Included in the list are charts of the top box-office earners, a chart of high-grossing animated films by the calendar year, a timeline showing the transition of the highest-grossing animated film record, and a chart of the highest-grossing animated film franchises and series. All charts are ranked by international theatrical box office performance where possible, excluding income derived from home video, broadcasting rights and merchandise.
Animated family films have performed consistently well at the box office, with Disney enjoying lucrative re-releases prior to the home video era with Walt Disney Animation Studios, who have produced films such as Aladdin and The Lion King, both of which were the highest-grossing animated film of all time upon their release. Disney Animation also enjoyed later success with the Frozen films and Zootopia in addition to Pixar, of which the films from the Toy Story, Finding Nemo, Incredibles, and Inside Out franchises have been the best performers. Beyond Disney and Pixar, franchises such as Despicable Me, Shrek, Ice Age, Kung Fu Panda, Madagascar, and Doraemon have met with the most success.
An animated feature film is defined as a motion picture with a running time of more than 40 minutes, in which movement and characters' performances are created using a frame-by-frame technique. Motion capture by itself is not an animation technique. In addition, a significant number of the major characters must be animated, and animation must figure in no less than 75 per cent of the picture's running time.
—Rule Seven – Special Rules for the Animated Feature Film Award: I. Definition[1]
The chart below lists the highest-grossing animated films. Figures are given in United States dollars (USD). Many films that were released during the 20th century do not appear on this list as figures have not been adjusted for inflation, and as a result the films on this list have all had a theatrical run (including re-releases) since 2004. Films that have not played since then do not appear on the chart due to ticket price inflation, population size, and ticket purchasing trends not being considered. If inflation were adjusted for, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs would appear at the top of the chart with an adjusted gross of $1,977,000,000.[2][nb 1] All except two—The Simpsons Movie and the original 1994 version of The Lion King, which are traditionally animated films—are computer-animated films. Despicable Me is the most represented franchise with all six films (including the Minions films) in the top 50 highest-grossing animated films. The top 11 films on this list, each having grossed in excess of $1 billion worldwide, are also ranked among the top 50 highest-grossing films of all time.
The following chart is a list of the highest-grossing computer-animated films. The films on this list have all had a theatrical run (including re-releases) since 2004.
All feature films in the Despicable Me, Kung Fu Panda, Finding Nemo, Incredibles, and Inside Out franchises, as well as the main films in the Madagascar franchise, are on the list while the Toy Story, Shrek, Ice Age, and How to Train Your Dragon franchises feature often.
The top 48 films listed are also among the 50 highest-grossing animated films and the top 11 are among the 50 highest-grossing films, each having grossed in excess of $1 billion worldwide.
A total of 38 stop motion films have grossed in excess of $1 million. All feature films in the Wallace & Gromit and Shaun the Sheep franchises are on the list, with Wallace and Gromit being the most represented franchise on the list, with three films. The films on this list have all had a theatrical run (including re-releases) since 1975.
The following chart is a list of the highest-grossing traditionally-animated films. The two films in the animated Jungle Book franchise appear on the chart, along with the first two from both the SpongeBob SquarePants and Pokémon feature series; these three are the most frequent franchises thereon with two titles each. The top two films on this list are also among on the 50 highest-grossing animated films.
The top-grossing animated films in the years 1937, 1940, 1942, 1950, 1953, 1955, 1961, 1967, 1992, 1994, 1995, 2004, 2010, 2013, 2020 and 2024 were also the highest-grossing films overall those years.[# 184]
Computer-animated films have been the highest earners in 1995, 1998–2019, and every year since 2021 while 1975 and 1993 are the only years when a stop motion animated feature grossed the highest. Traditional animated films have topped every other year.
The Ice Age franchises have had the most entries be the highest-grossing animated films of the year with four films, while the Rescuers and Finding Nemo all had both films in each respective franchise be the highest-grossing animated films of the year they were released.
Disney films has top the list the most of any studio topping the list 32 times.
Animal Farm, Out of an Old Man's Head, Fritz the Cat, and Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba – The Movie: Mugen Train were the only four adult animated films on the chart.
The top-grossing animated film of the year has usually been an American film, with a few exceptions. Japanese animated features have topped the list at seven occasions: in 1978, 1979, 1980, 1983, 1984, 1987, and 2020; the list has also been topped by a German film in 1926, Spanish in 1945, French in 1949, British in 1954, Swedish in 1968 and 1974, Norwegian in 1975, Belgian in 1976 and Canadian in 1985.
At least nine animated films have held the record of highest-grossing animated film at different times. three of these were Disney films and three more by Pixar. Shrek 2, made by DreamWorks Animation, is the only film on the list not produced by Disney or Pixar.
