The loud house the lost panties

The Loud House Main Character Index
The Loud Family (The Siblings) | The Casagrandes | Other Kids | Other Adults | Movie Characters


The Loud Siblings

Eleven siblings (one boy and ten girls) who serve as the main protagonists of the show. Originally, Lincoln was the de facto protagonist, but as time passed, his sisters have gotten their fair share of development too, making them an Ensemble Cast.


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The boy:

Lincoln Albert Loud 

The loud house the lost panties

"Surviving in a big family can be challenging, but it's not impossible."

Voiced by: (English) Sean Ryan Fox (pilot), Grant Palmer ("Left in the Dark" - "A Fair to Remember"), Collin Dean ("One of the Boys" - "House of Lies"), Jackson Petty (singing voice, "Really Loud Music"), Tex Hammond ("Game Boys" - "Room and Hoard"), Asher Bishop ("Wheel and Deal" to "Flip This Flip"), Bentley Griffin ("Save Royal Woods!" onward)
Voiced by: (Latin America) José Luis Piedra
Voiced by: (Brazilian Portuguese) Wirley Contaifer
Voiced by: (Italian) Alessio De Filippis
Voiced by: (Japanese) Chiwa Saitō
Voiced by: (French) Nathalie Bienaimé
Voiced by: (Hebrew) Guy Raifman
Played by: Wolfgang Schaeffer

The middle child and only son in the Loud family, 11-year-old (12 as of Season 6) Lincoln is an average, geeky boy who constantly has to deal with living in a house with ten sisters. He is typically the show's voice of reason and moral compass among his family, if not a bit quick-witted and fun-loving himself.


  • 100% Adoration Rating: As a nice change of pace, this is his reputation amongst the people of Loch Loud after being crowned Duke and after he saves Scotland from Morag, and the townspeople apologize to him. Deeming him the "Loudest of All Louds".
  • Abdicate the Throne: In the end of the movie, Lincoln turns down being the Duke of Loch Loud and chooses to return to Royal Woods with his family, letting Angus take his place.
  • Abhorrent Admirer: He acted as one towards his redheaded crush Christina, who became so turned off by his attempts to woo her that she transferred classes to avoid his presence, and he took it in grace.
  • Acquired Situational Narcissism:
    • In "Funny Business", when Lincoln's pratfall performance at a children's birthday party becomes viral, he becomes egotistical and rubs his success in Luan's face, setting up the conflict.
    • Also becomes a plot point of "Out on a Limo", in which he lets his luxurious ride go to his head.
    • And has a very downplayed case in the movie, where all he wants is to be seen as special like his sisters, and is overall less selfish and big headed than the usual examples. Helps that he has Angus acting as The Conscience to his Ego and keeping him on the straight and narrow.
  • Adorably Precocious Child: While he's just a pre-teen boy with a lot of growing up to do, Lincoln serves as the show's moral compass and voice of reason.
  • Affectionate Nickname: "Linky" by Lola, Leni, and Lily, and "Stinkin'" by Lynn Jr.
  • Ain't Too Proud to Beg: Near the end of "One of the Boys", he fearfully begs Lori not to flush his head down the toilet after he breaks her watch.
  • Always Someone Better: In "A Fridge Too Far", Lincoln manages to outwit Luan when it comes to pranking, as he sets a booby trap in the refrigerator that culminates in a watermelon falling on Luan's foot, marking this as a rare instance where Luan of all people falls victim to a prank.
  • Annoying Younger Sibling: Lori often considers him to be annoying, but she loves him really.
  • The Artifact: Originally, the first two seasons' main premise was about Lincoln surviving his crazy household. With the sisters having developed enough to carry their very own plotlines, he's not exactly as important to the series as he once was, and his focus episodes now tend to feature other aspects of his life besides his distressful household.
  • Author Avatar: In the first two seasons at least, Chris Savino based Lincoln almost completely on himself as a kid and is the source of his affinity for comics and manga.
  • Badass Boast: A subdued one, but still somewhat qualifies.

    Lincoln: Like I said, I might not be the fastest, and I might not be the strongest, but to get all of my sisters out of the way, it pays to have a plan.

