The following is an episode list for the BBC One sitcom Only Fools and Horses. The show is about two brothers who live in Peckham, London. It was first broadcast in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 8 September 1981.[1] It aired for seven seasons and sixteen Christmas specials.[2][3] The final episode was broadcast on 25 December 2003.[4] In total, 64 regular episodes of Only Fools and Horses were produced, all written by John Sullivan and now available on both Region 2 and Region 1 DVD.
Additionally, twelve special editions of the show were made; two of these ("Licensed to Drill" and "The Robin Flies at Dawn") have never been broadcast commercially[5][6] and some have only recently been rediscovered.[5][6][7]
All episodes originally aired on BBC One. The list below is ordered by the episodes' original air dates.
Derek "Del Boy" Trotter employs his younger brother, Rodney, as his assistant in his company, Trotters Independent Traders. At Peckham's local pub, The Nag's Head, Del and Rodney meet Del's friend Trigger (who believes that Rodney's name is Dave), and he sells them 25 briefcases for £200.[8] Back at their flat in Nelson Mandela House, the Trotters discover that the briefcases cannot be opened because the combinations for the locks have been inadvertently locked inside. The following day, Rodney attempts to run away to Hong Kong, although he eventually returns to Peckham after forgetting his passport. Del takes his brother's advice and discards the stolen briefcases.
Del's second-hand car dealer friend from Lewisham, Boycie, has recently bought a Jaguar E-Type for his girlfriend, and Del agrees to hide it in his garage for a week so that Boycie's wife, Marlene, does not see it. In exchange, Boycie gives Del a car costing £25, which Rodney describes as a "death trap". Del subsequently sells the car to an Australian man for £199, claiming that the car was previously owned by a vicar.[10] Later, the brothers decide to go on a night out in London's pubs and clubs, taking Boycie's Jaguar. Rodney finds a club and suggests that he and Del try it out, but they leave quickly when they realise it is actually a gay club. The brothers finally find a different club and meet two young women, who give the Trotters their phone numbers. On the way home, a car crashes into the back of the Jaguar owing to its poor brakes. Unfortunately for Del and Rodney, it is the Australian man from earlier.
Eager to forge new business links, Del befriends Vimmal Malik, a wealthy businessman who seems eager to work with Trotters Independent Trading. After a dance at the Camberwell Chamber of Trade, Del and Vimmal are cornered by Mr Ram and his heavy. It seems as though Vimmal is holding on to an expensive porcelain family heirloom that belongs to the Ram family – and they want it back. To try to make an impression, Del offers to mediate between the two men, especially as Mr Ram says he will pay £4,000 for the return of the statue to his family. Unluckily for Del, it is all a scam and he loses £2,000 to Vimmal and Ram, a couple of conmen touring the country, using the same trick on local businessmen wherever they go.
Rodney is feeling depressed after a dreadful night out with Del and two women, a mother and daughter. Del explains to Grandad that while he and Rodney were out, there was a big fight at one of the pubs; consequently, a young policewoman arrived to deal with the situation, whom Rodney tried to date while she carried out the arrest. At Sid's Café, Del learns that Rodney did manage to get a date with the policewoman, whose name is Sandra. Rodney takes Sandra to see a film and then invites her back to Nelson Mandela House, which is bad news for the Trotters, because the flat is full of stolen items. Del is not pleased when Rodney gives away information that could get the Trotters arrested. Luckily, it looks as if the Trotters have got away with it, but, back at her flat, Sandra tells Rodney that she knew from the very beginning that the flat was full of illegal items. Sandra gives the Trotters 24 hours to "spring clean" their flat before she informs the CID. Back at Nelson Mandela House, Del feels like killing Rodney despite his bringing it upon himself.
Trotters Independent Traders has got a job painting a Chinese takeaway, but Del gives the job to Rodney and Grandad, as he is busy. The job is finished, with the Chinese restaurant having had a new lick of yellow paint. Del returns home and greets Trigger, who reveals to Rodney that the paint he supplied Del with is dodgy and luminous. Fortunately, the restaurant's owner is delighted with the work, but there is an issue: Del used the paint to paint his mother's grave so now it looks radioactive. Del decides to keep quiet and flees the scene.[22]
Rodney, tired of his "two GCEs" getting him little more than a crummy job as a lookout, decides to go it alone and leave Peckham's own multinational conglomerate – Trotters Independent Traders. By the end of the week, he has already cornered the market in broken lawnmower engines, and, with Mickey Pierce as his financial director, the sky's the limit!
