which was on top 5 (which does not include, for example, John Barrowman's 2005 nomination for Best Actor due to his 14th place).

John Barrowman was nominated in two categories at the 2005 BBC's "Drama Best Of": Best Actor (ranked 14th) and Most Desirable Star (ranked 4th), his only nominations for Doctor Who; however, he was nominated for several awards for reprising his role of Jack Harkness in its spin-off Torchwood.
Year Category Nominee(s) Result
2005 Best Drama Won
Best Actor Christopher Eccleston Won
David Tennant Nominated
Best Actress Billie Piper Won
Favourite Moment "The return of the Daleks" Won
"The Doctor regenerates" Nominated
Best Villain The Daleks Won
The Emperor Dalek Nominated
Most Desirable Star Christopher Eccleston Nominated
David Tennant Nominated
Billie Piper Won
John Barrowman Nominated
Best Drama Website Doctor Who Won
2006 Best Drama Won
Best Actor David Tennant Won
Best Actress Billie Piper Won
Favourite Moment "Daleks vs Cybermen" Nominated
"Rose's exit" Won
Best Drama Website Doctor Who Won

BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards[]

Doctor Who was nominated at the 2010 BBC Radio 1 Teen Awards for 'Best TV Show'. It lost out to Channel 4's The Inbetweeners.[22] However, the show went on to win at the 2013 awards.[23] It was also nominated at the 2017 awards.[24]

Year Category Result
2010 Best TV Show Nominated
2013 Best TV Show Won
2016 Best TV Show Nominated
2017 Best TV Show Nominated

TV Moments Awards[]

BBC Awarded to a scene of the episode "The Doctor Dances" the TV Moments Award for Top Moment of May/June 2005. Finally, the moment was nominated as all the others "Top Moment" winners of the year for the Golden Moment Award, which he also won.

Year Category Nominee(s) Episode Result
2005 May/June Top Moment "The Doctor, Rose and Jack hear a deadly voice" "The Doctor Dances" Won
Golden Moment Won
Russell T Davies has been praised for his writing abilities. He has won twelve awards overall (including two British Fantasy Awards) for his contributions to the revived series.

British Fantasy Awards[]

In 2009, Doctor Who won the inaugural Best Television Award at the British Fantasy Awards. It won the award again the following year.[25]

Year Category Nominee(s) Title Result
2009 Best Television Russell T Davies "Doctor Who" Won
2010 Best Television Russell T Davies "Doctor Who" Won
2014 Best Film/Television Episode Steven Moffat "The Day of the Doctor" Nominated

Broadcast Awards[]

Doctor Who is currently nominated at Broadcast Awards (presented by the eponymous magazine) in the Best International Programme Sales category, along its spin-off Torchwood.[26]

Year Category Result
2012 Best International Programme Sales Nominated

Broadcasting Press Guild Awards[]

The Broadcasting Press Guilt Awards are presented by the Broadcasting Press Guild, a British association of journalists. Doctor Who have been nominated for seven awards overall, but did not win any.[27]

(left to right) Two key members of the production: Broadcasting Press Guild Award nominee Julie Gardner and Steven Moffat.
Year Category Nominee(s) Result
2006 Best Drama Series Phil Collinson, Russell T Davies and Julie Gardner Nominated
Best Actor Christopher Eccleston Nominated
David Tennant (also for Casanova and Secret Smile) Nominated
Best Actress Billie Piper (also for ShakespeaRe-Told) Nominated
Writer's Award Russell T Davies Nominated
2009 Best Actor David Tennant (also for Einstein and Eddington) Nominated
2010 David Tennant (also for Hamlet) Nominated

Constellation Awards[]

The Constellation Awards are Science Fiction specialised awards. Doctor Who won three awards in 2007,[28] three in 2008,[29] three in 2009, one in 2010 and one in 2011. David Tennant has been nominated for Best Actor five times, with three wins. In 2010 Murray Gold won Best Technical Accomplishment in Science Fiction Film or Television Series, especially beating Academy Award for Best Visual Effects winner Inception (nominated in the same category as him for its Visual Effects).[30]

