One Piece Filler Guide: A List Of Every Episode You Can Skip

One Piece is one of the longest mainline anime running today, having aired 1166 episodes and counting. Its primary characters have grown tremendously in that time, with its audience feeling that even more. Children have grown up watching the series, introducing family, friends, and even children of their own to the adventures of Monkey D. Luffy and the Straw Hats. But, much like many popular, long-running anime released in 1999 or its surrounding years, One Piece had to produce non-canon filler episodes or pad its content to give its creator, Eiichiro Oda, space to stay ahead on the manga. The surprising bit is, One Piece is hardly the worst offender.

Weigh these against the other Shonen Big Three anime, such as Naruto: Shippuden’s 41% problem, suddenly, only 8% of One Piece being considered filler suddenly doesn’t feel too bad. Plus, these other shows have since seen the light: Bleach: Thousand-Year Blood War is sharper than ever thanks to focusing on a glorious finale, and there’s plenty of hope for Boruto’s next anime to follow suit. What’s interesting is that, following One Piece’s momentous shifting to the seasonal model in 2026 for the Elbaph Arc, its filler has stopped dead in its tracks, with the ratio of non-canon to canon episodes thus gradually shifting.

Every Filler Episode Of One Piece

Episode #

Episode/Arc Title

54 – 60

Warship Island Arc

98 – 99

Enter the Desert Pirates! The Men Who Live Freely!; False Fortitude! Camu, Rebel Soldier at Heart!

102

Ruins and Lost Ways! Vivi, Her Friends and the Country’s Form!

131 – 135

Post-Alabasta Arc

136 – 138

Goat Island Arc

139 – 143

Ruluka Island Arc

196 – 206

G-8 Arc

220 – 224

Ocean’s Dream Arc

225–226

Foxy’s Return Arc

279 – 283

Mid-Enies Lobby Flashback Mini Arc

291 – 292

Boss Luffy Returns! Is It a Dream or Reality? Lottery Ruckus!; A Big Rice Cake Tossing Race at the Castle! Red Nose’s Plot!

303

Boss Luffy Is the Culprit? Track Down the Missing Great Cherry Tree!

317 – 319

Mid Post-Enies Lobby Side Stories

326 – 336

Ice Hunter Arc

382 – 384

Spa Island Arc

406 – 407

Special Historical Arc

426 – 429

Little East Blue Arc

457 – 458

A Special Retrospective Before Marineford

492

The Strongest Tag-Team! Luffy and Toriko’s Hard Struggle!

542

A Team Is Formed! Save Chopper

575 – 578

Z’s Ambition Arc

590

History’s Strongest Collaboration vs. Glutton of the Sea

626 – 628

Caesar Retrieval Arc

747 – 750

Silver Mine Arc

780 – 782

Marine Rookie Arc

895 – 896

Cidre Guild Arc

907

20th Anniversary Special! Romance Dawn

1029–1030

One Piece Film Red Tie-in Mini Arc

1084

Time to Depart – The Land of Wano and the Straw Hats

Overall, only 97 of One Piece’s 1157 numbered episodes are filler, making only 8% of the series filler. While that might seem a tad high, that’s nothing compared to other big anime from the same time period. 45% of Bleach is filler, while 13% of Dragon Ball Z is filler.

One Piece’s low filler percentage is likely due to Toei Animation introducing smaller filler scenes in canon episodes, meaning they can stretch the material out a bit more than other series. Now, however, it looks like One Piece’s move to a seasonal release schedule could mean that filler episodes are a thing of the past for the anime adaptation of Eiichiro Oda’s beloved manga.

One Piece Filler Episodes That Are A Secret Treasure

Screenshot from One Piece anime shows Luffy standing behind a marine while Luffy looks that the frame with two peace signs up.

One particular filler arc after Skypiea exceeded all expectations. Episodes 196–208 feature an arc where the Straw Hats land the damaged Going Merry in the middle of the impenetrable G-8 Marine base. The ship is captured, and many of the Straw Hats go undercover as Marines to find a means of escape.

Best One Piece Arcs

Every One Piece Arc Ranked From Forgettable To Masterpiece

One Piece is one of the most iconic, beloved, and long-running anime and manga ever. In all of its history, what are the best arcs in the story?

The G-8 filler arc is filled with moments for each member of the Straw Hats to shine, including Sanji’s infectious cooking, Robin’s infiltration skills, Usopp’s lying, and Luffy’s lack of subtlety, creating some of the biggest laughs of the series while telling a compelling story of cat and mouse as the Straw Hat’s avoid total capture.

