Bob's Burgers Characters

The Belcher family runs their burger restaurant by the waterfront and somehow makes it work. Explore every character from Loren Bouchard's beloved animated sitcom — from Bob's passionate cooking and Linda's theater dreams to Tina's erotic friend fiction, Gene's musical ambition, and Louise's anarchic scheming.

Last reviewed on 2026-05-02

🍔

Bob Belcher

Restaurant Owner / Father

The mustachioed, passionately earnest burger cook who runs his family restaurant with more love than business sense. Bob's defining trait is his genuine dedication to his craft — his burger-of-the-day specials are actual creative expressions — and his capacity for embarrassment that somehow never diminishes his dignity. His relationship with Linda, his deep love for his odd children, and his running commentary with the food he cooks make him one of TV animation's most authentically portrayed fathers.

🎭

Linda Belcher

Bob's Wife / Enthusiast

"Alright!" The most enthusiastically supportive wife in animated sitcom history — a woman who meets every situation with wine, theater references, and unconditional love. Linda's operatic response to ordinary events, her genuine delight in her family's weirdness, and her periodic terrible decision-making (usually involving getting the kids involved in something they shouldn't be) make her the show's emotional engine. John Roberts's voice performance — based on his actual mother — is the show's greatest creative choice.

🐴

Tina Belcher

Eldest Belcher / Erotic Friend Fiction Author

The 13-year-old whose deadpan earnestness about butts, zombies, horses, and her extensive erotic friend fiction library has made her an internet icon. Tina's complete lack of self-awareness about what makes her unusual, combined with her complete confidence that she's normal, creates comedy that never punches down — we laugh with Tina, not at her. Her crush on Jimmy Jr., her groaning, and her heroic refusal to be embarrassed about her interests make her the show's most revolutionary character.

🎹

Gene Belcher

Middle Child / Musical Prodigy

The theatrical, keyboard-playing, fart-noise-making middle Belcher whose musical ambitions and complete disregard for social conventions make him the family's wild card. Gene's confidence — he genuinely believes he's a star — is never mocked by the show; his musical episodes are consistently the most creative. His relationship with his mother (he clearly got her theatricality directly) and his friendship with Regular-Sized Rudy give him more depth than the "weird middle child" archetype usually gets.

🐰

Louise Belcher

Youngest Belcher / Chaos Agent

The pink-bunny-eared youngest Belcher whose anarchic scheming, manipulative intelligence, and fierce love for her family (expressed entirely through plans and chaos rather than sentiment) make her the show's breakout character. Louise's defining trait is her refusal to show softness — except when she does, which the show uses sparingly and devastatingly. Her relationship with her stuffed animal Kuchi Kopi and her occasional genuine vulnerability reveal a kid who loves her weird family more than she'll ever admit.

🔨

Teddy

Handyman / Bob's Best Friend

Bob's most loyal customer and de facto best friend — a handyman whose enthusiasm for the Belcher family, his need for connection, and his various life catastrophes make him the show's most poignant supporting character. Teddy's devotion to Bob (he once said Bob's burgers are the best part of his day) is reciprocated in Bob's own awkward, understated way. His various romantic failures, his pet hamster, and his complete sincerity make him the show's warmest presence outside the Belchers themselves.

🍕

Jimmy Pesto

Bob's Restaurant Rival

The handsome, vain owner of Jimmy Pesto's Pizzeria across the street — Bob's petty nemesis who somehow always seems to be doing better despite inferior food. Jimmy's rivalry with Bob is the show's clearest example of its refusal to be mean: Jimmy is arrogant and irritating, but he's not evil, and his genuine affection for his sons occasionally breaks through his competitiveness. His children (Jimmy Jr., the twins) are as weird as the Belchers, suggesting he's doing something right.

💃

Jimmy Junior

Tina's Crush / Dancer

Tina's perpetual romantic obsession — a boy defined almost entirely by his dancing ambitions and his complete obliviousness to what makes Tina uncomfortable. Jimmy Jr.'s arc with Tina is the show's sweetest slow-burn: he clearly likes her back but is too self-absorbed to commit, while she is entirely too patient with his obliviousness. His dancing scenes, his friendship with Zeke, and his occasional genuine sweetness make him more than "the boy Tina likes."

📋

Mr. Frond

School Guidance Counselor

Wagstaff School's uptight, craft-obsessed guidance counselor who serves as the Belcher kids' primary institutional antagonist. Frond's elaborate crafting projects, his desperate need for respect from students who clearly don't respect him, and his occasional glimpses of genuine sadness make him the show's most sympathetic antagonist. His crafts — elaborate felted creations meant to communicate wellness — are the show's most consistent background joke.

⚰️

Mort

Mortuary Owner / Neighbor

The quiet, gentle mortuary owner who shares the block with the Belchers and occasionally provides the show's most unexpected punchlines. Mort's complete normalcy about his death-adjacent profession, his friendship with Bob and the family, and his various subplots give him more character than his limited screen time suggests. His presence — a mortuary next to a restaurant — is a visual gag the show never quite lets die (pun intended).

About Bob's Burgers

Bob's Burgers was created by Loren Bouchard and premiered on Fox on January 9, 2011. The show has run for 14+ seasons and won the Emmy for Outstanding Animated Program in 2014. The Bob's Burgers Movie (2022) brought the Belcher family to the big screen.

The series is distinguished from its Fox Animation Domination peers by its consistent warmth — the Belchers genuinely like each other, a rarity in animated family sitcoms. Its musical episodes, its commitment to the children being weird rather than precocious, and its portrait of working-class family life with genuine dignity have made it one of TV animation's most beloved ongoing series.