Year Category Nominee(s) Episode Result
2007 Best Male Performance in a 2006 Science Fiction Television Episode David Tennant "The Girl in the Fireplace" Won
Best Science Fiction Television Series of 2006 Won
Outstanding Canadian Contribution to Science Fiction Film or Television in 2006 Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Won
2008 Best Male Performance in a 2007 Science Fiction Television Episode David Tennant "The Family of Blood" Won
Best Female Performance in a 2007 Science Fiction Television Episode Carey Mulligan "Blink" Won
Best Science Fiction Television Series of 2007 Won
2009 Best Male Performance in a 2008 Science Fiction Television Episode David Tennant "Midnight" Nominated
Best Female Performance in a 2008 Science Fiction Television Episode Catherine Tate "Turn Left" Won
Best Science Fiction Television Series of 2008 Won
Best Technical Accomplishment in a 2010 Science Fiction Film or Television Series Murray Gold
(for music)
Nominated
Best Overall 2008 Science Fiction Film or Television Script Steven Moffat "Silence in the Library" Won
2010 Best Male Performance in a 2009 Science Fiction Television Episode David Tennant "The Waters of Mars" Won
Best Female Performance in a 2009 Science Fiction Television Episode Michelle Ryan "Planet of the Dead" Nominated
Best Science Fiction Television Series of 2009 Nominated
2011 Best Male Performance in a 2010 Science Fiction Television Episode David Tennant "The End of Time: Part Two" Nominated
Matt Smith "A Christmas Carol" Nominated
Best Female Performance in a 2010 Science Fiction Television Episode Karen Gillan "Amy's Choice" Nominated
Best Science Fiction Television Series of 2010 Nominated
Best Technical Accomplishment in a 2010 Science Fiction Film or Television Series Murray Gold
(for music)
Won
2012 Best Science Fiction Television Series of 2011 Steven Moffat Nominated
2013 Best Science Fiction Television Series of 2012 Steven Moffat Nominated
2014 Best Male Performance in a 2013 Science Fiction Television Episode Matt Smith "The Time of the Doctor" Nominated
John Hurt "The Day of the Doctor" Nominated
Best Female Performance in a 2013 Science Fiction Television Episode Billie Piper "The Day of the Doctor" Nominated
Best Overall 2013 Science Fiction Film or Television Script Steven Moffat "The Day of the Doctor" Won

Critics Choice Super Awards[]

The Critics Choice Super Awards honors superheroes, science fiction/fantasy, horror, action and animation movies and series by the Critics Choice Association

Year Category Nominee(s) Title Result
2020 Best Actress in a Science Fiction/Fantasy series Jodie Whittaker Doctor Who Nominated

Diversity in Media Awards[]

Year Category Result
2017 TV Moment of the Year Nominated

Edinburgh International Television Festival[]

A panel of journalists and television executives for the annual awards given out at the Edinburgh International Television Festival voted Doctor Who as the best programme of the year in 2007 and 2008.[31][32]

Year Category Result
2007 Best Programme of the Year Won
2008 Won

Emmy Awards[]

Primetime Emmy Awards[]

The Primetime Emmy Award is an American accolade bestowed by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences in recognition of excellence in American primetime television programming since 1949.[33]

Year Category Nominee(s) Result
2020 Outstanding Derivative Interactive Program Doctor Who: The Runaway Nominated

Glamour Awards[]

Year Category Nominee(s) Result
2014 UK TV Actress Jenna Coleman Won

Glenfiddich Spirit of Scotland Awards[]

In 2007, David Tennant won a Glenfiddich Spirit of Scotland Award, in the Screen Award category.[34]

Year Category Nominee(s) Result
2007 Screen Award David Tennant Won

Golden Nymphs[]

The Monte-Carlo Television Festival reward every year various television series with its award, the "Golden Nymph".