A ripple of panic runs through The Nag's Head. Del's old school enemy, Slater, is back in town hell-bent on revenge and brandishing his police badge while on the trail of a stolen microwave.
To get revenge against Irishman Brendan O'Shaughnessy for supplying him with grey paint, Del visits his friend Denzil, who is due to have his front room painted by O'Shaughnessy, and gets the job for himself instead. Grandad and Rodney arrive with the paint, but, unfortunately, Rodney leaves the kettle on and apparently kills the canary in the kitchen. Grandad buys a new one, but, when Denzil's wife, Corrine, returns to the flat, she reveals that the canary died before the painting began. At The Nag's Head, Del meets the new landlord, Mike Fisher, and strikes up a deal to decorate the pub.
Reg Trotter, absentee father to Del and Rodney, unexpectedly arrives to spend Christmas with his boys. Reg explains that he has been living in Newcastle, and a doctor has diagnosed an hereditary blood disorder. Scared for their well-being, he decided to tell his two sons. However, several tests later, Reg is given the all clear, but it seems Del Boy and Rodney have different blood types. It would seem the wayward father has some explaining to do. Reg explains that he frequently argued with their mother before they split. She had several dalliances with other men, and Del is the mystery child. Fortunately, a visit to the family doctor gives Del the news to put the smile back on his face.
After Grandad's funeral, the mourners return to the Trotters' flat. Rodney is annoyed that Del is having a good time when he should be upset. After everybody leaves, Grandad's brother, Uncle Albert, another freeloading Trotter, emerges from one of the bedrooms after getting drunk. The following morning, Del drives Albert back home, but the caravan where he was living with Del's cousin has been moved. Del suggests that he find a room at the Seamen's Mission. Del tells Rodney that he does not know how to grieve for Grandad and is hiding his pain. Later, at The Nag's Head, Albert turns up and lies to the boys saying the mission is no longer there. Del falls for the deception, and suggests that he come home with them.
In an attempt to earn an easy £60 a week, Del persuades Boycie and Marlene to entrust him with the care of their Great Dane puppy, Duke, while they are on holiday. While out for a walk, Rodney notices that the dog is a bit sluggish, and they decide to take it to the vet. Del and Rodney think that the dog may have eaten some reheated pork leftovers for breakfast, and the vet quickly informs them that Duke has probably caught salmonella. It is only when they get home that they realise that Albert has eaten the other half of the pork, and they quickly rush him to hospital. When Albert gets discharged from hospital a few days later, with a clean bill of health, Del Boy discovers that Rodney has been giving Albert's sleeping pills to Duke, and the dog's vitamin supplements to Albert.
Surprised by Trigger's success with a new computer dating agency, Del joins and meets aspiring actress Raquel Turner and the two quickly hit it off. However, Raquel is not aware that Del is a market trader, as he claimed to be the manager of his own import–export business. Meanwhile, Rodney has a date with Nag's Head barmaid "Nervous Nerys", which ends in disaster after Rodney jumps a red light in the van and causes a police car to crash, having been convinced by Mickey and Jevon that Nerys enjoys the company of tough and manly men. A few days later, Uncle Albert's birthday party is held at The Nag's Head, but Del is horrified when the surprise stripper he booked turns out to be Raquel. The pair eventually make it up and Raquel reveals that she has been offered an acting role in a tour around the Middle East. Del is about to go to her flat and ask her to stay, but blows his chance when he is arrested after ripping the clothes off a policewoman, believing that she is a stripper booked by Uncle Albert in revenge for his birthday party.
