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Jujutsu Kaisen Watch Order: Where Jujutsu Kaisen 0 Fits

The exact sequence to follow, the canon movie you can't skip, and the recap specials you can.

The exact sequence to follow, the canon movie you can’t skip, and the recap specials you can.

Before you jump back into Jujutsu Kaisen 0, the one thing worth knowing is where it actually sits in the timeline. The 2021 MAPPA film is a prequel built around Yuta Okkotsu, and it slots into the main anime in a very specific spot. Watch it in the wrong order and you’ll either spoil character beats or miss setup that pays off later.

Quick answer: Watch Jujutsu Kaisen Season 1 (episodes 1–24), then Jujutsu Kaisen 0, then Season 2 (episodes 25–47), then Season 3 (the Culling Game arc). That is the standard release order and the easiest path for first-time and returning viewers alike.


Jujutsu Kaisen 0 release order placement

Release order is the cleanest way to watch everything. Season 1 lays the groundwork with Yuji Itadori and the world of curses, the movie acts as a self-contained prequel, and the later seasons build on both. Jujutsu Kaisen 0 was released in Japan on December 24, 2021, and reached US theaters in March 2022, grossing roughly $191 million worldwide.

OrderTitle
1Jujutsu Kaisen Season 1 (24 episodes)
2Jujutsu Kaisen 0 (film)
3Jujutsu Kaisen Season 2 (23 episodes)
4Jujutsu Kaisen Season 3, Culling Game (12 episodes)

Season 3, which adapts the Culling Game, ran from January to March 2026. A continuation titled Culling Game Part 2 is planned to follow. No firm new air window is confirmed for that continuation right now, so treat any date you see floating around with caution.


Chronological order (optional)

If you prefer to follow the story by in-universe timeline, the order shifts slightly. The movie takes place about a year before the main story, and Season 2’s opening Hidden Inventory arc is set even earlier. This route is interesting but not necessary for a first watch.

OrderTitle
1Season 2, episodes 1–5 (Hidden Inventory/Premature Death)
2Jujutsu Kaisen 0
3Season 1 (full)
4Season 2, episodes 6–23 (Shibuya Incident)
5Season 3 (Culling Game)

Why Jujutsu Kaisen 0 is not skippable

The film is fully canon. It introduces Yuta Okkotsu, a student haunted by the cursed spirit of his childhood friend Rika Orimoto, and it sets up his arc across the rest of the series. Season 2 directly references the movie’s outcome, so skipping it leaves a real gap.

The movie also expands on material the manga only sketched. It adds Yuta and Rika’s first meeting at a hospital, gives Suguru Geto more screen time, and stages bigger fight sequences. Nanami’s four consecutive Black Flashes and an extended Gojo versus Miguel battle both appear here, plus a post-credits scene that doesn’t exist in the manga.

Note: The Hidden Inventory/Premature Death arc in Season 2 sometimes gets mislabeled as filler because it centers on Gojo and Geto’s past rather than Yuji. It is essential viewing, and it connects directly to the emotional stakes of the Shibuya Incident.


What you can safely skip

Jujutsu Kaisen has no traditional filler. Nearly every episode adapts the manga and moves the plot forward. The only thing you can drop without missing a beat are recap specials and compilation films, which simply repackage footage you’ve already seen.

Skippable contentWhat it covers
First recap specialReviews Gojo and Geto’s past after Season 2’s fifth episode, touching on JJK 0
Second recap specialSummarizes all of Season 1 for returning viewers
Hidden Inventory compilation filmCondenses episodes you’ve already watched
Jujutsu Kaisen: ExecutionRecaps the Shibuya arc plus the first two Season 3 episodes

If any of these show up in your streaming queue, jump past them. Binge-watching back to back, they offer no new scenes.


Where the anime ends if you want the manga

The anime currently adapts the story up through the Culling Game. After Season 3’s early episodes, the events line up with around chapter 164 of the manga. To pick up where the show leaves off, start from the latter half of chapter 164 so you don’t skip transitional material.

Because the adaptation stays so faithful to Gege Akutami’s source, moving from screen to page is smooth. The manga runs to the full conclusion of Jujutsu Kaisen and continues into a sequel titled Jujutsu Kaisen Modulo. For a clean rewatch, the short version stays the same: take Season 1, then Jujutsu Kaisen 0, then everything after, and leave the recaps in the queue untouched.