Year Category Nominee(s) Result
2007 Outstanding Actor – Drama Series David Tennant Nominated
Outstanding Actress – Drama Series Freema Agyeman Nominated

Hugo Awards[]

In every year of its broadcast since 2005, Doctor Who has received multiple nominations (each for a different episode) for the Short Form category of the Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation, the oldest award for science fiction, winning every year until 2012 except 2009 for a total of six awards. The series receives a record of three separate nominations each in 2006, 2007, 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013.

Several episodes of the 2005 series of Doctor Who were nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form: "Dalek", "Father's Day" and the double episode "The Empty Child"/"The Doctor Dances". At a ceremony at the Worldcon (L.A. Con IV) in Los Angeles on 27 August 2006, the Hugo was awarded to "The Empty Child"/"The Doctor Dances".[35] "Dalek" and "Father's Day" came in second and third places respectively.[36] The 2006 series episodes "School Reunion", "Army of Ghosts"/"Doomsday" and "The Girl in the Fireplace" were nominated for the same category of the 2007 Hugo Awards, with "The Girl in the Fireplace" winning.[37]

The 2007 series episodes "Blink" and "Human Nature"/"The Family of Blood" also secured nominations in this category in the 2008 Hugo Awards,[38] with "Blink" winning the award.[39] The 2008 series episodes "Silence in the Library"/"Forest of the Dead" and "Turn Left" secured nominations in this category in the 2009 Hugo awards, but lost to Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog.[40] The 2009 series episodes "The Waters of Mars", "The Next Doctor", and "Planet of the Dead" secured nominations in this category in the 2010 Hugo awards,[41] with "The Waters of Mars" winning the award.[42] "Vincent and the Doctor", "The Pandorica Opens" / "The Big Bang", and "A Christmas Carol" from the 2010 series were also nominated in the Short Form category for the 2011 award, and was won by "The Pandorica Opens" / "The Big Bang".[43] Notably, Doctor Who was the only ongoing series nominated in the 2011 competition, with the remainder of the nominees being one-off short films. "The Doctor's Wife" won the 2012 award.[44]

For the 2014 ceremony, two Doctor Who episodes received nominations: "The Name of the Doctor" and "The Day of the Doctor". In 2015 episode "Listen" was nominated for the award.

Year Category Nominee(s) Episode Result
2006 Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form Robert Shearman ​and Joe Ahearne "Dalek" Nominated
Paul Cornell and Joe Ahearne "Father's Day" Nominated
Steven Moffat and James Hawes "The Empty Child"/"The Doctor Dances" Won
2007 Toby Whithouse and James Hawes "School Reunion" Nominated
Steven Moffat and Euros Lyn "The Girl in the Fireplace" Won
Russell T Davies and Graeme Harper "Army of Ghosts"/"Doomsday" Nominated
2008 Paul Cornell and Charles Palmer "Human Nature"/"The Family of Blood" Nominated
Steven Moffat and Hettie MacDonald "Blink" Won
2009 Steven Moffat and Euros Lyn "Silence in the Library"/"Forest of the Dead" Nominated
Russell T Davies and Graeme Harper "Turn Left" Nominated
2010 Russell T Davies and Andy Goddard "The Next Doctor" Nominated
Russell T Davies, Gareth Roberts and James Strong "Planet of the Dead" Nominated
Russell T Davies, Phil Ford and Graeme Harper "The Waters of Mars" Won
2011 Richard Curtis and Jonny Campbell "Vincent and the Doctor" Nominated
Steven Moffat and Toby Haynes "The Pandorica Opens"/"The Big Bang" Won
"A Christmas Carol" Nominated
2012 Neil Gaiman and Richard Clark "The Doctor's Wife" Won
Tom McRae and Nick Hurran "The Girl Who Waited" Nominated
Steven Moffat and Peter Hoar "A Good Man Goes to War" Nominated
2013 Steven Moffat and Nick Hurran "Asylum of the Daleks" Nominated
"The Angels Take Manhattan" Nominated
Steven Moffat and Saul Metzstein "The Snowmen" Nominated
2014 Steven Moffat and Saul Metzstein "The Name of the Doctor" Nominated
Steven Moffat and Nick Hurran "The Day of the Doctor" Nominated
2015 Steven Moffat and Douglas Mackinnon "Listen" Nominated
2016 Steven Moffat and Rachel Talalay "Heaven Sent" Nominated
2017 Steven Moffat and Ed Bazalgette "The Return of Doctor Mysterio" Nominated
2018 Steven Moffat and Rachel Talalay "Twice Upon a Time" Nominated
2019 Malorie Blackman and Chris Chibnall "Rosa" Nominated
Vinay Patel "Demons of the Punjab" Nominated
2020 Chris Chibnall "Resolution" Nominated
2021 Vinay Patel and Chris Chibnall "Fugitive of the Judoon" Pending