  • Batman Gambit: Frequently uses his familiarity with his sisters to pull these.
  • Because You Were Nice to Me: A primary reason for him crowning Angus the Duke (aside from his worthiness) is the latter caring for him, paying attention to him, mentoring him, and not giving up on him.
  • Beware the Nice Ones: Not above using trickery and blackmail if he feels his sisters are being unreasonable but is otherwise a nice boy. Also, don't get him mad.
  • Beware the Silly Ones: Being awkward, having a lot of growing up to do, and liking to read in his underwear doesn't keep Lincoln from being the "man with a plan".
  • Big Brother Instinct: Lincoln is very protective of his sisters (older and younger, but especially younger). For example —
    • Whenever Lana and Lola (who are twins) get into fights, he's the one who typically breaks them up and settles their disputes.
    • In "Left in the Dark", he comforts the twins when they're scared of a possible ghost being in the basement. And when Lincoln and his sisters think there really is a ghost, he loudly states he'll protect them and goes to tackle the "ghost".
    • In "Sleuth and Consequences", he takes the fall for Lucy when the family was trying to find out who clogged the toilet.
    • He and his sisters immediately end their chore feud in "Chore and Peace" when they think Lily has been consumed by the trash. He spends most of that time frantically looking for Lily—she later turns out to be just fine, as she had been with their parents the entire time.
    • Comes to a head in the movie, where he unhesitantly puts himself between his family, Angus, and a mind controlled fire breathing dragon that's about to burn them alive IMMEDIATELY AFTER WAKING FROM UNCONCIOUSNESS! Also counts as Extremely Protective Child.
  • Big Brother Mentor: Towards the start of The Loud House Movie, he educates Lily on how to survive living in a big family (needless to say, having had personal experience), and is proud of her when she displays progress.
  • The Big Damn Kiss: Shares one with Ronnie Anne in "Save the Date".
  • Big "NO!": In general, Lincoln uses this trope (i.e. shouts, "No!") whenever things don't go as planned for him.
  • Big Sister Worship: Towards Luna. He doesn't outright worship her, but he does look up to her.
  • Birds of a Feather: His crush on Paige in "L is For Love" seems to stem at least partially from the fact she likes video games just like him.
  • Bizarre Taste in Food: He has a fondness for ketchup sandwiches as well as peanut butter and sauerkraut sandwiches.
  • Born Unlucky: Happens in almost all of his major appearances; he tends to frequently run into problems out of his control, and most of the time has to sacrifice his own desires for others.
  • Breaking the Fourth Wall: He frequently speaks to the viewer about what's going on or what he learned. Since Season 2, it became gradually less and less. But Season 3 confirms this tendency to be a canon ability of his that he not only uses as a coping mechanism, but can also TEACH to others. Like Ronnie Anne.
  • Break the Cutie: In "No Such Luck", Lincoln is forced by his own parents to sleep outside in the dark and they sell all his stuff.
  • Break the Haughty: In "Funny Business", Lincoln's Acquired Situational Narcissism results in him not knowing how to handle emo Maggie's birthday, resulting in him being in danger from the reception until Luan steps in.
  • Broken Ace: Despite having many talents (comic artist, magician, strategist, pageant coach, video games, chess, musician, etc.), Lincoln frequently faces challenges in his everyday life and possesses insecurities.
  • Butt-Monkey: He is frequently on the receiving end of his sisters' antics, and while this isn’t happening, he’s still not free from going on misadventures and suffering misfortunes. Luckily for him, his misery became downplayed by Season 2 (with "No Such Luck" being a notable exception), with his butt-monkey status being sometimes more-or-less shifted towards Lori and Leni.
  • Can't Stand Them, Can't Live Without Them: His relationship with his sisters is very much this. As much as they bother him with their constant babbling, immaturity, and overall interference, his life would be complete nothingness without them. This is a plot point of "One of the Boys", where Lincoln travels to an alternate dimension where he has ten brothers instead of ten sisters, only for him to realize that his most desired lifestyle is worse than his current one, thus deciding to return to his sisters.
  • Catchphrase: He tends to say "But in a family as big as mine..." when talking to the audience.
  • Character Development: In The Loud House Movie, he goes from insecurely believing himself to be stuck in his sisters' shadow, to trying to make himself special by becoming the Duke of Loch Loud, to passing the title onto Angus and being satisfied with his place in his family as the one who takes care of them.
  • Cheerful Child: A quick-witted and fun-loving kid.
  • The Chessmaster: Being the "man with a plan" includes this kind of speciality.
    • In "Project Loud House", in order to get all of his sisters out of the door on time, he counters Luan's pranks, settles arguments between Lana and Lola, helps Lucy with her poems, dresses Lily, catches Lynn's football, stops Lisa's flask from exploding, prepares breakfast for his sisters. Even when things go wrong, he provides solutions to new problems that arise, such as stopping Lisa from trying out her experiments on Leni and impersonating Bobby to get Lori in a better mood so she can drive them to school.
    • In "Undie Pressure", his methods to win the bet include finding comfortable pants to win, getting Luan to finish a joke, and polishing the kitchen floor with the goal of making Lola look at her own reflection.
    • In "Toads and Tiaras", in order to get the Dairyland tickets he desires, he has Lana impersonate Lola in a pageant, keeps Lola from finding out, and teaches Lana how to be prim and perfect. He abandons it when he sees that it made Lana feel bad about herself, although Lana wins anyway.
    • In "A Tattler's Tale", in response to Lola's blackmailing, he has some of his sisters distract her while he searches her room and subsequently her pageant centre to use a secret of hers against her.
  • The Chew Toy: Nearly all the misfortunes that befall him and the advantages his sisters take of him are Played for Laughs.
  • Chick Magnet: Girls who spend time with him find themselves having a good time.
  • Classical Anti-Hero: His primary motivation is his selfish benefits but he still has a deep sense of morality and loves all of his sisters a lot and isn't afraid to show that. He often feels inadequate about his own abilities in comparison to his sisters which in turn often feed into his selfish desires, and he makes plenty of mistakes that cause just as many problems for himself as for others. However, he always strives to better himself and learn from those mistakes, and will take the fall for his actions and those of others.
  • Closet Sublet: His room's actually a converted closet. He doesn't mind though, since it's still his own room while his sisters all have to share their rooms—plus, it actually seems to be a fairly large closet, as it can fit not just Lincoln and one other person (often times Clyde), but all eleven of the Loud kids with no real problems, as seen in some episodes.
  • Cloudcuckoolander's Minder: Being the Only Sane Man, he plays this role whenever paired with Leni or Luan, as he has zero tolerance for their antics.
  • Comedic Underwear Exposure: A running gag is him reading comics in his undies or getting pantsed in front of everyone at school.
  • The Comically Serious: Lincoln is frequently put under the scenario of his sisters' wild antics, unleashing his sanity.
  • Control Freak: Like Lori, he tends to dip into the territory of acting selfishly controlling of his siblings and excusing it with a label exclusive to him.
  • Cool Big Bro: Acts like one to his younger sisters in some episodes, such as when he reminded Lisa to carry the one in "Bathroom Break", and when he stopped Lisa from taking Lily's vocal cords in "Potty Mouth".
  • Cool Loser: Depending on the episode. In "The Green House" he is faced with becoming the school outcast for not going green... and becomes a temporary outcast at the ending of the episode because all that hard work has made him extremely sweaty and stinky. His usual group of friends also tend to gravitate to the geeky side of things, implying he's not that popular.
  • Color Motif: He's associated with the color orange, thanks to his orange shirt. The show's logo contains an orange silhouette of his house. He could even be a reference to Nickelodeon, itself, which is also associated with orange.
  • Cosmic Plaything: Just how bad Lincoln's day is can reach abnormal and extreme levels Depending on the Writer.
  • Cosplay: He loves dressing up as his favorite superhero, "Ace Savvy", the titular protagnist of his own comic book series and the head commander of the Full Deck.
  • Crazy-Prepared: A lot.
    • It's shown in "Cover Girls" that he has a trunk under his bed full of sister disguises in case he needs to impersonate any of them, including a split one for being both Lana and Lola at the same time. The trunk also has multiple sizes of the clothes for each of the sisters as well, and it also includes a Lincoln costume.
    • In The Loud House Movie, he manages to organize his sisters' events so that they happen on time when his parents are too stressed out to do so.
  • Cynicism Catalyst: He undergoes one in the movie, in which having to witness his sisters be celebrated for their accomplishments, which he helped make possible, makes him sell himself short as being boring and ordinary.
  • Deadpan Snarker: Oftentimes sarcasm goes hand-in-hand with his daily coping of family brawl and school bullying.
  • Demoted to Extra: Downplayed since he's still an important part of the show, but while he was clearly the main character and the central focus of pretty much every episode in season 1, his role in the show has since been toned down to give other characters their Day in the Limelight. As of season 3, there have been several episodes already in which Lincoln has only a cameo or is completely absent.
  • Depending on the Writer: How sympathetic Lincoln is. Regularly, the audience pities him based on how often his sisters mistreat him when he's just a civilized being trying to have a normal day, while other episodes showcase him as a selfish jerk who uses manipulation and blackmail to get his way.
  • Determinator: Will go to incredible lengths to fulfill a task once he puts his mind to it. He spent eight months determining where the best spot was to sit in the family car.
  • Didn't Think This Through:
    • On occasion, when Lincoln successfully comes up with a scheme to get what he wants, he fails to consider that his ideas, while clever, aren't exclusive to him and his sisters are perfectly capable of copying him to reap the benefits for themselves, and ends up screwed by them anyway.
      • In "The Sweet Spot," after months of planning, and hours of negotiation in the dead of night, Lincoln manages to get the best seat in "Vanzilla." When the girls confront him over it, he tries to brush them off, only for them to get in the van and beat him, and each other, up over it.
      • Averted at first, and then doubled in "Friendzy", when Lincoln keeps inviting Clyde over because of the "friend card", which allows him to get what he wants on account that Lincoln has a friend over. Eventually the sisters figure out his scheme, and start inviting their friends before Clyde shows up. But, having anticipated that his sisters would copy his idea, he sidesteps them by inviting more friends so the can still get what he wants by way of "majority rules. So they "also" start inviting more and more friends over to the point where their house is overfilled.
    • "Pasture Bedtime" features an impressive one from him. At Girl Jordan's pool party, he forgets he's in his underwear when challenging Mollie to a cannonball record, and when he and his guy friends hide in the pool house, it doesn't occur to him to use items from in there to cover themselves so they can escape.
  • Disguised in Drag: In "A Novel Idea", he dresses as a girl in an attempt to join his sisters at Dad's office.
  • The Dog Bites Back: While he's usually too cowardly to stand up for himself in the presence of bullies, there are more than a few occasions where he averts his Extreme Doormat status and grows a spine when least expected.
  • The Everyman: Lincoln is the most normal kid in the Loud family (aside from Lori) and like his sister Lisa, he's mainly known for being nerdy and geeky, the "man with a plan", and of course, being The Protagonist.
  • Exhausted Eye Bags: He has these either on the sides of his eyes or below them. Probably caused by the stress of dealing with ten sisters. Then again, he's not too stressed out and he gets enough sleep, so it might just be genetic considering his parents have them too.
  • Extreme Doormat: Due to his selflessness, he usually lets himself get pushed around, mainly in regard to his sisters.
  • Fanboy: Of Ace Savvy, Muscle Fish, Rip Hardcore, etc..
  • Fourth-Wall Observer: He frequently talks to the viewer about how he survives in such a large and crazy family. By Season 2, this was mostly dropped.
  • Gasshole: He can let out a good fart, such as in "A Tale of Two Tables," "Space Invader," and "Roughin' It."
  • Geek: He tends to read comic books, likes sci-fi films, often plays video games and would rather play them than exercise, has been to coventions before, is a Fanboy of Ace Savvy among other things, collects stuff such as coins, and.. well... just look at his appearance!
  • The Generic Guy: Lincoln's a typical, fun-loving, innocent boy whose personality is hardly distinguishable from other kid characters in media.
  • Good Is Not Nice: He is the main protagonist, but at times, he does some jerkish things to his sisters, but he always learns his lesson at the end whenever this happens.
  • Graceful Loser: He commonly ends up failing in his exploits, but normally manages to see the positives of the situation.
  • Has a Type: His crushes indicate that he seems to have a thing for both redheads (Christina and Paige) and Latinas (Ronnie Anne and Ms. DiMartino).
  • The Heart: Lincoln is characteristically the most moral member of the cast, courtesy of being The Protagonist.
  • Heroes Want Redheads: Had a crush on a red-haired classmate of his named Cristina in "Making the Case". Eventually subverted, as he doesn't seem to like her anymore. That said, he also has a crush on an orange-haired girl named Paige in "L is For Love", which seems to partially stem from their shared love of video games.
  • Heroic Sacrifice: In "April Fools Rules", he sets off all of Luan's pranks so that Ronnie Anne won't have to endure them, despite knowing full well how lethal they are. Even after it gets him badly injured, he doesn't care.
