It’s the Fairy Tail 20th Anniversary, and it’s one of those milestones that feels personal for a lot of fans. What started back in 2006 as a loud, messy, friendship-first fantasy series has grown into something that stuck around far longer than anyone expected, and not just because of magic or fights.
Creator Hiro Mashima marked the anniversary with a simple but heartfelt message, thanking fans for supporting the series all this time and teasing that “lots of things are planned this year.” No details yet, just a promise that 2026 is going to be busy for Fairy Tail fans.
From One Guild to a Global Phenomenon
Fairy Tail debuted on August 2, 2006, and ran for 11 years, wrapping up in July 2017. Over that time, it grew into a massive fantasy world centered on one chaotic guild and the people who call it home. And now to get nostalgic, it’s the Fairy Tail 20th Anniversary.
By the end of its original run:
- 63 manga volumes were released
- Over 72 million copies were sold and printed worldwide
- The series became a long-running fixture of modern shonen manga
But the numbers only tell part of the story.
What really made Fairy Tail stick was how openly it wore its heart. This was a series that believed in chosen family, in sticking together even when things got ugly, and in fighting for your people no matter the odds.
Fairy Tail 20th Anniversary: Characters That Never Really Left
Natsu, Lucy, Gray, Erza, and the rest of the guild didn’t just finish their story and disappear. They stayed with readers long after the final chapter.

That’s why the sequel series, FAIRY TAIL: 100 Years Quest, which began in 2018, felt less like a revival and more like catching up with old friends. With Mashima handling the story and Atsuo Ueda on art, it expanded the world without losing the core vibe: loud teamwork, emotional payoffs, and battles fueled by stubborn loyalty.
Why the Fairy Tail 20th Anniversary Matters
Fairy Tail was never about being perfect. It was about being sincere.
It embraced:
- Friendship as real strength
- Emotions without irony
- Heroes who mess up, argue, and still show up
In an era where a lot of series lean into cool distance or heavy cynicism, Fairy Tail stayed earnest. That’s a big reason it keeps finding new fans even now and how it can have bragging rights to say it’s the Fairy Tail 20th Anniversary.
What’s Next for Fairy Tail and Hiro Mashima?

Right now, details about the Fairy Tail 20th Anniversary plans are still under wraps. Mashima’s message was clear, though: this isn’t just a quiet birthday. There’s more coming, and it’s meant to be celebrated together with the people who’ve been there since the beginning.
For a series built on guild bonds, that feels exactly right.
Twenty years in, Fairy Tail isn’t just a manga milestone. It’s a shared memory for a whole generation of fans, and judging by what’s being teased, the party’s not over yet.
And if you’re looking to watch the series with friends become a patron to All Ages of Geek’s Patreon as we watch Fairy Tail from the very beginning.

Geek out with us!
- Newsletter
- Patreon
- Socials
- I Married a Monster on a Hill (Award-Winning Series)