IGN Best of Television Awards[]

In 2011 Doctor Who was nominated by IGN for Best Sci-Fi/Horror Series. American Horror Story won the award.[45]

Year Category Result
2011 Best Sci-Fi/Horror Series Nominated
2012 Nominated
2013 Nominated
Best Sci-Fi/Horror Series – People's Choice Won
2014 Best Sci-Fi/Horror Series Nominated
Best Sci-Fi/Horror Series – People's Choice Won
2015 Best Sci-Fi/Horror Series Nominated
Best Sci-Fi/Horror Series – People's Choice Nominated

National Television Awards[]

The National Television Awards are the most prominent ceremony for which the results are voted on by the general public.

The revived series have been very popular: every year from 2005 to 2010, it won the Most Popular Drama Award and the actor who played The Doctor won the Best Actor Award (name variable, depending on the year), once for Eccleston and four for Tennant.[46] Three actress who played the Doctor's main companion have been nominated: Piper won Best Actress in 2005 and 2006, Agyeman was nominated for Best Actress in 2007, and Tate was nominated for Outstanding Drama Performance in 2008 but lost due to Tennant's victory on the same category.

David Tennant was very popular at the National Television Awards, winning the male acting award of the ceremony every year during his time as the Tenth Doctor (2006 to 2010, no ceremony in 2009).

2011 was the first year without win for the revival series: it was nominated once again for Most Popular Drama, and Matt Smith was nominated for Most Popular Drama Performance. When the Most Popular Drama Performance Award was split the following year, Smith won Male and Karen Gillan won Female.

2019 saw the return of Doctor Who to the shortlisted nominations list of the National Television Awards for the first time since 2016 when it was nominated for Most Popular Drama Series. Both Jodie Whittaker and the series were nominated in the shortlist.[47]

Year Category Nominee(s) Result
2005 Most Popular Drama Won
Most Popular Actor Christopher Eccleston Won
Most Popular Actress Billie Piper Won
2006 Most Popular Drama Won
Most Popular Actor David Tennant Won
Most Popular Actress Billie Piper Won
2007 Most Popular Drama Won
Most Popular Actor David Tennant Won
Most Popular Actress Freema Agyeman Nominated
2008 Most Popular Drama Won
Outstanding Drama Performance David Tennant Won
Catherine Tate Nominated
2010 Most Popular Drama Won
Most Popular Drama Performance David Tennant Won
2011 Most Popular Drama Nominated
Most Popular Drama Performance Matt Smith Nominated
2012 Most Popular Drama Nominated
Most Popular Drama Performance: Male Matt Smith Won
Most Popular Drama Performance: Female Karen Gillan Won
2013 Most Popular Drama Nominated
Outstanding Drama Performance (Male) Matt Smith Nominated
Outstanding Drama Performance (Female) Karen Gillan Nominated
2014 Most Popular Drama Won
Outstanding Drama Performance Matt Smith Won
2015 Most Popular Drama Nominated
2016 Most Popular Drama Nominated
2019 Most Popular Drama Nominated
Outstanding Drama Performance Jodie Whittaker Nominated

Nebula/Ray Bradbury Awards[]

The Nebula Awards are presented by the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America. Doctor Who received two nominations in the Best Script category, but lost it to Hayao Miyazaki's Howl's Moving Castle and Guillermo del Toro's Pan's Labyrinth respectively. In 2009 the award was replaced by the Bradbury Award in which Doctor Who was nominated in 2011 and won in 2012.