  • Heterosexual Life-Partners: With Clyde. They're best pals, and have both had straight crushes.
  • Hidden Depths:
    • "Changing the Baby" shows some of Lincoln's favorite pastimes are playing chess in the park and collecting coins.
    • "Project Loud House" reveals Lincoln can be as poetic as Lucy.
    • In "House Music" it turns out he can play the cello.
    • "Study Muffin" Lincoln tells us he's usually a good student (when he's not distracted by his hot substitute teacher), and is able to score an A on his test.
    • "Pulp Fiction" shows that Lincoln not only is a good enough writer and artist that he won a comic writing contest, but that he can redo the entire thing in record time.
    • "Flying Solo" shows that Lincoln has a beautiful singing voice, which the movie already hinted at, but now it's acknowledged in-universe.
  • High-Pressure Emotion: Lincoln's temper has its limits, and when he finally loses his temper, rage red climbs his face and his turkey tail cowlick becomes a steam whistle.
  • Hollywood Genetics: Respective blonde and brunette Rita and Lynn Sr. created white-haired Lincoln. It's been confirmed in the show that he was born with white hair that he inherited from his maternal grandfather, yet the rest of the family biologically dons brown or blonde hair. Even
    The loud house the lost panties
    Word of God has no idea why it's like that, leaving it up to the audience's interpretation...
  • Hypocrite: In the episode "The Green House" he gives into peer pressure and hoards the electricity just to host a video game tournament while getting his sisters to give up theirs.
  • Hypocritical Humor: In "Heavy Meddle", he sounds annoyed when asking why people put empty jars back in the fridge, but then does so himself.
  • Identical Grandson: "Cover Girls" shows that Lincoln's got his maternal grandfather's white hair, skin complexion, and facial features. The Movie also shows that he is an almost exact match for his ancestor, The Duke of Loch Loud; likely possessing the same traits as him, but with problems he clearly lacked.
  • Idiot Ball: Despite being the show's voice of reason, he still manages to pick this up every now and then.
  • I Have Sisters: Lincoln is the middle child and only son of eleven kids, and while he does have typical boyish interests like comic books and video games, most of the "feminine" things that he knows about are related to things that his sisters are interested in (such as Lola's interest in beauty pageants leading Lincoln to know which types of fabric are harder to clean than others), are practical (such as being able to cook) and learning to be kind and sensitive (as shown in "One of the Boys"). However, as shown in "Lincoln Loud: Girl Guru", just because Lincoln has a bunch of sisters, it doesn't automatically make him a "girl expert".
  • I Just Want to Be Special:
    • In "Making the Case" he wants to win some kind of trophy like most of his sisters did.
    • In The Movie, he is jealous of his sisters always getting attention and wishes he were famous like them.
  • Informed Flaw: In The Movie, Lincoln feels that he's the only ordinary member of his family, and strives to show he's just as special as his sisters. This is in spite of being shown to possess several talents well on par with his sisters, including being one of the best junior magicians in town, as Clyde points out. Lincoln dismisses this on the basis that anyone could do those things, a statement that could be applied to several of his sisters' talents as well.
  • In-Series Nickname: Some of the characters, his sisters particular, occasionally call him "Linc".
  • In Touch with His Feminine Side: Downplayed. Despite his occasional attempts to remind himself he is a man, Lincoln very much shows he's lived and been raised his entire life around girls, courtesy of his ten sisters. He knows how to knit, design and make clothing, enjoys mud facials and baking, discusses ships on TV shows, cries at emotional moments, has a stuffed rabbit named "Bun-Bun", likes to sing, coaches Lola for her pageants, cleans up nicely, and overall is very kind and sensitive (his selfish tendencies aside). However, his primary interests (comic books, video games, sci-fi movies, trucks) are befitting for a typical boy his age, he is thick-skinned and snarky, occasionally indulges in being gross, expresses exasperation towards Lori and Bobby's cheesy romance, and has an affinity for reading in his underwear.
    • While his main friend group mostly consists of guys, it's shown he has no problem having both boys and girls as friends.
  • Ink-Suit Actor: He looks somewhat like his fourth (not counting Sean Ryan Fox) voice actor, Asher Bishop.
  • It's All About Me: He can be rather selfish sometimes and controlling of his sisters' lives. Special mentions go to spending 8 months just to find the best seat in Vanzilla and forcing his sisters to appear like people they're not in the family photograph.
  • Jack of All Stats: Lincoln acts like this out of his sisters. He is not as good as his sisters in what they do, but he is competent enough to impress, and help them in what they are doing: such as helping Lucy write her poems, being one step ahead of Luan in her pranks, preventing Lisa's experiment from exploding by adding a chemical, and catching Lynn's football in "Project Loud House". He is also the only one Luna complimented when the Loud House siblings were playing instruments in "House Music".
  • Jerkass Ball: At his worst, Lincoln can be extremely selfish and has been known to try and take advantage of his sisters' own hopes for his own gain. However, almost every time he ends up realizing just how badly he screwed up and does his best to try and set things right, even if it gets him into trouble in the process. And flaws aside, he's a thoughtful, sensitive, and caring person.
  • KidAnova: He's had crushes on no less than four girls around his age (Christina, Ronnie Anne, Paige, and Stella).
  • Kid-Appeal Character: Lincoln's meant to entertain the show's demographic in that he has "cool" interests like video games, comic books, and sci-fi movies like a typical boy his age. Not only that, but he could also be seen as relatable to them due to facing ideal day-to-day challenges like living in an awkward family (one where he is the only boy among ten girls at that), strict authority figures, getting blamed for others' wrongdoings, and in general combating life's obstacles in pursuit of fun.
  • Kid Hero: Though he's already The Protagonist of the series, he definitely fits the bill in the movie, finding himself in scenarios such as facing personal insecurities, becoming temporary Duke, riding a dragon, or risking his life to save his family and ancestral homeland from Morag. The episode "Family Bonding" also has him stopping the Millers before they could annihilate all the cherries in Michigan. All whilst retaining his adorable appearance.
  • Kids Shouldn't Watch Horror Films:
    • In "The Price of Admission", Lincoln sneaks out at night to watch a horror film his parents prohibited him from seeing and is left psychologically scarred afterwards. His parents don't punish him for his wrongdoing as they decided the trauma he suffered from watching the film was enough of a lesson.
    • In "The Boss Maybe", he and Clyde watch another horror film, one that Lucy explicitly describes as the "scariest movie of all time." They end up so traumatized by the film's contents it takes Leni reading them a considerably less terrifying tale to calm them down.
  • Kiddie Kid: Downplayed. He mostly acts his age, but he still has a stuffed rabbit toy named Bun-Bun, which he deeply cares for.
  • The Knights Who Say "Squee!": He becomes a massive fan of his ancestral double, the former Duke of Loch Loud, expressing ecstatism and worship upon finding out about his accomplishments, including being known as the most special of the Louds, and is very much awed when seeing his ghost near the end of the movie.
  • The Klutz: He is very clumsy.
  • Later-Installment Weirdness: His usual fourth-wall breaks became less prominent as of Season 2, as there are a whole handful of episodes where he doesn't speak to the viewer at all.
  • Light/Darkness Juxtaposition: The light to Lucy's darkness.
  • Light Is Good: He has white hair, wears light-coloured clothing, and is a good kid.
  • Like Father, Unlike Son: Lincoln admitted that he and his father don't really share many interests outside Legends of the Hidden Temple.
  • Loser Protagonist: More-so in earlier episodes, subverted because he won more in later episodes.
  • Lovable Coward: Lincoln becomes sensitive when faced with the likelihood of being bullied, but the audience roots for him anyway because his case is understandable, given how he demands privacy and does not want to be harassed.
  • Lovable Nerd: Lincoln is into video games and comic books, but he's also very endearing, sympathetic and sweet-natured towards his friends and family.
  • Manipulative Bastard:
    • He's not above blackmailing Lori to get information about what she did to Leni in the episode "Driving Miss Hazy".
    • In "Suite and Sour", he manages to convince his parents to allow him and his sisters to go to a luxurious hotel with them through a play.
  • Masculine Girl, Feminine Boy: The Feminine Boy (has a stuffed rabbit and is In Touch with His Feminine Side) to Ronnie's Masculine Girl (a rough and aggressive Loving Bully). He shares a similar dynamic as the Feminine Boy with his more tomboyish sisters, such as Luna, Lynn, and Lana.
  • Mature Younger Sibling: Lincoln usually serves as the Only Sane Man among his circle of ten sisters, who, both the younger and older ones, usually start fights with him, blame him for their own faults, and rub their personality quirks in his face while he's trying to go about his day. Sometimes he'll be the one to cheer up one of his older sisters whenever they face a problem.
  • Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane: It's not known how he's able to remove his underwear without taking off his pants.
  • Meaningful Name:
    • His name is likely derived from U.S. president Abraham Lincoln, as he was born aboard the presidential limousine.
    • His nickname, Linc, also fits in that he's the link connecting his sisters together, as he tries to solve their issues and keep the family united. In a meta sense, given that he's The Everyman and Audience Surrogate and has a habit of Breaking the Fourth Wall, he's also the link between the show and the audience.
  • Middle Child Syndrome: Flat-out placed in this position. He's the middle child and sometimes feels like he needs more attention.
  • Misplaced Retribution: Often gets on the receiving end of this trope. Whenever his classmates hear that his sisters are acting up, they take their wrath upon him, as if they can't bring themselves to punish his sisters, who are the real culprits. The worst offenders are "The Green House" (in which he nearly becomes the school outcast due to his sisters' wanton use of electricity, heat energy, etc.) and "Making the Grade" (in which he is sent to the "sticky table" because Lisa is patronizing the fifth graders).
  • Momma's Boy: Lincoln seems to have a better relationship with his mother than his father, behaving like his Cheerful Child self around her. In fact, Lincoln isn't shown to have much in common with his dad (other than their love of Legends of the Hidden Temple).
  • Mr. Imagination: "Butterfly Effect" shows that Lincoln's imagination is capable of conceiving Disaster Dominoes.
  • Nice Guy: At his best, Lincoln is a friendly boy who is willing to sacrifice his own happiness for his sisters.
  • Nice Mean And In Between: Despite his occasional selfishness, Lincoln is still the nice compered to how last oldest sister Lynn Jr is mean, while his first youngest sister Lucy is in-between. Among the three of them they are the middle children of the Loud family.
  • No-Respect Guy: Lincoln is (usually) the Only Sane Man, whose words of wisdom are frequently ignored in favor of his sisters' rowdiness.
  • Not Me This Time: Lincoln's claim that starts the plot of "Sleuth or Consequences" is that, despite often doing it in the past, this particular instance of the toilet being plugged isn't his fault.
  • Not so Above It All: He acts like the only sane boy, but he does like to read in his underwear.
  • The One Guy: The only boy of in a family full of girls.
  • Only Sane Man: Lincoln is the show's voice of reason and seems to be the character with the most common sense, aside from Lori and Lisa (well, usually). This is especially noticeable in "Project Loud House", "Heavy Meddle", and "Cereal Offender". Exaggerated in "Study Muffin", to the point even his own dad is in on obsessively stalking Hugh.
  • Out of Focus: By Season 3, he has begun to appear less. Either he is absent in several episodes, or he gets a minimal or secondary role. Either way, the series spotlight has begun to be more focused in his sisters and their relationship between them.
  • Overshadowed by Awesome:
    • In "Making the Case" it's shown he feels he lives in shadows of his 10 sisters because unlike them he had no trophy.
    • His character arc in the Movie is entirely based on him feeling not special compared to his town-famous sisters.
  • The Pollyanna: Despite his rough at-home life, Lincoln nevertheless maintains his default Cheerful Child status.
  • Positive Friend Influence: He's shown to be a good influence on Clyde, often discouraging his obsessive tendencies toward Lori.
  • Precocious Crush: Lincoln has a crush on his teacher, Ms. DiMartino, as do the rest of his boy classmates.
  • Puppy Love: He has had crushes on Ronnie Anne, Paige, and Christina.
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni:
    • The red to Clyde's blue. Lincoln is often the go-getter of the duo that leads their activities, while Clyde is often the voice of reason that tries to keep Lincoln in line when things go too far (assuming that he's not also guilty of the same behavior).
    • Within the middle children of the Loud Family, he plays the Red Oni to Lucy's Blue and plays the Blue Oni to Lynn's Red.
  • Resentful Outnumbered Sibling: Lincoln's sisters outnumber him ten to one, and he's right in the middle. He sometimes resents only having sisters and feels like the odd one out.
  • Ridiculously Average Guy: Lincoln is the only one of his family who's never won a trophy. Though a background scene from "Insta-Gran" may prove otherwise.
  • Screams Like a Little Girl: He used to scream like this in the earlier two seasons, before his voice actor changed.
  • Sensitive Guy and Manly Man:
    • By a very narrow margin, there's him as the manly man to Clyde's sensitive guy. Both are conventionally nerdy, somewhat wimpy kids with a series of feminine qualities, but Clyde takes these traits to bigger extremes than Lincoln. Also, Lincoln has a thick skin and can handle things going bad, while Clyde is far more emotionally fragile and sensitive. Compare their reactions to finding out their favorite show 'ARGGH!' is fake in "ARGGH! You For Real".