More Than A Few Of One Piece’s Filler Arcs Are Rough Sailing

The Straw Hats hover in the air in One Piece
The Straw Hats hover in the air in One Piece

Though One Piece undoubtedly has some strong filler arcs and episodes, there are more than a few that just don’t hold up. The Warship Island arc, for example, has the typical hallmarks of a filler arc through things like bad art and an uninteresting story, and it also ruined the pacing by pushing back the Straw Hats’ entrance to the Grand Line.

The Warship Island arc is also infamous for how it goes against One Piece canon by introducing a dragon, as when dragons would be referenced years later, everyone would remark on how they thought dragons were only myths.

Most filler arcs in One Piece don’t fare much better than that. For example, the Silver Mine and Cidre Guild arcs both disrupt canon for mindless action and stories that don’t add anything to the overall narrative, and the Cidre Guild arc is especially infamous for that because of how it comes at the beginning of the Wano arc.




















The Ultimate · Straw Hat Challenge
Set Sail for Trivia
“I’m gonna be King of the Pirates!”

CrewNakama!

SeasEast Blue

Devil FruitsGomu Gomu!

VillainsFear the sea

DreamsOne Piece!

01

Monkey D. Luffy accidentally ate a Devil Fruit as a child, giving him rubber-like abilities. What is the name of that fruit?




✓ Correct! The Gum-Gum Fruit (Gomu Gomu no Mi) turned Luffy’s body into rubber. He ate it from Shanks’ treasure chest as a kid, gaining stretchy powers but losing the ability to swim forever.

✗ Overboard! The answer is the Gum-Gum Fruit. The Chop-Chop Fruit belongs to Buggy, the Flame-Flame Fruit to Ace, and the Smoke-Smoke Fruit to Captain Smoker — but Luffy’s rubber powers come from the Gomu Gomu no Mi.

02

Luffy’s iconic straw hat was given to him as a child by a famous pirate who inspired his dream. Who gave Luffy the hat?




✓ Correct! Red-Haired Shanks entrusted his straw hat to young Luffy in Foosha Village, telling him to return it when he becomes a great pirate. That promise drives Luffy’s entire journey.

✗ Overboard! The answer is Red-Haired Shanks. While Gold Roger originally wore the hat, it was Shanks who passed it down to Luffy after saving his life from a Sea King — a defining moment in the series.

03

Before joining the Straw Hats, Sanji works as a sous chef at a floating restaurant on the ocean. What is the name of this restaurant?




✓ Correct! The Baratie is the ocean-going restaurant run by Chef Zeff, Sanji’s mentor. In the live-action series, it’s one of the most stunning sets — a fully realized ship-restaurant on the open sea.

✗ Overboard! The answer is The Baratie. Run by the legendary pirate-turned-chef “Red Leg” Zeff, this floating restaurant is where Luffy recruits Sanji as the Straw Hats’ cook.

04

Roronoa Zoro is famous for his unique sword-fighting technique. How many swords does he wield in his signature style?




✓ Correct! Zoro uses Three-Sword Style (Santoryu), wielding one sword in each hand and a third in his mouth. His dream is to become the world’s greatest swordsman by defeating Dracule Mihawk.

✗ Overboard! The answer is three. Zoro’s iconic Three-Sword Style places one blade in each hand and a third clenched between his teeth — a fighting technique unique to him in the One Piece world.

05

Each Straw Hat crew member has a personal dream. What is Nami’s ultimate goal that drives her journey?




✓ Correct! Nami’s dream is to draw a map of the entire world. Her cartography skills and navigation talent make her indispensable to the crew, and her passion for mapmaking was nurtured by her adoptive mother Bell-mère.

✗ Overboard! The answer is to draw a complete map of the world. Nami is a gifted cartographer whose dream goes beyond just sailing — she wants to chart every sea and island so no one is ever lost again.

06

A powerful Marine Vice Admiral is revealed to have a surprising family connection to Luffy. Who is this high-ranking Marine?




✓ Correct! Vice Admiral Monkey D. Garp is Luffy’s grandfather. Known as “Garp the Fist,” he’s a Marine hero who wanted Luffy to become a Marine — not a pirate. Their family dynamic is a major subplot in the live-action series.

✗ Overboard! The answer is Vice Admiral Garp. Monkey D. Garp is Luffy’s grandfather and one of the most legendary Marines alive. Despite being on opposite sides of the law, their bond runs deep.

07

Usopp is recruited into the Straw Hat crew after the pirates help defend his home village from Captain Kuro’s Black Cat Pirates. What is the name of Usopp’s village?