Year Category Nominee(s) Episode Result
2006 Best Script Steven Moffat "The Girl in the Fireplace" Nominated
2007 "Blink' Nominated
2011 Ray Bradbury Award for Outstanding Dramatic Presentation Richard Curtis and Jonny Campbell "Vincent and the Doctor" Nominated
2012 Neil Gaiman and Richard Clark "The Doctor's Wife" Won
2014 Nick Hurran and Steven Moffat "The Day of the Doctor" Nominated

Nickelodeon Kid's Choice Awards[]

Every year, Nickelodeon screens an awards show where, as the name depicts, kids vote for their favourites in each category. Doctor Who was nominated in 2012 and 2013 in the Best UK Show category but lost to The X Factor[48] and House of Anubis[49] respectively.

Year Category Result
2012 Best UK TV Show Nominated
2013 Nominated

Peabody Award[]

In 2013, BBC Wales was awarded an Institutional Peabody Award for Doctor Who. The award is granted for "excellence in its own terms" to television, radio and electronic media. The award's website praised Doctor Who as follows: "Seemingly immortal, 50-years-old and still running, this engaging, imaginative sci-fi/fantasy series is awarded an Institutional Peabody for evolving with technology and the times like nothing else in the known television universe."[50]

People's Choice Awards[]

In 2008 the show received a nomination for the People's Choice Awards, where results are voted online by general public. Doctor Who was nominated for Favorite Sci Fi/Fantasy Show in 2005 but lost in to Stargate Atlantis.[51] The PCA nomination marked the first time a mainstream popular, non-niche American award had recognized the series.

Year Category Result
2008 Favorite Sci Fi/Fantasy Show Nominated
2012 Favorite Sci Fi/Fantasy Show Nominated
2014 Favorite Sci Fi/Fantasy Show Nominated
2018[52] The Sci-Fi/Fantasy Show of 2018 Nominated

PinkNews Awards[]

Year Category Result
2017 Ally Award for LGBT inclusiveness Won

Rockie Awards[]

The Rockie Awards are presented by the Banff World Media Festival, a Canadian event, ever since at least 2016.

Year Category Result
2019 Best Scifi and Genre-based series Won

RTS Television Awards[]

The Royal Television Society's annual awards are decided by balanced juries of media professionals, with separate juries for individual categories within each of the six groups of Awards. The group of awards for which Doctor Who was nominated were the Television Awards.

In 1974, the RTS Television Awards gave to Doctor Who the first award in its history. Its only other victory was on 2008, 34 years later. The series was nominated three times for Best Drama Series,[53] but never won.

Year Category Nominee(s) Episode Result
1974 Best Graphics Bernard Lodge Won
2005 Best Costume Design – Drama Lucinda Wright Nominated
Best Make Up Design – Drama Davy Jones and Neill Gorton Nominated
2006 Best Drama Series Nominated
Best Production Design Edward Thomas Nominated
Best Costume Design – Drama Louise Page Nominated
Best Make Up Design – Drama Sheelagh Wells and Neill Gorton Nominated
Best Visual Effects – Digital Effects The Mill Nominated
2008 Best Drama Series Nominated
Best Actor – Male David Tennant (also for Recovery) Nominated
Best Sound – Drama Julian Howarth, ​Tim Ricketts, ​Paul McFadden ​and Paul Jefferies "Midnight" Won
2010 Best Production Design – Drama Edward Thomas "The Pandorica Opens" Nominated
2011 Best Writer – Drama Steven Moffat Series 6 Nominated
Lifetime Achievement Award Beryl Vertue Won
2016 Best Effects – Special Real SFX & Millennium FX Series 9 Nominated

Satellite Awards[]

Satellite Awards are presented by the International Press Academy. David Tennant received a nomination in 2008,[54] while the series and Jodie Whittaker were nominated for two categories in 2018.[55]