    Lincoln: I can handle it, but my friend Clyde is crushed.

    • Downplayed with him as the sensitive guy to Liam's manly man. Liam isn't devoid of a sensitive side himself, as he is hurt over Lincoln and their guy friends ditching his sleepover, takes a nervous approach to the start of middle school, and tears up at Lincoln's singing voice, but he is an expert at baseball, enjoys it, can wrestle, proudly tends to get dirty as a farm boy, and lacks the In Touch with His Feminine Side qualities that Lincoln has.
  • Small Name, Big Ego: Depending on the Writer, he becomes overconfident about his goodness and tends to put himself and his affairs above others and theirs.
  • The Social Expert: Zig-zagged. His plans tend to involve acting accordingly to what someone would do. However, he can overlook details, and isn't immune to trusting the wrong person (Chandler, Morag).
  • Starring Smurfette: He is the only boy in a family full of girls and he is usually the main character. Somewhat subverted in the later episodes, which put more focus on his sisters and other characters.
  • Straight Man: He brings his morality into full force whenever faced with the unfortunate scenario of being paired with his more absent-minded or kookier siblings.
  • Surrounded by Idiots: Lincoln is forced to live with a bunch of girls who screw him over and lack common sense, who he usually acts as the voice of reason to. Although, he truly loves them.
  • Team Chef: He's the one who cooks for his sisters the most, even able to prepare hard-boiled eggs from the pan.
  • Terrified of Germs: Seems to be easily grossed out over things such as someone using his toothbrush or dropping something in the toilet. He usually freaks out if something is gross to him.
  • This Loser Is You: Lincoln's clearly meant to be relatable to the audience in that he's a nerdy kid who not only faces the looming prospect of ridicule, but also struggles to fit in both at school and in an odd family (one where he is the only brother among ten sisters at that).
  • Throw the Dog a Bone: Season 2 onwards seems to be leveling off on his Butt-Monkey status. This is Justified in episodes where he's more or less demoted to a supporting or minor character, and especially becomes more prevalent as the series progresses since his Butt-Monkey status has been toned down.
  • Token Good Teammate: Downplayed. Lincoln can be a bit of a self-centered jerk at times, but by default, he often holds the status as the Only Sane Man of the house, who is usually really nice, but constantly deals with being harassed or pestered by his vexatious sisters. Leni, Luna, Luan, Lucy, Lana, and Lily are also good-natured, but they have their own respective flaws, which often interfere with Lincoln's day.
  • Too Clever by Half: Lincoln is a smart boy who comes up with inventive solutions to get around the chaos of his house, and elaborate plans to get what he wants. But while he is smart enough to think of these plans, he sometimes doesn't consider that his plans are not exclusive to him and his sisters can simply copy what he does to reap the benefits for themselves.
  • Trademark Favorite Food: Seems to really like chicken nuggets and Mac and cheese bites.
  • Tranquil Fury: He tends to not significantly raise his voice, even when furious.
  • Trauma Conga Line: Though he already goes through quite a bit of misfortune in the show, especially in episodes like "No Such Luck", he really gets put through the wringer in the movie, in which he constantly lives in the shadow of all his 10 sisters, older and younger, to the point of being pushed out of their achievement picture and locked outside his father's restaurant, which they were celebrating in, despite him playing a large role in helping their achievements be possible. Then, he has a BSoD Song about how insignificant he is, strolling down the streets alone in the dark while doing so. Just when it looks like he'll finally get glory through being the Duke of Loch Loud in Scotland, Morag uses the Dragon Stone to mind control the dragon he's riding and destroy the town, framing him in the process. The people turning on him causes him to break down crying. Later, he has to witness his entire family being nearly murdered by Morag right before his eyes, and him risking his life to save them causes her to corner him over a cliff, where he nearly falls to his death alongside his baby sister before they are rescued by Lela. All this at the age of 11.
  • Unfazed Everyman: On his more cynical days, Lincoln has Seen It All and can't help but retaliate with sarcasm.
  • Unlucky Everydude: More-so in earlier episodes, where his Butt-Monkey and Born Unlucky roles were more frequent and prominent.
  • Unwanted Assistance:
    • His reaction to his sisters in "Heavy Meddle."
    • Played straight and then inverted in "White Hare". Lincoln avoids them specifically due to the events in "Heavy Meddle" then after his dream, seeks out their assistance.
  • Unwitting Instigator of Doom: His insulting of Ronnie Anne prompts Bobby to break up with Lori when he finds out, sending her into an emotional rage where she forces Lincoln to double date with them in order to make things up to them. His initial refusal nearly finds him on the receiving end of a nightstand!
  • Vocal Evolution: His voice got a bit lower in the second third of Season 1 due to Palmer hitting puberty. By the time Dean took over, his voice returned to its original high pitch, albeit a little whinier.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: His plans intended to help himself and his family can on occasion involve taking advantage of others.
  • Wise Beyond His Years: Downplayed. He mostly acts his age, and has his fair share of unwise moments, but Lincoln still often takes on a very impressive level of responsibility when it comes to dealing with his sisters or keeping them in check, as well as getting himself and his friends out of trouble.
  • Would Hit a Girl: He faces off against Morag physically in The Movie, though this is definitely justified as she is trying to murder him and his family.
  • Wouldn't Hit a Girl: Played with, Lincoln firmly believes that violence doesn't solve anything, but he holds an especial grudge against using it towards the female populace. This reluctance of his serves as a main plot point in "Save the Date", where he didn't help to retaliate against Ronnie Anne's physical abuse simply because of her gender. But this doesn't seem to extend to his sisters, who he freely fights with in his everyday life. Also averted in "Back Out There", where he fights Renee over a comic book, and one of them punches the other, as well as with Morag in The Movie.
  • Women Are Wiser: Inverted.
    • He's often portrayed as wiser than his sisters, including Lori and Lisa occasionally.
    • Between him and Ronnie Anne, he's the more rational.
  • Youthful Freckles: Shares this trait with Luna, Lynn, and Clyde. He has freckles to showcase his nerdiness.

