The Loud House - Season 2 Apr 2026
Luan’s comedy club night goes silent when she makes a joke about someone’s insecurity. She learns the difference between laughing with and laughing at . Emotional gut punch.
Clyde feels like his two dads hover too much. He stays at the Loud House for a weekend. By day two, he misses the overparenting. Sweet and funny.
Lori’s last first day of high school. She tries to make every moment perfect—but ends up realizing it’s the messy moments she’ll miss most. Bobby gives her a bracelet that says “2.5 hours away” (the drive to Faraway).
The family fridge breaks. While waiting for a new one, they discover old food from every era of the kids’ lives. Flashbacks to each sibling as a toddler. Pure nostalgia. The Loud House - Season 2
Lynn loses a big soccer game and has a meltdown. The family discovers she’s been hiding a fear of failure since she was benched in peewee sports. Healing happens on a bowling alley of all places.
Lincoln’s secret boy band (with Clyde, Rusty, and Zach) gets discovered by the school. Lincoln is embarrassed until the sisters defend him—by forming a rival sister band.
Leni runs for student council treasurer because “money likes nice colors.” By accident, she gives a brilliant speech about emotional budgeting. She wins. And is surprisingly good at it. Luan’s comedy club night goes silent when she
Lori visits Faraway University for a weekend. She loves it—but misses home terribly. The episode ends with her realizing she can be homesick and excited at the same time.
Lynn Sr. enters a cooking competition. The kids secretly help him via earpiece. He makes it to the finals before realizing he wants to win—or lose—on his own terms.
Each sister has to swap roles for a day (Lori does Lana’s chores, Luan does Lisa’s homework, etc.). Complete chaos—but total mutual respect by the end. Clyde feels like his two dads hover too much
Lana finds an injured raccoon and nurses it back to health in the basement. The raccoon starts training other animals. Lana must lead a “critter evacuation” before Dad finds out.
Rita feels like she’s lost herself in motherhood. She takes a weekend writing workshop. The kids survive without her (barely), and she returns with a children’s book draft: “The Loud House: A Love Story.”
Lola enters a pageant against a new girl who’s actually talented, not just glitzy. Lola learns that true confidence isn’t about winning—it’s about doing your best and being proud anyway.