Year Category Nominee(s) Result
2008 Best Actor – Television Series Drama David Tennant Nominated
2018 Best Television Series, Genre Nominated
Best Actress in a Series, Drama/Genre Jodie Whittaker

Saturn Awards[]

The Saturn Awards, annually presented Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films since 1972, are the second oldest awards to honor science fiction, fantasy and horror (after the Hugo Awards). However it only began to reward series in 1989, after Doctor Who's original run. The series has been nominated for 20 awards between 2007 and 2019, winning the only Best International Series Award (defeating its spin-off Torchwood) in 2008 and Best Television Presentation for the Christmas special "The Husbands of River Song" in 2016.

Paul McGann's Saturn Award nomination for playing the Eighth Doctor in the 1996 film made him the first actor in history to be nominated for an award for playing the Doctor.

The 1996 Doctor Who television movie won Best Television Presentation, one of the only four awards received by the franchise prior to its revival in 2005. McGann was nominated for Best Actor.

Year Category Nominee(s) Result
1996 Best Single Genre Television Presentation Doctor Who (1996 film) Won
Best Actor on Television Paul McGann Nominated
2007 Best Syndicated/Cable Television Series Nominated
Best Television DVD Release Doctor Who: The Complete Second Series Nominated
2008 Best International Series Won
2010 Best Television Presentation "The End of Time" Nominated
Best Actor on Television David Tennant Nominated
Best Guest Starring Role in Television Bernard Cribbins Nominated
2011 Best Television Presentation Nominated
2012 Best Youth-Oriented Television Series Nominated
2013 Best Youth-Oriented Television Series Nominated
2015 Best Youth-Oriented Television Series Nominated
Best Supporting Actress on Television Jenna Coleman Nominated
2016 Best Science Fiction Television Series Nominated
Best Television Presentation "The Husbands of River Song" Won
Best Guest Starring Role on Television Alex Kingston Nominated
2017 Best Television Presentation "The Return of Doctor Mysterio" Nominated
2018 Best Science Fiction Television Series Nominated
Best Television Presentation "Twice Upon a Time" Nominated
2019 Best Science Fiction Television Series Nominated
Best Actress on a Television Series Jodie Whittaker Nominated
Best Performance by a Younger Actor on a Television Series Tosin Cole Nominated
2020 Best Science Fiction Television Series Pending

Scream Awards[]

The Scream Awards are dedicated to the horror, sci-fi, and fantasy genres of feature films and series. Winners are elected by fans among pre-selectioned nominees via online.

Matt Smith (Eleventh Doctor) won the Scream Award for Best Actor in 2011.
Year Category Nominee(s) Result
2006 Best TV Show Nominated
2007 Best TV Show Nominated
2008 Best Science Fiction Actor David Tennant Nominated
2010 Best TV Show Nominated
2011 Best TV Show Nominated
Best Science Fiction Actress Karen Gillan Nominated
Best Science Fiction Actor Matt Smith Won

Scribe Awards[]

Year Category Nominee(s) Result Ref.
2012 Best Audio Doctor Who: The Many Deaths of Jo Grant Nominated [56]
2013 Doctor Who: Project: Nirvana Nominated
2015 Doctor Who: Iterations of I Won
2016 Doctor Who: The Red Lady Won
Doctor Who: Damaged Goods Nominated
2017 Doctor Who: The Mouthless Dead Nominated
2018 Doctor Who: Across the Darkened City Nominated
Doctor Who: Cold Vengeance Nominated
2019 Doctor Who: The Calendar Man Won
Doctor Who: The Invention of Death Nominated
The War Master: The Master of Callous Nominated
2020 Doctor Who: The Creeping Death Won
Doctor Who: Daybreak Nominated
The Diary of River Song: Concealed Weapon Nominated
2021 Doctor Who: Out of Time Won
Doctor Who: The Enemy of My Enemy Nominated
Doctor Who: He Kills Me, He Kills Me Not Nominated

Seoul International Drama Awards[]

In 2009, the Seoul International Drama Award from South Korea honoured Doctor Who with the Award for Most Popular Foreign Drama of Year.[57]