The older sisters:

Lori L. Loud 

The loud house the lost panties

"Literally!"

Voiced by: (English) Catherine Taber
Voiced by: (Latin America) Fernanda Robles
Voiced by: (Brazilian Portuguese) Carina Eiras
Voiced by: (Italian) Jolanda Granato
Voiced by: (Japanese) Yōko Hikasa
Voiced by: (Hungarian) Janka Solecki
Voiced by: (Hebrew) Alona Alexander
Played by: Lexi DiBenedetto

The eldest Loud sibling at 17 years old (18 as of Season 5), Lori takes pride in that fact by being colossally bossy and condescending toward Lincoln and her sisters. She spends most of her time texting her boyfriend Bobby on her smartphone and is overly confident about her maturity. She's every definition of a teenage girl stereotype and often acts like a Big Sister Bully, but she has her heart in the right place at the end of the day. As of Season 5, Lori has moved out of the house to attend her golfing college of Fairway University.


  • Affectionate Nickname: "Babe" from her boyfriend, Bobby.
  • All Women Love Shoes: She is shown to have a bunch of shoes hidden under her bed, which she didn't realize due to kicking them off at random times.
  • Aloof Big Sister: Lori's status as the eldest alone gives her a feeling of distance and defeatism towards the rest of her siblings, in addition to being a typical adolescent Alpha Bitch outside of home. Although, this doesn't stop her from regressing to good terms with them at the end of the day, and she fails to realize that being cynical does not make her completely mature.
  • Always Second Best: In "Selfie Improvement", it's shown she feels like this next to Carol Pingrey, who has been showing her up since childhood. Ironically, Carol reveals that she felt the same next to Lori, which convinces both girls to put an end to their rivalry.
  • Attention Whore: Being a big believer in her own maturity, she frequently demands attention.
  • Aw, Look! They Really Do Love Each Other: She is notorious for being bossy to her siblings, but never fails to repay them for their kindness.
    • In "The Waiting Game" she thanks Lincoln profusely for getting her a job at the local pizza arcade, allowing him and Clyde to enjoy her share of free food and tokens as a thank you to him; she comes by to thank him again when he works her shift so she doesn't miss her high school dance.
    • In "Out On a Limo", she insists Lincoln be allowed to enjoy his free limo ride before they all join him for a turn later.
    • In "A Fair to Remember", she tells Lincoln he really is a "cool bro" when he helps her and Bobby to get back together.
    • In "Cheater by the Dozen", she's furious her meddling sibs mistaking Bobby's preparations for their big anniversary date for cheating. But she recognized that they were trying to protect her and looking out for her and told them she appreciated them for it.
    • She is frequently seen hanging around with Leni and taking selfies with her, in spite of her shared annoyance over Leni's lack of common sense and tendency to raid her wardrobe.
  • Babysitter from Hell: Complete with dressing and acting like a dictator in "No Guts, No Glori". Justified since she's trying to prevent the house from becoming even more chaotic while the parents are gone.
  • Berserk Button:
    • Don't ever enter her room or mess with her phone if you value your safety.
    • And above all, don't EVER endanger her relationship with Bobby. It could be the last thing you ever do (a hyperbole of course, but still).
  • Beauty Is Never Tarnished:
    • Averted. She's among the prettiest of the Louds, but that doesn't stop her from being depicted as a chronic farter.
    • She also suffers from Your Make Up Is Running every time she cries, making her look like a demented and enraged raccoon.
  • Big Sister Bully: Her status as the oldest gives her a feeling of dominance and superiority.
  • Bittersweet 17: She's the eldest and firstborn Loud sibling and is 17 years old prior to Season 5, so several of the episodes focusing on her involve this trope:
    • Despite reminding her siblings she's eldest, she has a Sickeningly Sweethearts nickname for her boyfriend all the other kids know and use sarcastically: "Boo Boo Bear".
    • She only allows Leni, Luna and Luan to come to her sophisticated party. She tries to make it an elegant affair, eschewing what she thinks of as childish. The party flops and everyone leaves until Leni posts a photo of fun with the younger sibs. Lori's teen friends weren't ready for a sophisticated adult soiree.
    • "Driving Miss Hazy": Lori has been lording being eldest and the only licensed driver over the other kids so they band together to help ditzy Leni get her license. Lori becomes insecure that the kids won't need her anymore and sabotages Leni.
    • Lori decides she needs her own space to get away from the chaos of 10 siblings. She realizes it's lonely and scary on her own and contrives to get back in the house without admitting her decision was hasty.
    • "The Loudest Mission: Relative Chaos:" When she finds out that Bobby is not returning to Royal Woods, she has a Freak Out and drives Lincoln to demand answers. After several abortive attempts to trick or convince Bobby to come back, she gives up and breaks down into Inelegant Blubbering. Bobby explains his plan, and Lori comes around, maturely realizing they'll only be apart for a year until university...and that his plan will let them be together long term.
    • In "Change of Heart", Lori is caught between hating Clyde's obsessive crush, and wanting the attention because it boosts her self esteem.
  • Braces of Orthodontic Overkill: In "Come Sale Away" it is revealed she used to have braces that were more exaggerated and more awkward than Luan's.
  • Bratty Teenage Daughter: Ironically, despite being the oldest child, Lori also tends to be the one most prone to whining about her life when things go wrong.
  • Break the Haughty: Lori is a stereotypical high school Alpha Bitch and bullying Green-Eyed Monster whom the writers try their best to emotionally destroy and unleash the insecurities of:
    • The most prominent example perhaps comes from "Save the Date", in which Bobby breaks up with Lori on account of her brother Lincoln having made Ronnie Anne—who's also Bobby's sister—cry, leading Lori into a state of depression.
    • There’s also her humiliating ordeal in City Slickers where she falls into a manhole and her inability to do any kind of job in her dad’s restaurant in Can’t Hardly Wait. Both times, she’s reduced to tears.
  • Brutal Honesty: Due to the amount of stress she endures daily, Lori finds sugar-coating her true feelings beneath her. Not as much as Lisa though...
  • Butt-Monkey: She (of all people) is starting to lean more in this direction in the later seasons, almost as much as Leni but not as much as Lincoln. Both "Selfie Improvement" and "City Slickers" have whole montages of her suffering various painful or humiliating misfortunes.
  • Can't Stand Them, Can't Live Without Them: As epitomized in "Garage Banned", Lori considers her siblings to be a real pain in the neck, but in her words, her life would "literally" be nothing without them.
  • Character Development: She goes from a bossy, superficial Aloof Big Sister to a somewhat bubbly Cool Big Sis in the later seasons.
  • Characterization Marches On: In the first season, she was just your average Bratty Teenage Daughter and Big Sister Bully who took advantage of her siblings out of self-gain and overall had little redeeming qualities. Towards the end of season 1, however, she started showing her soft side to Lincoln and her family in general, showing that she is indeed a Jerk with a Heart of Gold.
  • Childish Tooth Gap: She had one when she was about seven years old, as shown in a family photograph of her feeding a one-year-old Lincoln a bowl of ice cream.
  • Clingy Jealous Girl: "Butterfly Effect" and "Green House" have shown that if Bobby is around any other females without her physical presence she gets pretty aggressive about said female. This includes her own sister, Leni, who was hiding a present for her as a favor for Bobby and disowned her in response (although this ended up being part of All Just a Dream) or an inanimate object such as the painting of Mona Lisa. She's also known to play Clyde's hopeless adoration for her to her advantage, as "Change of Heart" shows her becoming maniacally obsessed with winning him back after she thinks Leni has become his new fixation.
  • Cloudcuckoolander's Minder: Courtesy of being roommates, Lori serves as Leni's voice of reason, as the latter is far too absent-minded and dimwitted to think for herself.
  • The Comically Serious: Lori is often faced with the looming prospect of suffering embarrassment at the hands of her younger siblings, or just her social standing in general.
  • The Conscience: Due to being roommates and having a lot in common, she keeps Leni in place and acts nurturing in response to her stupidity.
  • Control Freak: She wants everything to be under her control.
  • Cool Big Sis: Can be this when she lets go of her own irrational selfishness.
  • Color Motif: Is associated with sky blue, thanks to her sky blue-colored shirt, shoes, and eyeshadow.
  • Cosplay: Her Full Deck persona has her become the High Card, likely referencing her being the tallest and oldest Loud sister.
  • Crazy-Prepared: Her room has a keypad lock for entry.
  • Cut His Heart Out with a Spoon: She frequently threatens to turn Lincoln into a "human pretzel".
  • Cute Clumsy Girl: Lori can often trip and slip in most of her appearances, which also causes various types of accidents, especially in "Can't Hardly Wait".
  • Deadpan Snarker: She likes to make snarky remarks to everyone else when she gets the chance.
  • Demoted to Extra: A justified example, as mentioned below under Later-Installment Weirdness: Since Season 5, Lori has moved out of the Loud House to attend Fairway University. Because of this, while she still appears every now and then, her overall screentime within the show has become much less prominent.
  • The Dentist Episode: In one of the podcasts, she has a dentist's appointment with Rita.
  • Depending on the Writer: Lori's personality zigzags from time-to-time. Most of the episodes she stars in either depict her as a Big Sister Bully or a Cool Big Sis, or a bit of both. One could say she's a complex character.
  • Deuteragonist: Lori is easily the most important and developed sibling after Lincoln, which makes sense since her firstborn status, romantic relationship and imminent adult life give her unique struggles to deal with instead of the usual childhood problems her sisters and brother go through.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: She has a bad habit of this in her worst moments, like threatening to turn Lincoln into a "human pretzel" simply for wandering into her room by mistake, or beating Lynn with a loaf of bread when Lynn mistakenly told her they were out of it.
  • Dreary Half-Lidded Eyes: She has these which reflects her aloof and chill Cool Big Sis attitude, and show her blue eye shadow.
  • Dude Magnet: Just ask Bobby, Clyde, and Carl.
  • Enraged by Idiocy: Lori gets easily angered by her sisters' naivety and immature behavior, especially towards Leni.
  • The Fashionista: Downplayed. She's not as into fashion as Leni, but she does seem to be interested in clothes.
  • Fatal Flaw: Lori's vanity. She very often confiscates her siblings' fun out of sadism and uses her status as the eldest as a defense mechanism, which sooner or later leads to her having to open her eyes out of embarrassment and take their side.
  • The Finicky One: Lori holds a very uptight and melodramatic attitude towards her family in terms of social intuition.
  • Fire-Forged Friends: Towards Carol Pingrey.
  • Foil: To her roommate Leni in terms of behavior. While they're quite similar in that both are beauty-obsessed teenage girl stereotypes who have blonde hair and care passionately about their popularity, their personalities are completely different from each other:
    • Lori has a strong sense of rationality and sophistication, which makes her overconfident about her ego and thus she can come off as quite rude, bossy, bratty, and demanding.
    • Leni is a complete scatterbrain who's incredibly naive and clumsy and has trouble thinking for herself even when in the face of the most rudimentary of tasks. Despite this, unlike Lori, Leni does not have a single mean bone in her body and is genuinely an All-Loving Heroine.
  • Foolish Sibling, Responsible Sibling: The Responsible to Leni's Foolish in that Lori is far more intelligent and rational than the former, who, needless to say, is The Ditz.
  • Former Friend of Alpha Bitch: Inverted in regards to Carol Pingrey; the latter had been rivaling Lori ever since kindergarten, but a decade later the pair started talking to each other and realized they're just as insecure, ultimately developing a friendship after several years of rivalry.
  • Gamer Chick: As shown at the end of "No Guts, No Glori", she can pick up and play a new fighting game with no worries.
  • Gasshole: Ever since she was a baby, she's had a bit of a flatulence problem, which isn't helped by her dieting at times, which can include eating high fiber snacks. Compared to Lynn Jr., who's proud and boastful of her flatulence, Lori tends to be more embarrassed about hers, because she only farts when nobody's around, and will often make excuses if she's caught. This reaches a head in "Tripped!", where her farting in Vanzilla is the one road trip incident (among many others) that gets brought back up and mocked by the rest of the family the most, much to her chargin.
  • Girly Girl with a Tomboy Streak: She's a stereotypical Valley Girl who's into fashion, chatting on the phone, makeup, and painting her nails, but she also farts when no one's around, is as good at video games as Lincoln, is a very good golfer, and acts dominant and assertive on a frequent basis.
  • Good Is Not Nice: Lori can be very cross and condescending at times, but she is still a good person at her core.
  • Green-Eyed Monster: Whenever her personality is tapped into, she's very often portrayed as an insanely jealous individual who desperately craves superiority and is obsessively possessive of her relationship with Bobby and Clyde's Precocious Crush on her.
  • Hair-Trigger Temper: She's a bit easily angered. Not to the level of Lola, though.
  • Hidden Depths:
    • Her dream job is to be a CEO of a major corporation. She'll also settle for Co-CEO.
    • A perfect day for her includes a round of golf. One episode reveals that she's on the varsity golf team at her high school (and a later episode reveals that she was the only one to make the varsity team as a freshman).
  • Hypocrite:
    • In "Linc or Swim", she accuses Lincoln of being selfish for hogging the pool even though she tries to hog it for "senior swim", using her status as a high school senior.
    • In "The Green House", she gets jealous when Bobby stands next to the Mona Lisa —an inanimate object—, but in "Study Muffin" she openly flirts with Hugh and does not show any remorse about it.
    • In "No Guts, No Glori", she disallows phone calls, but then talks on her cell phone.
  • Hypocritical Heartwarming: In the earlier seasons, some of her Big Sister Instinct attempts were done rather condescendingly.
  • I Just Want to Be Special: Implied in "Driving Miss Hazy" when the other kids teach Leni how to drive. She mentions that she likes being the only Loud sibling who can drive and she feels that her siblings will no longer rely on her if Leni learns how to do it as well.
    • Also comes up as her primary motivation to win back Clyde's affection in "Change of Heart", because him showering her with unwanted advances and sweet-but-sorta-creepy gifts made her feel good about herself.
  • Inelegant Blubbering: Lori is not a pretty crier. In episodes like "Save the Date" or "The Loudest Mission: Relative Chaos," she cries so hard her make-up starts running down her face.
  • Inferiority Superiority Complex: While she's mostly depicted as a bullying, hypocritical Green-Eyed Monster who often uses her status as the oldest to try and get what she wants, some episodes (such as "A Fair to Remember" and "Change of Heart") have shown Lori as a highly insecure girl who depends on her relationship with Bobby and Clyde's obsessions with her to prop up her ego. It's also implied that, other than her talent at golf and her being the only one of the eleven kids to have a driver's license, being the oldest is all Lori really has.
  • Informed Deformity: She apparently has a double chin and acne, but the audience doesn't really get to see that (until the former happened in "Room with a Feud"). Her baby pictures also reveal that she used to have a cone-shaped head and webbed toes.
  • It's All About Me: Not to the extent of Lola, but she can be rather selfish and entitled, especially when it comes to attention from Bobby.
    • Her efforts to sabotage Leni's driving tests are grounded mostly in her desire to continue extorting favors from her siblings and wanting to feel that her siblings need her. It takes Lincoln spelling it out for her in his disgusted outrage for her to realize she put Leni (and others) in extreme peril out of her own selfishness.
    • Lori's attempts to ensure that Clyde stays obsessed with her in "Change of Heart" seem to stem almost purely from the fact that his crush and the gifts she receives from him make her feel good about herself (despite technically already having a boyfriend in the form of Bobby). However, it later turns out that Clyde simply wanted to try and act more normal around her and become a better man for someone he actually stood a chance with (granted, Lori was not aware of this up until the end).
  • Jerkass Has a Point: Lori may occasionally be a Big Sister Bully, but there's often a method to her callousness.
    • She accurately guesses that the Loud siblings switching chores would go awry.
    • Her tough demeanor when babysitting her siblings was shown to be a good choice, otherwise they all go nuts.
  • Jerkass Realization: In regards to the one-sided affection from Clyde she was trying to win back to make her feel good about herself.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Despite her dominant and rude behavior, she loves every single one of her siblings at the end of the day, and she'll come through for them when they need her.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Jerk: In the show's early days, Lori was very much this to Lincoln, as whenever it seemed like she felt remorse for him, it was usually subverted in one way or another. Even on the occasions she would do something legitimately nice for him (such as buying him a new pair of gaming glasses after she broke his old one in "Get the Message"), she would often act rather condescending about it.
  • Karma Houdini: She hits on Hugh in "Study Muffin" and takes a picture of his butt while still seeing Bobby and never gets called out on it.
  • Lack of Empathy: In her more bitchy moments (particularly in the earlier seasons), she shows zero sympathy to the suffering of her less fortunate siblings.
  • Large Ham: A large ham in a tall body. She sometimes makes dramatic threats or flirts dramatically with Bobby.
  • Later-Installment Weirdness: Since Season 5, Lori has moved out of the Loud House to attend Fairway University. Because of this, her screentime within the Loud House has become much less prominent compared to previous seasons when she had more interactions with all of her younger siblings back at home. She now only either reappears in the house periodically for visits, has bit moments with her siblings via phone calls, and/or she has episodes focused on her time at Fairway.
  • Light Feminine and Dark Feminine: Both she and Leni are feminine, but she's the bossy, cynical, and snarky Dark Feminine to Leni's sweet, naive, and innocent Light Feminine.
  • Lovable Alpha Bitch: She's a high school senior with a condescending and selfish attitude who still loves her family and will do the right thing, even if it requires being humiliated by her siblings to open her eyes occasionally.
  • Masculine Girl, Feminine Boy: Femininity aside, she's the Masculine Girl to Bobby's Feminine Boy. Her passion for golf and assertive attitude aren’t traditionally considered feminine, while Bobby is clearly In Touch with His Feminine Side, being unafraid to cry or show emotion in public and enjoying sappy romance movies, theatre, unicorns, and getting facials.
  • Mysterious Middle Initial: Double Subverted. According to her driver's license, her middle name starts with "L", but the episode "Selfie Improvement" seemingly revealed her middle name to be Marie, the same as Lisa's. It's been clarified by Lincoln that all the Loud kids get the middle name Marie by their parents when they're in trouble.
  • Narcissist: Constantly demands attention and is overconfident of her shallow superiorities.
  • Nerd Glasses: She used to wear large contact lenses when she was younger, which combined with her acne and braces, perfectly showcased her at around Luan's age.
  • Never My Fault: She refuses to admit she has a farting problem and will always blame her farts on anything.
  • Nice Girl: She becomes this in later seasons.
  • Not so Above It All: She is the first of the sisters who falls in love with Hugh in "Study Muffin", and makes her sort of a hypocrite. See Clingy Jealous Girl.
    • Also, despite her frequent scoffing at her younger siblings' antics, she at times will unabashedly join in on their goofy fun. In the episode "Party Down", for example, she tries to throw a "mature" party for her peers and keeps throwing her younger siblings out, but at the end, she winds up having a blast with them.
  • Odd Couple: With Bobby. Who would've guessed that the mature and rational Lori would be interested in the dense and simple-minded Bobby?
  • Official Couple: With Bobby; they're officially dating.
  • Only Sane Woman: Along with Lincoln and Lisa, usually. They often are the only ones not goofing off. Lori does appear to be the most sane and mature Loud sibling overall, (since she's also the oldest), but she can be a bit bratty at times. On the occasions when she's not taking up this role, you can (usually) expect either Lincoln or Lisa (who are both just about equally sane) to do it instead.
  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business: She ignores Bobby's phone calls in "Selfie Improvement" as she's too caught up in competition between Carol Pingrey in getting the most likes on a selfie.
  • Opposites Attract: Her relationship with Bobby amounts to this. Lori is rational and sophisticated, while Bobby is a dense and absentminded Kindhearted Simpleton.
  • Phoneaholic Teenager: During season one, if she was not being mean to her siblings (especially Lincoln), she was calling or texting her boyfriend Bobby (or some other friend of hers). She makes up a story to Lincoln about how horrified she was when Lola broke her phone by boiling it on the stove.
  • Pride: She seems to have a bit of a high opinion of herself when it comes to her status as a sibling, her relationship status, and her popularity.
  • Pubescent Braces: She used to wear braces when she was approximately Luan's age, complementing her "awkward" phase.
  • Put on a Bus: Sorta, Lori isn't officially written out of the show but ever since she entered college, she's now away from her hometown.
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni: She's The Blue to Leni's Red. Lori is more mature and rational than Leni, and certainly a lot smarter than her, too. So she often acts as Leni's voice of reason as a result. Coincidentally, Lori wears blue, and it's her theme color. However, Lori could also have traits of a Red Oni, since she can be easily angered and is a bossy Big Sister Bully to her siblings, compared to Nice Girl All-Loving Heroine Leni.
  • Shipper on Deck: She and Leni act largely supportive of Luna's relationship with Sam throughout "Racing Hearts".
  • Sickeningly Sweethearts: With Bobby. Lincoln and Ronnie Anne both make fun of them for it.
  • Single Woman Seeks Good Man: Seems to be the main reason why she would date someone like Bobby, who is not the sharpest tool in the shed but nevertheless treats her with the utmost respect.
  • Small Name, Big Ego: She thinks she's the best of her siblings simply for being the eldest.
  • Straight Man: Lori is the straightforward and realistic voice of reason to Leni.
  • Strong Family Resemblance: Going by her Imagine Spot in "Driving Ambition", she will end up resembling Rita a lot as an adult.
  • Surrounded by Idiots: Lori seems to be the most sane and mature of her siblings, aside from Lincoln and, to a lesser extent, Lisa.
  • Team Dad: In Mr. and Mrs. Loud's absence, Lori—as a babysitter—has the authority to act as a strict and gruff parental figure towards her ten siblings so as to prevent the house becoming any worse than it already is.
  • Took a Level in Cheerfulness: Overlapping with Took a Level in Kindness, Lori is shown to be more bubbly and perky by the end of season one, becoming more willing to participate in the fun with her siblings. Previously, aside from her interactions with Bobby, she was otherwise a grouchy and stoic individual.
  • Took a Level in Kindness: While she can still be bossy and demanding, her bossiness and temper were toned down by the end of Season 1 as she is shown to be a more caring and thoughtful person. Compare her behavior in "Get The Message", where she threatened to turn Lincoln into a human pretzel for invading her space, to her actions in "Cheater By The Dozen", where, upon finding out that her siblings meant well, was very touched by what they wanted to do.
  • Transplant: Alongside Lincoln, Lori frequently guest stars in The Casagrandes due to her status as Bobby's girlfriend.
  • True Blue Femininity: Wears a blue shirt, blue shoes, and blue eyeshadow.
  • Used to Be a Sweet Kid: Flashbacks in "Life Is Better Loud" of her as a little girl show her to be much more bubbly than the bossy and condescending teenager she would become.
  • Valley Girl: Acts like more of a modern one. Obsessed with her phone, using "literally" like a comma, and obsessing over shoes and clothes. She's a bit smarter than the stereotype, though.
  • Verbal Tic: She seems to say "literally" a lot. Sometimes she uses it properly, but usually not. For example: in "Homespun," when while trying to get ready for a study date with Bobby, she gets trapped in the bathroom and the shower curtains fall on top of her, she loudly exclaims, "This house is literally falling apart!"
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: If "No Guts, No Glori" is to be believed, the whole Loud House would descend into chaos if Lori wasn't in charge as a Babysitter from Hell while their mother and father were not home.
  • Women Are Wiser: Lori is clearly more closer to earth and smarter than her dense boyfriend Bobby.
  • Would Hurt a Child: If her threats to turn Lincoln into a "human pretzel" are anything to go by. She also is said to have hit Lynn Jr. with a baguette in "Cheater By The Dozen" and threatened to do the same to her other siblings.
  • Younger than She Looks: Lori can easily pass for someone in her early-twenties despite being in her late teens.
  • Your Makeup Is Running: Whenever she cries, her mascara will immediately start flowing in black rivers down her face.

