
Some stories just know how to get you. A wedding dress being zipped up. A hospital waiting room. A daughter leaving for college with a mom pretending she’s fine. One minute you’re watching strangers, and the next you’re texting your mom at 11 pm on a Tuesday for no reason you can explain.
Best Mother-Daughter Relationships on TV
These 14 movies and shows will do exactly that. Some through relationships you recognize immediately—the best-friend mom, the complicated one, the one where nobody says what they actually mean. Others through the ones you didn’t know you needed until you did.
Donna and Sophie, Mamma Mia!
Donna and Sophie are less mother and daughter than they are each other’s whole world—and the movie never lets you forget it. The scene where Donna helps Sophie into her wedding dress is the one that gets you, every time, without fail. Technically, Mamma Mia! is a movie about fathers, but it’s really about what it looks like when a mom raises a daughter entirely on her own and somehow, impossibly, gets it right.
Rory and Lorelai, Gilmore Girls
Lorelai and Rory are the gold standard of the best-friend mom—fast-talking, coffee-dependent, and completely co-dependent in a way that somehow (almost) never feels unhealthy. The show spans years of their lives and manages to make every stage feel true: the teenage friction, the college distance, the slow realization that your mom was right about more than you wanted to admit.
Anna and Tess, Freaky Friday
Anna and Tess can’t stand each other—until they’re forced to live inside each other’s lives for a day, at which point they realize they’re not so different after all. It’s a comedy first, but the moment it stops being funny is the moment it lands. The switch is more than a plot device. It’s the most literal version of the thing every mother and daughter eventually has to reckon with: you have no idea what it’s like to be her.
Daphne, Maggie, Mae, and Milly, Because I Said So
Daphne meddles in her youngest daughter’s love life with the kind of specific, targeted overinvolvement that will make you laugh until you recognize it. The movie is light, but it earns its place on this list for one reason: it’s the most honest depiction of a mom who loves her daughter so completely that she hasn’t yet figured out how to let her be a person. Every daughter has felt that. Most of them have also, eventually, understood it.
Xo and Jane, Jane the Virgin
Jane and Xo are only 16 years apart, which means they grew up together as much as they raised each other—and the show knows exactly what to do with that. What makes it unusual is the third layer: Xo’s mother, Alba, whose presence turns every mother-daughter dynamic in the show into a negotiation across three generations. You watch it and start doing the math on your own family without meaning to.
Tami and Julie, Friday Night Lights
Tami Taylor is the kind of mother who makes you want to be a better person—principled, warm, and completely uninterested in being liked when being right matters more. Her relationship with Julie is the most realistic depiction of a good mom and a difficult daughter on this list. Julie is frustrating in the way that only daughters who have everything they need can be, and Tami loves her anyway, without making it a thing. That’s the part that gets you.
Marmee, Jo, Amy, Meg, and Beth, Little Women
March doesn’t dominate this story—her daughters do—but remove her and the whole thing collapses. She leads by example so quietly that you don’t notice it until you’re already shaped by it, which is either the most effective parenting or the most devastating thing about growing up, depending on the day. Greta Gerwig’s 2019 adaptation earns every one of its tears.
Rebecca and Kate, This Is Us
Rebecca and Kate’s relationship is hard to watch because it’s hard to look away from—loving and loaded in equal measure, spanning decades in a way that makes both of them impossible to reduce to a single version of themselves. The show gives you Rebecca as a young mother, a middle-aged mother, and an aging one, and the accumulation of all three is what breaks you. You’ll finish an episode convinced you need to call your mom immediately and also that you need a minute alone first.
Lady Bird and Marion, Lady Bird
Christine (she insists on Lady Bird) wants out of Sacramento, out of her mother’s house, and out of every expectation Marion has placed on her, and the movie never once suggests she’s wrong for that. What it does instead is show you Marion’s side with equal generosity, which is the thing that makes this film devastating rather than just good. The last three minutes will rearrange something in you.
Mia and Pearl, Elena, Izzy, and Lexi, Little Fires Everywhere
Mia and Pearl are a team in the way that single mothers and only daughters sometimes are—insular, loyal, and completely unprepared for what happens when the outside world gets in. Elena and her daughters are the counterpoint: a mother who loves her children inside a blueprint they never agreed to. The show puts these two versions of motherhood in direct collision and doesn’t let either of them off the hook. It’s uncomfortable in the best way.
Kate and Marah, Tully and Cloud, Firefly Lane
This one works on two tracks simultaneously: Kate’s fraught, tender relationship with her daughter, and Tully’s lifelong reckoning with a mother who was never quite able to show up. One shows you what it looks like when love is present, but communication breaks down. The other shows you a mother who was never going to show up. Together, they make the case that whatever your relationship with your mother looks like, you’re probably not as alone in it as you think.
Jackie, Isabel, and Anna, Stepmom
Jackie is dying and she knows it, which means she spends the film doing the most selfless thing a mother can do: preparing someone else to love her children after she’s gone. It’s a movie about rivalry that becomes a movie about sacrifice without you noticing the shift. The scene where she tells her daughter the things she’ll miss is the one that finishes you.
Aurora and Emma, Terms of Endearment
Aurora and Emma spend the first half of this film driving each other insane, and the second half proving that none of it mattered. It covers 30 years of a mother-daughter relationship and gets every stage right—the desperation to escape, the slow return, and the moment you realize your mother is the only person who has ever really known you. It is not an easy watch, but it’s fully worth it.
M’lynn and Shelby, Steel Magnolias
Everything on this list has been building to this one. M’Lynn and Shelby have a love that exists at full volume—present for every moment, every decision, every consequence—which makes what happens to them impossible to prepare for, no matter how many times you’ve seen it. The cemetery scene is one of the greatest pieces of acting ever committed to film, and it will leave you wrecked in a way that somehow still feels like a gift. Watch it with your mom if you can.
This post was last updated on May 29, 2026, to include new insights.