Del has just seen the film Wall Street for about the fourth time and decided that the upwardly-mobile lifestyle is for him. The camel-hair coat is out, and in comes a smart new image: green Mackintosh, mobile phone, Filofax and aluminium briefcase – but the yellow van remains. Del even wants to buy the flat off the council and sell it for a fast buck. Rodney, meanwhile, has decided to complete a computing diploma course at the adult education centre. It is there that he meets a young woman called Cassandra, who returns his raincoat to him when he mistakes hers for his, Del having written Rodney's name inside the collar. Del and Trig ditch The Nag's Head in favour of propping up a wine bar. As Del accidentally falls through the bar hatch, Rodney and the boys head to a club, where Rodney amazes the others by dancing with Cassandra. She gives him a lift home, but he pretends to live in a big house in the posh King's Avenue. As they say goodbye, he is caught waving to the unknown occupants of the posh house. As he walks home, a rainstorm starts.
Del and his friends are horrified to discover that their surprise school reunion has been arranged by Roy Slater, who is back in Peckham having been paroled from Parkhurst six months earlier following the diamond smuggling caper a few years before. Del is even more horrified to learn that Slater is Raquel's estranged husband. Del is forced to keep Slater sweet or risk the secret of the identity of Raquel's husband being revealed. Del, Rodney and Albert soon learn that Slater is due to receive a windfall from more illegal diamonds: a fact that the police and Raquel are unaware of. Del uses this to blackmail Slater into leaving Peckham and finalise his divorce with Raquel. Ironically, shortly after Slater leaves, Del reveals that Slater was at no real risk of being caught, because Slater was the only one who held any evidence of his involvement with further diamond smuggling.
Raquel is frustrated with Del who is spending his evenings at the casino, frequently returning past midnight. Rodney raises the problem with Del, who explains he is brokering a deal to get hold of some Russian ex-military camcorders. Rodney and Cassandra have decided to try to have a baby. When Del comes home at 8.15 am, stopping only to change his clothes, Raquel leaves him. Del organises a date with Beverley, his dentist's receptionist; however, he cancels it after much persistence from Rodney and Uncle Albert. A changed man, he invites Raquel back. While celebrating, he drunkenly starts a riot on the estate. All seems calm, but Beverley seems to be stalking Del.
Rodney is bottling up his emotions following the loss of his baby. Del, realising that Cassandra needs his support, wants to help Rodney adjust. Raquel's parents arrive for a meal and to meet their daughter's new man. He does little to impress, and Uncle Albert makes matters worse by confusing the coffee and the gravy. The next day, Raquel's father meets Rodney and Del as they clear their garage. Being an antiques dealer, he spots a long-lost 18th century Harrison marine timekeeper, which he recommends getting valued. When the watch is sold for auction at Sotheby's, the highest bid is for £6.2 million.[80]
Del and Rodney lose their riches in a bad investment in the Central American markets, and are declared bankrupt. They return to Peckham, and their Mandela House flat, and, to make matters a lot worse, they suffer a major blow when Uncle Albert dies and they end up at the wrong funeral. Cassandra and Rodney are finding that their love life is a little flat, and so they spice it up by role-playing their fantasies. Cassandra becomes Rodney's police woman, and Rodney does not quite look right as Gladiator. Del appears on the game show "Goldrush" in a last-ditch attempt to win back their fortune. Despite a phone call saying that Del has actually won following a badly written final question, Del mistakenly believes that it is prankster Mickey Pearce and tells them to give the fortune to charity. Meanwhile, Sid has taken over at The Nag's Head now that Mike is in prison, and Damien seems to be growing up fast.
Del tries to sell Christmas trees at the local market.
David Jason and Nicholas Lyndhurst return for the 2014 Sport Relief special after 11 years. The sketch sees David Beckham head to Peckham to join Del Boy and Rodney in a greasy spoon café. They attempt to sell Beckham's underpants.[84]
David Jason appeared in adverts for Abbey National, Rover and Radio Times as Del Boy. Jason made a cameo appearance on the 2021 Christmas special of Strictly Come Dancing, wishing Jay Blades well after he danced to the show's theme tune.[85][86] Jason also made a cameo as the voice of an animated Del Boy on a 2023 edition of The Apprentice.[87][88] In March 2024, Jason appeared in the role of Del Boy in an episode of Car SOS.[89]
John Challis made appearances as Boycie in a few adverts for UK Gold and an advert for Del's autobiography. He also appeared in a music video for Del Boy's Tune.