Leni L. Loud 

The loud house the lost panties

"Wait, what was I talking about?"

Voiced by: (English) Liliana Mumy
Voiced by: (Latin America) Lupita Leal
Voiced by: (Brazilian Portuguese) Jullie
Voiced by: (Italian) Giuliana Atepi
Voiced by: (Japanese) Naoko Komatsu
Voiced by: (German) Daniela Reidies
Played by: Dora Dolphin (A Loud House Christmas), Eva Carlton (The Really Loud House)

The second-eldest Loud sibling at 16 years old (17 as of Season 5), she may not be the brightest of the bunch, but she more than makes up for it in beauty and kindness. Leni is an aspiring fashion designer who's naturally unaffected and innocent, and very endearing. In Season 5, she becomes the oldest of the siblings still living at home after Lori leaves for college.


  • Accidental Misnaming: Never seems to get Clyde's name right. Lincoln too, when she isn't using his nickname.
  • All-Loving Heroine: Leni is genuinely nice to everyone, even bullies.
  • All Women Love Shoes: She owns a whole closet of shoes but mostly wears sandals.
  • Amazing Technicolor Population: She suffers this in “Project Loud House” after being exposed to one of Lisa’s experiments, despite turning back to normal shortly afterwards.
  • Annoying Younger Sibling: To Lori. Despite being roommates, they have a lot of Sibling Yin-Yang, with Leni often getting on Lori's nerves with her obliviousness (although Leni doesn't mean to bother her).
  • Attention Deficit... Ooh, Shiny!: Partially due to her low intelligence, Leni is easily distracted, especially by things she loves like clothes, fashion, and make-up.
  • Benevolent Boss: She is shown to be this when temporarily made manager of Reininger's, during which she appoints herself "Fun-ager" and tries to make the day fun for her coworkers. She not only succeeds at this, but when she is overwhelmed by a massive sale she had overlooked she still manages to regain control of the situation with the help of her friends.
  • Beware the Nice Ones: Leni might be the dimmest and the kindest of the Louds but even she can get aggressive, especially if you push her too far.
  • Beware the Silly Ones: She's the second-most eccentric of the Loud sisters behind Luan, yet she can be provoked pretty easily.
  • Big Sister Instinct: She has always had this towards her younger siblings and is deeply affectionate with all of them. It really kicks into high gear though in "Snoop's On" when she believes Luna is turning to a life of crime after reading her diary. She teams up with Luan and Lincoln to see to it that Luna doesn't ruin her future and is worried Luna's mystery friend is a toxic influence on her younger sister. Luckily it all turns out to be an elaborate prank put on by Luna.
  • Brainless Beauty: Is appearance-focused, but is also dim and says things like, "My favorite color is zebra."
  • Buffy Speak: She often talks like this due to not being very smart. In "Driving Miss Hazy" it turns out that talking to her on her level, or "speaking Leni," is the best way to teach her how to drive.
  • Bunny-Ears Lawyer: Yes, you heard right. This Naïve Everygirl is skilled at fashion designing.
  • Butt-Monkey: If Lincoln or Clyde aren’t the ones getting the short end of the stick, she qualifies due to her ditziness.
  • Cannot Keep a Secret: She's spoiled surprise parties (as seen in "No Spoilers"), TV show endings (like in "Room with a Feud"), and Secret Santas (like in "Season's Cheatings").
  • Character Development: More like "Intelligence Development". With a job at Reininger's and Lori in college, Leni naturally has had to get a little smarter and more competent to keep up with the increased responsibility, but not quite enough to be Dumbass No More.
  • Character Tics: Leni poses her arms in a limp-wristed manner, sometimes referred to as "raptor arms".
  • Childish Older Sibling: Tends to act very ditzy and can't be trusted handling the least complicated of tasks, which is saying something because she's the second eldest child.
  • Chubby Chaser: Leni is dating an overweight guy named Chaz, who, like herself, is interested in fashion.
  • Cloudcuckoolander: Leni is a pretty good example of this. She's mostly just ditzy, but sometimes acts eccentric too.
  • Color Motif: She's associated with turquoise, which is the color of her dress and the bows of her sandals.
  • Cool Big Sis: Towards her younger siblings. Despite being a ditz, she's very kind to them.
  • Cosplay: Her Full Deck persona has her become the Eleven of Hearts. Likely referencing her being the kindest and most loving of the eleven Loud siblings (as well as the fact that there's no such thing as an eleven card, but she wouldn't know that).
  • Cute Clumsy Girl: Leni is a beautiful-yet-clumsy girl, which is best exemplified with the Running Gag of her bumping into walls inadvertently (Or her tripping and slipping, or the times she fell down the stairs and flat on her face, or all the times she failed her driving test).
  • The Cutie: While incredibly stupid, her naïve and sweet demeanor makes her this.
  • Depending on the Writer:
    • Leni's intelligence actually zigzags by episode. The same girl who has trouble distinguishing the "dumb one" of her family is also keenly aware how airheaded her siblings find her.
    • Also, her kindness. Most often, she stays true to her character and is easily the nicest, most passive, and most caring and generous of all the Loud siblings, if not the whole cast. However, certain episodes like "Brawl in the Family", "The Sweet Spot" or others which focus on mass conflicts between the whole sibling group tend to ignore or downplay this, and make Leni just as malicious and violent as the other sisters.
  • Disappointing Older Sibling: While they do love her, she's seen as a bad example by her younger siblings, not because she's rude or anything, but because she often messes things up for them with her clumsiness.
  • The Ditz: Can't even ride her hand-me-downed bike when she's young, and not even aware she's tripped to mud after that.
  • Drives Like Crazy: Has failed her driving test a total of 14 times according to "Driving Miss Hazy", and as Lori notes, she can't even drive a lawn mower without the girls and Lincoln all resorting to "Leni speak." "Driver's Dread" also shows that she has a terrible taste in picking driving instructors, making her driving even worse. As of "Bummer Camp" this has been toned down considerably, although going by "Crashed Course" she's still rather lousy at the wheel.
  • Dude Magnet: By Season 6, she has had more love interests than any other Loud (and unlike Lincoln, they're all reciprocated). In her case, Chaz, Scott and Gavin.
  • Dumbass Has a Point: Despite Leni's idiocy, she can occasionally make intelligent observations. In "One Flu Over the Loud House", she opposes her uninfected siblings' idea of trying to escape from her flu-ridden siblings, instead staying to help cure her sick family. She even calls Lincoln out for treating them like lesser beings based on their condition.
  • Dumb Blonde: There are a lot of blondes in this family, but she plays this trope straight since she's the least intelligent out of them all. She is literally too dumb to walk and chew gum at the same time.
  • Dumb Is Good: While she is laughably naive, she's arguably the nicest of the Louds and much kinder than the "smart" ones of the family (e.g. Lori, Lisa, and Lincoln).
  • Easily Impressed: Naturally with generally low intelligence comes pretty low standards and a very naive nature. She called being able to see after she simply opened her eyes a miracle, and believes Lincoln to be some manner of genius for suggesting her desk lamp might be on her desk.
  • Eloquent In Their Native Tongue: Played with when Lincoln taught her how to drive. He didn't need to learn a new language, but he needed to learn how to speak in terms a Valley Girl could understand.
  • Everyone Has Standards:
    • Even Leni, who's usually too sweet to be savage, expresses blatant annoyance to Luan's puns. Likewise, she (of all people) was the first to talk behind Luan's back in "No Laughing Matter". Additionally, in the same episode, she is not amused when Lola accidentally lets slip that she read Luan's diary.
    • Somewhat subverted though as she accidentally reads Luna's diary in "Snoop's On" and ends up reading more of it against her better judgement. Through some clever trickery, Luna reminds her why she should never invade someone's privacy.
  • Extreme Doormat: As the episode "Shop Girl" shows, she isn't very good at standing up for herself.
    • See Depending on the Writer above. She is normally a bit of a doormat when at her nicest, though with some limits. But in episodes where her kindness is forgotten about, like "Brawl in the Family", her willingness to be a doormat naturally drops with it and she becomes very violent and aggressive along with the rest of the siblings.
  • Failure Is the Only Option: She's failed her driving test 14 times in "Driving Miss Hazy", and still hasn't tried again by Season 5. In "Driver's Dread", it takes Lincoln's encouragement to get her to learn how to drive again, and she finally passes.
  • The Fashionista: She likes buying and modeling clothes, and often voices her opinion on clothes, whether it's positive or negative.
  • Fatal Flaw: Leni's naivety, which can often make her a victim of painful slapstick or manipulation.
    • Her kindness can sometimes be seen as this, depending on the episode. On one hand, "Shop Girl" shows the advantages to being so nice and selfless in its conclusion, but "Everybody Loves Leni" does show that some people, even her own friends, will take advantage of that if she doesn't apply limits.
  • Flanderization: While she was thick-headed from the beginning, by "Racing Hearts", it got to the point where she had to be held on a dog leash to stop her from wandering.
  • Foil: To Lori. Lori is the sensible, rational, and sophisticated of the duo, while Leni's a complete scatterbrain who's too dumb to think for herself. However, unlike Lori, who's primarily catty, condescending, egotistical, pessimistic, and bossy, Leni is a well-meaning Nice Girl without a single mean bone in her body.
  • Foolish Sibling, Responsible Sibling: The Foolish to Lori's Responsible in that Leni is far less intelligent and rational than the former, who is primarily her voice of reason.
  • Forgetful Jones: Part of her ditzy nature, Leni has a short attention span and tends to be very forgetful.

    Leni: Wait, what was I talking about again?