Year Category Result
2009 Most Popular Foreign Drama of the Year Won

SFX Awards[]

At the SFX Awards, presented by the eponymous science fiction/fantasy magazine, Doctor Who won every category it was nominated for from 2005 to 2008 included. Currently, every actor nominated for an award won it (except Tennant, who lost Best Actor to Smith in 2011). The series won four times Best TV Show, three Best TV Episode (with eight nominations overall), five Best Actor and four Best Actress. It receives a triple nomination for Best TV Episode in 2007, a double nomination in the same category in 2010, and a double nomination for Best TV Actor in 2011. The 2012 shortlist includes Best TV Show, Best TV Actor for Smith, and Best TV Actress for Karen Gillan, Alex Kingston and Suranne Jones.

In 2005, the series came first in a survey by SFX magazine of "The Greatest UK Science Fiction and Fantasy Television Series Ever".

Year Category Nominee(s) Episode Result
2005 Best TV Show Won
Best TV Episode Joe Ahearne and Russell T Davies "The Parting of the Ways" Won
Best TV Actor Christopher Eccleston Won
Best TV Actress Billie Piper Won
2007 Best TV Show Won
Best TV Episode Euros Lyn and Steven Moffat "The Girl in the Fireplace" Won
James Strong and Matt Jones "The Impossible Planet"/"The Satan Pit" Nominated
Graeme Harper and Russell T Davies "Army of Ghosts"/"Doomsday" Nominated
Best TV Actor David Tennant Won
Best TV Actress Billie Piper Won
2008 Best TV Show Won
Best TV Episode Graeme Harper and Russell T Davies "The Stolen Earth"/"Journey's End" Won
Best TV Actor David Tennant Won
Best TV Actress Catherine Tate Won
2010 Best TV Show Nominated
Best TV Episode Russell T Davies and Andy Goddard "The Next Doctor" Nominated
Russell T Davies, James Strong and Gareth Roberts "Planet of the Dead" Nominated
Best TV Actor David Tennant Won
2011 Best TV Show Steven Moffat Won
Best TV Episode Jonny Campbell and Richard Curtis "Vincent and the Doctor" Nominated
Best TV Actor David Tennant Nominated
Matt Smith Won
Best TV Actress Karen Gillan Won
2012[58] Best Actor Matt Smith Won
Best Actress Karen Gillan Nominated
Alex Kingston Won
Screenwriting Excellence Neil Gaiman "The Doctor's Wife" Won

Sunday Herald Culture Awards[]

Year Category Nominee(s) Episode Result
2018 Best Actor – Television Peter Capaldi "Twice Upon a Time" Won

TV Quick Awards[]

The TV Quick Awards (or TV Choice Awards) are awarded every year by the British magazine TV Choice.

Catherine Tate (Donna Noble) won a TV Quick Award for Best Actress in 2008, her only year as a regular in the series.
Matt Smith (Eleventh Doctor) and Karen Gillan (Amy Pond) were both nominated for TV Quick Awards in 2010 and 2011.

Doctor Who won Best Loved Drama, later changed to Best Family Drama, every time since 2005. The actor who played the Doctor and the actress who played his main companion during a series was nominated every year since 2005: Best Actor had been won one time by Eccleston and three times by Tennant, and Best Actress had been won once by Piper, once by Tate and once by Gillan.