Snow White held the record for the longest, with 55 years, while Finding Nemo held it for the shortest period of a year. The original 1994 version of The Lion King was the most recent non-3D CG animated film to hold the record. Shrek 2, Toy Story 3, and Inside Out 2 are the only three sequels to hold the record. Finding Nemo was the first 3D CG animated film.
All of these films are still among the highest-grossing animated films except Snow White, and only Snow White, Aladdin and Shrek 2 are not also among the highest-grossing films. The Lion King is the only franchise to hold the record twice. Frozen was the most recent animated film to be original and to hold the record.
Title | Established | Record-setting gross | Ref |
---|---|---|---|
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs[nb 5] | 1938 | $8,500,000 | [# 262][# 263] |
1993 | $418,200,000 | [# 150] | |
Aladdin[nb 6] | $504,050,219 | [# 146] | |
The Lion King | 1994 | $768,000,000 | [# 18] |
2002 | $783,841,776 | [# 264] | |
Finding Nemo | 2003 | $867,893,978 | [# 24] |
Shrek 2 | 2004 | $928,760,770 | [# 26] |
Toy Story 3 | 2010 | $1,066,969,703 | [# 12] |
Frozen[nb 4] | 2014 | $1,287,000,000 | [# 8] |
2017 | $1,290,000,000 | ||
The Lion King (2019)[nb 2] | 2019 | $1,656,943,394 | [# 3] |
Inside Out 2 † | 2024 | $1,698,217,953 | [# 1][# 2] |
The following is a timeline of highest-grossing computer-animated films.
Toy Story is the only franchise to hold the record on multiple occasions doing so with the first three films. Pixar is the only studio to hold the record on multiple occasions doing so seven times, while A Bug's Life and Finding Nemo both held the record the shortest for less than a year. Shrek 2, made by DreamWorks Animation, is the only film on the list not produced by Disney or Pixar.
Title | Established | Record-setting gross | Ref |
---|---|---|---|
Toy Story | 1995 | $361,958,736 | [39] |
A Bug's Life | 1998 | $363,258,859 | [40] |
Toy Story 2 | 1999 | $485,015,179 | [# 256] |
Monsters, Inc. | 2001 | $525,373,250 | [# 69] |
Finding Nemo | 2003 | $867,893,978 | [# 24] |
Shrek 2 | 2004 | $928,760,770 | [# 26] |
Toy Story 3 | 2010 | $1,066,969,703 | [# 12] |
Frozen[nb 4] | 2014 | $1,287,000,000 | [# 8] |
2017 | $1,290,000,000 | ||
The Lion King (2019)[nb 2] | 2019 | $1,656,943,394 | [# 3] |
Inside Out 2 † | 2024 | $1,698,217,953 | [# 1][# 2] |
At least three stop motion animated films have held the record of highest-grossing animated film at different times. Chicken Run currently holds the record for the longest, with 24 years, while The Nightmare Before Christmas held it for the shortest period of seven years.
These films are still among the highest-grossing stop-motion animated films.
Title | Established | Record-setting gross | Ref |
---|---|---|---|
The Pinchcliffe Grand Prix | 1975 | $6,439,069 | [# 265] |
The Nightmare Before Christmas | 1993 | $50,003,043 | [41] |
1994 | $58,019,461 | [42] | |
Chicken Run | 2000 | $227,793,915 | [43] |
The following chart is a list of the highest-grossing animated film franchises. The top two are among the highest-grossing film franchises of all time and, respectively, are ranked 13th and 18th of all time. Pixar is the most represented studio with six franchises on this list. Despicable Me is the highest-grossing animated franchise of all time with $5.6 billion; it is also one of three animated franchises (Toy Story and Frozen) with at least two films grossing over $1 billion worldwide. Frozen is the only animated franchise where every installment grossed $1 billion; it has the highest per-film average, with nearly $1.4 billion unadjusted, and along with Inside Out, are the only animated franchises to average over $1 billon per film.
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The 2015 edition of Guinness World Records does not provide an explicit figure for Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. However, it does state that it is one of only two pre-1955 films—the other being Gone with the Wind—that are among the adjusted top ten. It placed tenth in the 2012 edition, and the eleventh highest-grossing film according to the 2015 edition is The Exorcist, which has grossed $1.794 billion adjusted to 2014 prices. The adjusted grosses for the other films on the chart increased by 4.2 percent between 2011 and 2014 according to Guinness, and using this apparent rate of inflation would take the adjusted gross for Snow White from $1.746 billion at 2011 prices to $1.819 billion at 2014 prices.