  • Friend to All Children: "Schooled!" shows Leni is very good dealing with preschoolers, mostly because she operates in a similar wavelength to them.
  • Gamer Chick: Sort of. She claims she doesn't play video games because they rot her brain, but enthusiastically joins Lincoln and Clyde in playing one in "Change of Heart" and is even able to keep up with Lincoln in Dance Battle in "Grub Snub". In The Casagrandes, her name is also seen on the leaderboards of a fashion-oriented AR game at third place.
  • Genius Ditz: Despite being ditzy and absent-minded, Leni is skilled in fashion designing, wood carving, lock-picking, singing, and making smoothies, which demonstrates that despite her characteristic stupidity, she is very talented. It's taken to quite an awesome extent in "Pulp Friction", where she manages to get Vanzilla to the Post Office even after it breaks down by using a sash she bought to tie Vanzilla to a tow truck.
  • Genki Girl: Leni is certainly peppy and energetic, but not nearly to the extent of Luna, Luan, or Lynn. In "Change of Heart" Leni quite literally enthusiastically launches herself (off the couch) into Lincoln and Clyde's endeavor, dragging them through the air in her drive to get started.
  • Girly Girl: Leni definitely seems to be one of the most stereotypically feminine Loud sisters, along with Lola. She's bubbly, ditzy, light, and fashion-obsessed.
  • Girly Girl with a Tomboy Streak: Fashion and make-up are among her favorite things, yet in "Change of Heart", despite having expressed a previous disdain for video games, she's shown gleefully playing one with Lincoln and Clyde.
  • Goggles Do Nothing: Wears shades purely as head decoration. The one time they went over her eyes, she thought she went blind.
  • Hair of Gold, Heart of Gold: The sweetest of the Loud kids, whose hair is noticeably a much lighter shade of yellow than her sisters, perhaps making her a platinum blonde.
  • Hairpin Lockpick: She's apparently quite adept at using one.
  • Hidden Depths:
    • When she's making Lori's bed for a ride to the mall, she has, as Lincoln puts it, "amazing craftsmanship".
    • Upon mastering the lawnmower, Leni etches her name into the lawn.
    • In "Cheater By The Dozen" she prepares a perfectly-made salmon dish for herself and her siblings, implying she can cook to some extent.
    • In "It's a Loud, Loud, Loud, Loud House" she's shown to be a handy lockpicker and implies she's fully aware the others believe her to be a ditzy airhead.

      Leni: What? There's more to my head than just air, you know.

    • In "Pulp Friction", she manages to get Vanzilla to the Post Office and catch up to Principal Huggins even after it breaks down by using a sash she bought to tie Vanzilla to a tow truck, earning her praise from her siblings, notably Lucy, for her good thinking.
    • She exploited a "test drive" so she and Lori could get a car to make a mall run.
    • In "L is for Love", it's revealed that despite being obsessed with her own looks, she's not shallow at all, as her crush is Chaz, a fat but kindhearted boy.
    • In "Job Insecurity", she apparently has knowledge about Russian cuisine and Hawaiian wildlifenote .
    • "Change of Heart" revolves around her interpersonal skills and creating a surprisingly effective regimen for curing Clyde's infatuation almost on the fly. She also proves to have a surprisingly practical understanding of loofahs, and despite her previously stated dislike of video games, is seen playing them with the boys with a cheerful, goofy smile.
    • In "Leader of the Rack", she proves a surprisingly effective manager when put in charge of Reininger's, keeping both her coworkers and customers happy by combining her usual fun-loving ways with an impressive display of organizational skills.
    • In "No Spoilers", Leni demonstrates herself to be a competent party planner when she salvages her siblings' surprise birthday party for their Mom. Ironically, all their efforts to keep Leni away for fear of her spoiling the surprise only resulted in their preparations failing miserably until they brought Leni back. She is quickly named as the family's permanent party planner for her successful effort.
    • In "A Dark and Story Night", Leni has the resourceful idea to have Triton, DeLola and Ribbon construct a waterwheel underneath the nearby waterfall in order to give the mermaid an alternate, unlimited energy source so that they can acquire her power crystal.
    • In "How Double Dare You!", Leni's knowledge of fashion comes in handy during a geography question of all things and she is able to advance herself and Lincoln into the next round, much to Lisa's amazement. She also proves herself competent in the physical challenges, ultimately claiming the win for herself and Lincoln through raw determination.
    • In The Casagrandes, it's implied in "Undivided Attention" that she's a competent gamer, as her name is seen at third place on the leaderboards of Fashion Safari.
  • The Hyena: According to Lincoln in "Room with a Feud", Leni loves laughter, a shared interest that prompts her and Luan to become temporary roommates.
  • The Idealist: Leni perpetually sees the world through a positive light, being quite The Pollyanna and All-Loving Heroine. It takes quite a lot to knock the rose-colored glasses off her.
  • Incorruptible Pure Pureness: Leni has not even a single mean bone in her body and is unable to get morally corrupt by force, ultimately having a good reputation among authority figures and subverting the Alpha Bitch stereotype.
  • The Ingenue: Leni sure is sweet, but her naivety and inability to think for herself can often cause trouble, which is completely unintentional on her part.
  • Innocently Insensitive: While she can be a troublemaker, it's always rooted in her gullible and innocent nature and never with any malice, such as when she "freed" the lobsters and the roast chickens in the supermarket.
  • Inopportune Voice Cracking: Her voice squeaks on a regular occurrence, often when she's excited or startled.
  • Jerkass Ball: While Leni is a Nice Girl with a pure identity, she still has a mean streak to her to portray her as a realistic character rather than just a Disney-esque All-Loving Heroine. She regularly fights with Lori over clothes, and gets hit with this badly in "Brawl in the Family", where she fights over her with a dress that ignites massive drama in the household. This could be justified under good old Sibling Rivalry.
  • Kiddie Kid: While the second-eldest sibling, her ditziness means she's often entertained by things that would entertain small children, like kiddie puzzles, finger-painting, and bouncing on the trampoline. In "Schooled!", Dr. Shuttleworth thinks Leni is a preschool volunteer who relates to the toddlers on their level.
  • Kindhearted Simpleton: Leni is the nicest and sweetest member of the Loud family; however she really isn't that bright.
  • The Klutz: Frequently bumps into walls.
  • Light Feminine and Dark Feminine: Both she and Lori are feminine, but she's the sweet, naive, and innocent Light Feminine to Lori's bossy, cynical, and snarky Dark Feminine.
  • Like Is, Like, a Comma: Her most annoying habit is overusing the word "like".
  • Literal-Minded: It's one of her main quirks, it seems.
    • In "Driving Miss Hazy", when Lori tells her to make her bed in exchange for a ride to the mall, Leni actually makes Lori a new bed out of wood, entirely from scratch.
    • In "House Music", when Luna makes Leni a backup singer, Leni takes that to mean singing "backup" repeatedly. Then, when Luna tells her to sing what's on the page of the lyric book, Leni starts singing "what's on the page" repeatedly as well.
    • In "Come Sale Away", when her family is having a garage sale, she literally tries to sell the garage.
    • In "Cheater By The Dozen", she assumes that a stakeout involves eating steak, and asks if the group minds her making it a "salmonout" instead, as it's healthier.
    • In "One Flu Over the Loud House", she hears Lincoln talking about directions with phrases like "six o'clock" and then thinks he's saying it's the time. Later, he tells her to stop acting like Mother Teresa and she says, "Our mother's name is Rita".
    • In one of the podcasts, Lincoln says, "You're the best, Leni!" and she says, "I don't know any other Lenis."
  • Long Hair Is Feminine: She has long, pale-blonde hair and is one of the most traditionally feminine of the sisters.
  • Loon with a Heart of Gold: Leni's a ditzy scatterbrain with an absurd way of thinking, but she more than makes up for that with her goody-goody demeanor.
  • Magnetic Hero: Leni's overly nice demeanor makes her an easy target for instant friendships.
  • Misspelling Out Loud: In "Snow Bored", a running gag involves Leni misspelling the word "fun" as "F-O-N". She even eventually gets Lisa to do it.
  • Naïve Everygirl: Leni is a stereotypical Dumb Blonde 16-year-old girl with an endearing and innocent nature which is a frequent target for bullies.
  • Nice Girl: While she could contend with Lori thanks to being the second-oldest, she never comes even close to being a Big Sister Bully like her roommate and is inarguably the sweetest of the siblings. As the episode "Shop Girl" shows, this trait makes her an easy target for bullying, but she ultimately uses her sweetness as a defense, which proves to be a success as the bullies then turn out to like her.
  • Nice to the Waiter: In "Shop Girl", Leni gives her last piece of clothing to the waiter, giving her a part-time job.
  • Official Couple: With Chaz, as proven in her and Lori's musical number in "Really Loud Music".
  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business: Pretty rarely happens, but if Leni is ever in a bad mood, or for instance loses any desire to go shopping, then something is seriously upside-down. A good example is in "Everybody Loves Leni", where Leni elects not to go to her favorite sale because she is afraid her feuding friends will only fight over who she chooses to go with; she stays home binging and feeling like the bad guy in what was an unprovoked fight.
  • Pair the Dumb Ones: Leni is very dumb and is dating a boy named Chaz, who while not as dumb, is still not the sharpest tool in the shed.
  • Perpetual Smiler: It's a rare occurrence to see Leni frowning.
  • Phoneaholic Teenager: Downplayed; like Lori, Leni loves to use her phone, though she isn't obsessed with it like the former.
  • Plucky Comic Relief: If Luan isn't taking the comedic spotlight with her puns, expect Leni to do so with her ditzy nature.
  • The Pollyanna: Unless something upsets her, Leni is always happy-go-lucky.
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni: She's the red to Lori's blue. Leni is very scatterbrained and too dumb to think for herself, while also being very optimistic. In contrast, Lori is smarter, more rational, and more realistic than Leni, and she often acts as her voice of reason. However, Leni could also have traits of a Blue Oni, since she's a lot less likely to get angry than Lori and is arguably the sweetest of her siblings (especially when compared to Lola).
  • Sanity Ball: In "One Flu Over the Loud House", she doesn't want to join her uninfected siblings' plan to escape from her flu-ridden sisters, instead opting to stay and care for her sick family. She even calls out Lincoln for treating them like lesser beings because of their condition. This doubles as Smart Ball.
  • Shipper on Deck: She and Lori act largely supportive of Luna and Sam's relationship in "Racing Hearts".
  • Shout-Out: Leni is named after Lennie Small from Of Mice and Men.
  • Sibling Rivalry: Consistently fights Lori over pieces of clothing.
  • Slapstick Knows no Gender:
    • So far she's been used as Lisa's guinea pig twice, once in a flashback from "Left in the Dark" where her head is swollen and has pink spots all over her face. Then in "Project Loud House", Lisa gives her an ointment that turns her skin blue and almost gave her a bloating potion but was intercepted by Lincoln.
    • Another Running Gag in the series is her plowing into walls face first.
  • Smart Ball: Picks this up in "One Flu Over the Loud House", where she refuses to escape from her flu-ridden family and instead opts to stay and take care of them, even calling Lincoln out for treating them like lesser beings based on their condition.
  • Smarter Than You Look: Many throwaway lines suggest that Leni is smarter than she seems and only acts stupid to stand out. The same girl who has trouble distinguishing the "dumb one" of her family is also keenly aware of how airheaded her siblings find her.
  • Spiders Are Scary: Leni is shown to have ongoing arachnophobia.
  • Sudden Intelligence: She becomes even smarter than Lisa after being hit on the head with a shelf and several pairs of shoes in "Butterfly Effect", though this is later revealed to be all in Lincoln's head at the end of the episode.
  • Super Gullible: To say that she's easy to fool would be an understatement. Luan loves to exploit this for her pranks.
  • Talking in Your Sleep: She once had a "fashion nightmare" that she narrated while sleeping.

    Leni: Scrunchies...leg-warmers...SOCKS WITH SANDALS!

  • Teach Her Anger: In "Shop Girl", Leni is trained by her siblings to be more aggressive and able to stand up to herself. She succeeds initially, only to regress to her passiveness in the end.
  • Textile Work Is Feminine: Leni is an aspiring fashion designer who makes most of her own clothing and she's one of the most feminine of the Loud sisters.
  • Teens Are Short: Not in the main cartoon, where she's the second-tallest of the Loud siblings, but played straight in the live-action Christmas movie, where her actress is a great deal shorter than Luna, Luan, and Lynn Jr.
  • Tomboyish Name: While definitely not a tomboy, she is the only sister in the house to have a guy-sounding name (Leni sounds like Lenny). But while most English speakers will think of the masculine name Lenny, Leni is actually a feminine German name. Three German Olympic athletes, Leni Schmidt, Helene "Leni" Junker, and Magdalena "Leni" Lohmar, all had this name.
  • Valley Girl: She's a teenage girl stereotype of the Dumb Blonde variety. Lincoln has to resort to using "Leni-speak" in order to teach her how to drive.
  • Verbal Tic: She tends to say "like" a lot. In "Undie Pressure", her challenge (similar to the rest of her sisters) is ultimately not to say it. She fails quickly.
  • Why Did It Have to Be Snakes?: She hates spiders due to fear, which is a plot point in "Along Came a Sister".