Year Category Nominee(s) Result
2005 Best Actor Christopher Eccleston Won
2006 Best Loved Drama Russell T Davies, Phil Collinson and Julie Gardner
(double win)
Won
Won
Best Actor David Tennant Won
Best Actress Billie Piper Won
2007 Best Loved Drama Won
Best Actor David Tennant Won
Best Actress Freema Agyeman Nominated
2008 Best Loved Drama Won
Best Actor David Tennant Won
Best Actress Catherine Tate Won
2010 Best Family Drama Steven Moffat Won
Best Actor Matt Smith Nominated
Best Actress Karen Gillan Nominated
2011 Best Family Drama Steven Moffat Won
Best Actor Matt Smith Nominated
Best Actress Karen Gillan Won
2012 Best Family Drama Won
Best Actor Matt Smith Nominated
Best Actress Karen Gillan Nominated
2013 Best Drama Series Won
Best Actor Matt Smith Nominated
Best Actress Jenna Coleman Nominated
Outstanding Contribution Award Won
2015 Best Family Drama Nominated
Best Actor Peter Capaldi Nominated
Best Actress Jenna Coleman Nominated
2016 Best Family Drama Nominated
Best Actor Peter Capaldi Nominated
2019 Best Family Drama Nominated
Best Actress Jodie Whittaker Nominated
2020 Best Family Drama Nominated

TV Times Awards[]

Year Category Nominee(s) Result
2017 Favourite Newcomer Pearl Mackie Nominated

TRIC Awards[]

The TRIC Awards are annually presented by the Television and Radio Industries Club.

Year Category Nominee(s) Result
2006 New TV Talent (also for ShakespeaRe-Told) Billie Piper Won
2007 TV Drama Programme Russell T Davies, Phil Collinson and Julie Gardner Nominated
2008 Russell T Davies Nominated
2010 Won
2014 HD Drama Programme of the Year Won

VES Awards[]

At the Visual Effects Society Awards, Doctor Who won one award out of six.

Year Category Nominee(s) Episode Result
2007 Outstanding Animated Character in a Live Action Broadcast Program, Commercial or Music Video Nicolas Hernandez, ​Jean-Claude Deguara, ​Neil Roche and ​Jean-Yves Audouard
(for the werewolf)
"Tooth and Claw" Nominated
2008 Outstanding Visual Effects in a Broadcast Miniseries, Movie or Special David Houghton, ​Will Cohen, ​Nicolas Hernandez ​and Sara Bennett "Voyage of the Damned" Nominated
Outstanding Visual Effects in a Broadcast Series David Houghton, ​Will Cohen, ​Jean-Claude Deguara ​and Nicolas Hernandez "Last of the Time Lords" Nominated
Outstanding Animated Character in a Live Action Broadcast Program or Commercial Nicolas Hernandez, ​Adam Burnett, ​Neil Roche and ​Jean-Claude Deguara
(for the 900-year-old Doctor)
Nominated
2009 Outstanding Visual Effects in a Broadcast Miniseries, Movie or Special Dave Houghton, ​Marie Jones, ​Matthew McKinney, ​Murray Barber "The Next Doctor" Nominated
Outstanding Matte Paintings in a Broadcast Program or Commercial Simon Wicker, ​Charlie Bennett, ​Tim Barter, ​Arianna Lago "Silence in the Library" Won

Visionary Arts Organisation Award[]

Malorie Blackman, a first time writer for the show, co-wrote Rosa with Chris Chibnall

The episode Rosa won the Visionary Arts Organisation Award for Television Show of the Year at the BAFTA in London.[59][60]

Year Category Nominee(s) Episode Result
2019 Television Show of the Year Malorie Blackman, Chris Chibnall Rosa Won

Writers' Guild of Great Britain[]

Every year the Writers' Guild of Great Britain honours the best writing. The series have been nominated five time: one in 1975, and four times for the revived series. Steven Moffat have been nominated three times overall, winning one.

Year Category Nominee(s) Result
1975 Best Children's Drama Script Robert Holmes, Malcolm Hulke, Terry Nation, Brian Hayles and Robert Sloman Won
2007 Best Soap/Series Chris Chibnall, Paul Cornell, Russell T Davies, Stephen Greenhorn, Steven Moffat, Helen Raynor and Gareth Roberts Won
2009 Best Television Drama Series Gareth Roberts, Russell T Davies and Phil Ford Nominated
2010 Simon Nye, Chris Chibnall, Mark Gatiss, Toby Whithouse and Steven Moffat Nominated
2011 Stephen Thompson, Steven Moffat, Gareth Roberts, Richard Curtis, Neil Gaiman and Matthew Graham Nominated

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