✓ Correct! Syrup Village is Usopp’s peaceful hometown where he was known for telling tall tales. It’s also where Kaya lives, and where the crew acquires the Going Merry from her estate.

✗ Overboard! The answer is Syrup Village. Foosha Village is Luffy’s hometown, Shells Town is where Zoro was held captive, and Coco Village (Cocoyasi) is Nami’s home — but Usopp hails from Syrup Village.

08

The Netflix live-action adaptation was praised for its casting. Which actor plays Monkey D. Luffy?




✓ Correct! Mexican actor Iñaki Godoy won fans over with his infectious energy and earnest portrayal of Luffy. Mackenyu plays Zoro, Taz Skylar is Sanji, and Jacob Romero Gibson plays Usopp.

✗ Overboard! The answer is Iñaki Godoy. The young Mexican actor perfectly captured Luffy’s boundless enthusiasm. The other actors all play Straw Hat crew members — but Luffy is all Iñaki.

Voyage Complete
Your Pirate Record

/ 8

Are you King of the Pirates — or lost at sea?

Even more infamous are the Spa Island and Foxy’s Return arcs. Both the Spa Island and Foxy’s Return arcs are infamous for bringing back the incredibly divisive Foxy and doubling down on everything people hated about him, only making him less popular with fans and further fueling the misinterpretation that Foxy isn’t canon to One Piece.

One Piece’s Filler Alternatives Hit A New Low In 2025

One Piece Chopper's Checkup

While filler episodes can be potentially enjoyable, One Piece fans have a harder time giving recap episodes a pass, and things became more frustrating in 2025 with five recap episodes frequently breaking the 33-episode batch’s momentum. Lovable as the Straw Hats’ crew doctor is, people got rather sick of Dr. Chopper’s Adventure Checkups. It was clearly needed to free up time and resources for the animators, especially with the first recap preceding the incredible beginning to the Kuma flashback. But it also begged the question of why they bothered, serving as a stronger illustration of the seasonal model giving the most organic fix for this problem.

Fans won’t miss this last breath of One Piece filler content, with the anime instead focusing on moving forward. It’s in the final saga, and judging from the discourse surrounding every episode, fans rarely need a full recap of the previous week’s events. But as the lore drops of future Elbaph Arc episodes will undoubtedly send viewers’ heads spinning, it’ll be interesting to see whether the anime slows its pacing in the moments ahead to let audiences process what they see. After all, Elbaph is strongly tied to multiple key players in One Piece’s massive story, and crucially, the first true battleground of its greatest heroes and villains.

One Piece Is All Killer, No Filler In 2026

The full reveal of Elbaph in the anime
One-Piece-Episode-1162-Elbaph-Reveal

Despite reasonable nostalgia over some genuinely entertaining original episodes, One Piece’s anime has made a triumphant return in 2026, bringing with it all the incredible adventures and discoveries fans have come to love, minus the filler. The Elbaph Arc has been going great, giving just enough space for positively tantalizing moments of mystery, in exchange for 26-episode seasons. It’s bittersweet that fans will no longer have the weekly promise of new episodes ad infinitum, but the results speak for themselves: it’s sustainably well-animated, and focuses intently on telling Oda’s story.

One Piece is in no danger of ending too soon in the anime, though. Between gearing up for One Piece: Heroines’ adaptation, more of the live-action series, and even a newly-recreated East Blue Saga coming from WIT Studio, every project running lately is focused on their source material and not overstaying their welcomes, not that there’s any danger on that front. One Piece fans will look back fondly on some filler episodes, and those will always be available for a rewatch. But from here on out, it seems it’s smooth sailing for the Straw Hats.


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Release Date

October 20, 1999

Network

Fuji TV

Directors

Hiroaki Miyamoto, Konosuke Uda, Junji Shimizu, Satoshi Itō, Munehisa Sakai, Katsumi Tokoro, Yutaka Nakajima, Yoshihiro Ueda, Kenichi Takeshita, Yoko Ikeda, Ryota Nakamura, Hiroyuki Kakudou, Takahiro Imamura, Toshihiro Maeya, Yûji Endô, Nozomu Shishido, Hidehiko Kadota, Sumio Watanabe, Harume Kosaka, Yasuhiro Tanabe, Yukihiko Nakao, Keisuke Onishi, Junichi Fujise, Hiroyuki Satou

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Mayumi Tanaka

    Monkey D. Luffy (voice)

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Kazuya Nakai

    Roronoa Zoro (voice)


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