Worldwide – $1,274,219,009 (total as of August 8, 2014; including Japanese gross up to August 3, Spain gross up to July 27 and omitting Nigerian gross)
Total prior to 3D reissue: $867,893,978
By now, it has grossed about $330 million worldwide – so it remains one of the most popular films ever made.
1987 release – $46,594,212; 1993 release – $41,634,471
Considered a highly risky gamble when the movie was in production in the mid-1930s, by the fiftieth anniversary of its 1937 premiere Snow White's earnings exceeded $330 million
In only 2 months after the 1987 re-release, the film grossed another $45 million—giving it a total gross to date of about $375 million!
North American box-office: $46,594,719[permanent dead link ]
North American box-office: $41,634,791
The film's negative cost was $2.6 million, more than $1 million higher than Snow White's
Cinderella revived its fortunes. Re-released in February 1950, it cost nearly $3 million to make but earned more than $20 million worldwide
And Fritz was a $700,000 picture that made $90 million worldwide, and is still playing.
Founded in 1972, [sic] the [Nelvana] company earned an international reputation in 1984, after American director George Lucas—best known for the Star Wars movie series—hired the studio to create two animated TV spin-off series, Ewoks and Droids. A year later, Ohio's American Greetings Corp. and Kenner Parker Toys Inc. commissioned Nelvana to produce the animated Care Bears Movie. Earning $34 million in 1985, it became at the time the world's most profitable non-Disney animated movie. Buoyed by that success, Nelvana made two sequels. But the last of the trilogy, the 1987 Care Bears Adventure in Wonderland, which Nelvana produced for just under $5 million, only broke even. Conceded Hirsh: 'It was just one [sequel] too many.'
...the first animated feature film to pass the $100 million watermark worldwide (excluding Disney's re-releases)
1996 re-release $20.9 million
Worldwide: $968,511,805; Production Budget: $45 million
North America: $15,686,215; Overseas: $1,448,133
$782,941,776
On its initial release Pinocchio brought in only $1.6 million in domestic rentals (compared with Snow White's $4.2 million) and $1.9 million in foreign rentals (compared with Snow White's $4.3 million)."
Total after IMAX reissue but before 3D re-release: $783,841,776
Among [Nelvana's] credits are: ... * The animated Care Bears movies whose third romp, The Care Bears' Adventure In Wonderland!, will be released in August. The first Care Bears movie, made for $3.5 million, took in $25 million at the box office and the second one grossed $12 million.
[Brewster] ended up in Toronto at Leach and Rankin, an animation firm, and working on The Care Bears Movie [which] cost about $2 million to make and made more than $20 million at the box office.
How animated films will do theatrically in 1986 and 1987 when theaters will be crowded with them is open to question. However, the $4 million The Care Bears Movie, which uses upscale television animation, has been a surprise success. 'To the 2- to 7-year-old, the Care Bears are like Redford and Streisand,' said Samuel Goldwyn Jr., who picked up the movie for distribution after it was turned down by most major studios.
The first [Care Bears] movie, released in 1985, grossed $25 million at the box office. Its $3.5-million budget was financed by American Greetings in partnership with Kenner-Parker Toys Inc. of Beverly, Mass. The Americans also funded the sequel, which brought in $12 million. Nelvana financed the third movie itself and it has so far grossed $6 million.
Eiga Doraemon: Shin Nobita no Daimakyō - Peko to 5-nin no Tankentai (Doraemon the Movie: New Nobita's Great Demon ~Peko and the Exploration Party of Five~ fell from #7 to No. 12 on Box Office Mojo's chart in its eighth weekend and earned 21,972,680 yen (US$214,914) on 337 screens for a new total of 3,419,638,380 yen (US$33,447,483).
Gekijōban Pocket Monster Best Wishes! Kyurem Vs Seikenshi Keldeo fell from No. 11 to No. 14 on Box Office Mojo's chart in its ninth weekend. The film features the new legendary Pokémon, Keldeo. Kunihiko Yuyama returned to direct the film after directing most of the previous films and The Slayers films. The film earned US$291,480 on 357 screens for a new total of US$44,057,737.
The Pokémon the Movie: ExtremeSpeed Genesect film fell from #13 to No. 15 on Box Office Mojo's chart in its ninth weekend. Kunihiko Yuyama's feature film is billed as the final chapter of Pocket Monsters: Best Wishes! (Pokemon: Black and White!). It features a confrontation between the legendary Pokémon ExtremeSpeed Red Genesect and Mewtwo, who returns in this installment in an alternate form. The film earned 22,971,203 yen (US$232,560) on 345 screens for a new total of 3,062,219,686 yen (US$31,001,912).