Critical response The first season of the series generated a generally positive response from professional critics, with some praising it as better quality when compared to other shows by
MTV. According to
Metacritic, which assigns a rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the show holds an average score of 61 out of 100, which indicates "Generally favorable reviews", based on fourteen reviews. Metacritic also lists the show as the second-highest rated
MTV series by professional critics behind
Awkward. Review aggregator
Rotten Tomatoes reports that 68% of 25 critics have given the first season a positive review. The site's consensus is: "Thanks to a charismatic lead in Tyler Posey and some dark, biting humor, Teen Wolf is a pleasant summer surprise, even if it does tread familiar ground." Linda Stasi, a writer from the
New York Post, awarded the series' premiere a perfect score, stating, "Not only is it really well thought out, but the good-looking kids in the show can actually act." Verne Gay from
Newsday also reserved high praise for the show, calling it a "winner and best of all, fun". David Hinckley of
New York Daily News commented favorably on the series, ending his review with "Werewolves, pretty girls, dumb bullies and lacrosse. What more, really, could you ask of high school?" Film critic
Rex Reed is a fan of the series, calling it "the sexiest show on television today." Some critics had a less positive reaction toward the first episode. Troy Patterson from
Slate gave it a mixed review, referring to it as "light and passably witty supernatural drama". James Poniewozik from
Time magazine also had mixed feelings towards the show, saying, "The pilot isn't bad, exactly—it's well-paced if a little dour in spots and there's some decent CW-esque banter—but it's pretty much entirely what I would have expected from any supernatural teen drama". Following the first-season finale in August 2011, Ian Grey of
IndieWire gave the series a positive review and Angel Cohn of
Television Without Pity named it the third best new show of the summer.
BuddyTV ranked
Teen Wolf #4 on its list of 2011's best new TV shows. The second season of the show received even more positive reviews than the first, with Rotten Tomatoes reporting a 90% approval rating based on 10 critical reviews. The third season also received positive reviews, earning an approval rating of 88% based on 17 reviews. Despite its generally positive reception, the show struggled with its representation of
LGBTQ characters and issues and was critiqued for
queerbaiting.
Ratings The series premiere attracted a total of 2.17million viewers. After airing its third episode,
Teen Wolf was reported to be heading into its fourth week with tremendous momentum following a 23 percent increase among persons 12–34, with a 1.6 in the demo. With double digit percentage gains among total viewers and key demos,
Teen Wolf was the #1 show in its timeslot with women 12–34. The first-season finale attained a series high in persons 12–34 (1.9) and 2.1million viewers overall, as well as being first in its timeslot among teens and females 12–34. The show's creator,
Jeff Davis, confirmed that the show benefits from a very significant online viewership, with up to eight million streams per episode on MTV's online platforms alone. Davis cited this as a significant contributing factor to MTV renewing the show for a sixth season. ==Other media==