Luna Loud 

The loud house the lost panties

"STAGE DIIIIVE!!!"

Voiced by: (English) Nika Futterman
Voiced by: (Latin America) Alicia Barragán
Voiced by: (Brazilian Portuguese) Mariana Torres
Voiced by: (Italian) Elena Perino
Voiced by: (Japanese) Mutsumi Tamura
Played by: Sophia Woodward

The third-eldest Loud sibling, 15-year-old (16 as of Season 5) Luna is an aspiring musician with dreams of being a rock star. She's incredibly rambunctious when rocking out, but very mellow and grounded to reality in her free time.


  • Affectionate Nickname: She herself goes by the alias "Lunes", which her father and Sam also address her by.
  • Ambiguously Bi: She is a talented rocker with Boyish Short Hair and a punk outfit, and she is attracted to Sam, a girl. However, she previously showed interest towards Hugh in "Study Muffin", which gave a hint that she might be bisexual, which most of the fanbase has come to believe as well. Series writer Kevin Sullivan stated in an interview that they never gave Luna an official orientation out of respect to the many LGBTQ+ youth who have struggled/are struggling with their sexual and/or gender identity.
  • Beware the Nice Ones: Though she's known for being a Cool Big Sis, and the elder Loud sister that Lincoln feels the closest to, Luna still has her moments where she's not afraid to use her fists.
  • Boyish Short Hair: Luna sports a pixie cut and is one of the more tomboyish of the Loud girls. To drive it home, before she came to love rock and roll she used to let her hair grow out.
  • Break the Cutie:
    • Gets hit with this hard in "Really Loud Music", in which she is forced by her managers to transition from her rock image to a pop one simply because the latter is more likely to win the crowd. It's painfully obvious that she didn't want to go through with it.
    • She suffers a milder case of this in "Racing Hearts", in which she is left bummed out over her and her date Sam having little in common.
  • Breakout Character: Early on, Luna was one of the least focused on sisters on the show. However, her popularity with fans would eventually lead her to become the most prominent Loud sister, outside of Lori; even becoming the first sister to get a half-hour special dedicated to her. She's now more or less the Tritagonist of the series and among the show's most fleshed out characters. Case in point; she went from having literally only one episode focusing on her in season two to having multiple focal stories including an extended 22-minute special about her in season three.
  • Brief Accent Imitation: She sometimes speaks in a British accent, probably to imitate the British rock stars she loves. Her challenge in "Undie Pressure" is not to do this (she compensates by doing a Swedish accent instead.) She does well until she discovers there's a contest featuring who can do the best British accent.
  • Broken Ace: She's good at playing music. Not so much when it comes to composing it as seen in "House Music".
  • Character Development: Eventually becomes the second-most important and fleshed out sister, next to Lori, enough to be considered the tritagonist.
  • Child Popstar: This image gets invoked on her in "Really Loud Music" as a result of her overly trusting nature towards showbiz authority, ultimately subverting her rock star desires.
  • Color Motif: She's associated with the color purple, as is shown on her clothes, her eyeshadow, and her "edgy" interest of being a rockstar.
  • Cool Big Sis: Fits this the best among the older Loud siblings due to her generally cool and kind nature, in comparison to the kind-but-dim-and-kooky Leni and Luan, and the more-abrasive Lori.
  • Cool Bike: Modified Leni's old bike into a chopper complete with a side-car before passing it along to Luan.
  • Cosplay: Her Full Deck persona has her become the Night Club. After all, what's a club without a musical performance?
  • Daddy's Girl: Luna has a really close relationship to her dad, in addition to taking after him. She shares the entire plot with him in "House Music".
  • Dreary Half-Lidded Eyes: She has an aloof and chill Cool Big Sis attitude reflected in her half-closed eyes. This also serves to show her purple eyeshadow.
  • Fake Brit: An In-Universe example; she's an Anglophile and often speaks in a British accent.
  • Fatal Flaw: Her recklessness and love of music has often caused problems for her and for others.
  • Fangirl: She's a wholeheartedly devoted fan to Mick Swagger, ultimately viewing him as her idol.
  • Gayngst: Kinda sort of, possibly. In "L is for Love" Luna shows a lot of uncertainty about whether her crush Sam would even like her, but it's not revealed that Sam is a girl until the end of the episode. The episode is ambiguous on if Luna's anxiety is specifically because they may have an Incompatible Orientation, or because of the insecurity that some have toward their crushes in general.
  • Genki Girl: She's highly energetic, especially when rocking out.
  • Gratuitous English: In the Italian dub, she usually greets Lincoln with "brother".
  • Hidden Buxom: The concept reel of "Cover Girls" (where she, not Luan, was dressed as Leni) showed that she isn't as flat as her character model generally depicts her as. Though that could very well be her wearing a pair of Fake Boobs as part of her disguise, being that Leni is most definitely not flat.
  • Hidden Depths:
    • Who would have thought that a wild future rock star like her could also play classical violin, or a harp?
    • "A Roadie To Nowhere" shows that she is way more adept at coding than she lets on.
  • High-School Sweethearts: She and Sam are an Official Couple as of "Racing Hearts".
  • I Just Want to Be Special: As shown in "Really Loud Music", she doesn't just want to be a rockstar, she wants her music to be liked by everyone. She learns that she can't please everybody, and to just play the song she wants.
  • Idiot Ball: Normally, Luna is among the more sensible of the Loud siblings, and possesses at least average intelligence. However, she can get so caught up rocking out that she does things that are incredibly stupid, for example trying to stage-dive people who clearly can't hold her weight, such as the six-year-olds at Lola and Lana's kiddie concert in "For Bros About to Rock" and Lily in "Changing the Baby".
  • Ink-Suit Actor: She does look a bit like Nika Futterman.
    The loud house the lost panties
    This piece of fan art, showing caricatures of the actresses dressed as their respective characters,
    The loud house the lost panties
    shows just how similar Luna and Futterman really look.
  • Jerkass Ball: In "House Music" she takes a level in jerkass after hearing that Mick Swagger will be scouting talents at the Family Fun Fair the Louds are competing in, going as far as kicking her dad out of their band and treating her other siblings harshly to suit her own needs.
    • Also in "Really Loud Music", when she disses her family for questioning her changing her image to get to the music business.
  • Large Ham: Especially dramatic when she is rocking out.
  • Leitmotif: The theme tune played rock & roll style.
  • Likes Older Women: She refers to Lincoln's teacher as "smokin'".
  • Long Hair Is Feminine: Back when she was just a typical schoolgirl who hadn't even came to love rock & roll yet, Luna used to let her hair grow out. She also trades her short-haired rocker appearance to look like a long haired pink popstar girl as part of her forced Girliness Upgrade for the sake of stardom in "Really Loud Music".
  • Loony Fan: To the point she ended up on the news for chasing after Mick Swagger for a lock of his hair.
  • Maniac Tongue: She usually flails her tongue when rocking out. It also flops out when she's bounding after Hugh like a dog in "Study Muffin."
  • Motor Mouth: Prone to speaking quickly.
  • Nice Girl: She is the second-nicest out of the Loud ladies (after Leni) and Lincoln usually gets along with her the best. Although, her temper has slightly increased in the later seasons.
  • No Indoor Voice: She's considered the loudest of the Louds. Not surprising, given she's an aspiring musician.
  • Official Couple: After having received her love note at the end of "L is for Love", Sam Sharp is finally dating Luna as of "Racing Hearts".
  • Older Than She Looks: She can pass as being 12 or 13 even though she's 15. This is best emphasized by her lack of breasts and Youthful Freckles.
  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business: In "A Tale of Two Tables", Luna tells Lincoln that singing is prohibited from the dinner table, which startles him.
  • Pink Means Feminine: She's forced to wear pink attire going hand-in-hand with her invoked popstar image in "Really Loud Music".
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni: She's the blue to Luan's red.
    • The red to Lucy's blue. Both have edgy fields of interest, but Lucy is a near emotionless goth while Luna is a loud and energetic rockstar.
    • The red to Sam's blue. Unusually for this trope, the outdoors loving Sam is the more blue of the two. Sam seems a little more soft spoken and reserved in comparison to Luna, who can blurt out a "Woo-woo!" out of excitement and wears her emotions on her sleeve. A downplayed example as both are aspiring rockstar girls.
  • Rockers Smash Guitars:
    • She does this in "The Loudest Yard" after playing an electric guitar rendition of "The Star-Spangled Banner" in a nod to Jimi Hendrix.
    • In a flashback in "Hand-Me-Downer", she can be heard doing this off-screen before giving Lincoln the broken guitar.
    • Parodied during a flashback in "Driving Ambition", where she smashes a harp instead.
  • Speaks in Shout-Outs: While usually not as incessantly or as intent on "nailing the occasion" as Luan with her puns, Luna clearly loves quoting well-known song lyrics in her normal speech. While these (as anyone would anticipate) usually are classic rock lyrics, she has demonstrated she isn't above tossing out an occasional "Oops!...I Did It Again" or "Achy Breaky Heart".
  • The Rock Star: More often than not she's rocking out on her guitar.
  • Tomboy: Luna is an aspiring rock star.
  • Tomboyish Voice: She loves rocking out on her electric guitar and aspires to be a rock star, which aren't particularly feminine activities, and she has a deep and raspy androgynous voice courtesy of Nika Futterman.
  • Tomboyness Upgrade: When she was younger, she was a shy, long-haired Girly Girl who played the violin. Now she's an energetic short-haired tomboy who likes rock music.
  • Tomboy with a Girly Streak: She's a rambunctious, deep-voiced electric guitar player, but isn't completely devoid of a girly side; she regularly wears eyeshadow and a skirt, likes to apply facial cream to herself and gets giddy over the prospect of Lincoln having a girlfriend. Prior to the third season at least, she also used to act as Lily's caretaker amongst the sisters. This was also Invoked on her in "Really Loud Music", where she was forced to abandon her rockstar aspirations in favor of a pop image simply because the latter is more popular, and she wore incredibly glamorous and pink clothing to boot.
  • Totally Radical: Often uses slang like "dude".
  • Tritagonist: Eventually becomes the second-most-important of the sisters, next to Lori.
  • Unwillingly Girly Tomboy: She becomes one under her invoked "Lulu" image in "Really Loud Music", in which she is forced to become a materialistic and glamorous popstar simply because it outnumbers rock in popularity.
  • Verbal Tic: She says "dude" a lot even if she's talking to one of her sisters or another girl, and "brah" even if she's talking to her own brother.
  • Vocal Dissonance: Despite being 15 years old, she has a rather raspy, croaky voice. Her singing may have something to do with that.
  • Waxing Lyrical: Quite a few of her lines are references to real-life pop songs.
  • Your Mind Makes It Real: In "Really Loud Music", she begins hearing her family randomly burst into musical numbers when she has trouble thinking of the right sound for the song she's writing; according to Lisa, the family's numbers are really aural hallucinations caused by her uncertainty, and Luna is the only one to see and hear them.
  • Youthful Freckles: To emphasize that she is one of the more energetic Loud sisters.

Luan L. Loud 

The loud house the lost panties

"(laugh) Get it?"

Voiced by: (English) Cristina Pucelli
Voiced by: (Latin America) Leyla Rangel
Voiced by: (Brazilian Portuguese) Gabriela Medeiros
Voiced by: (Italian) Irene Multari
Voiced by: (Japanese) Misato Matsuoka
Played by: Catherine Ashmore Bradley

The fourth-eldest Loud sister, 14-year-old (15 as of Season 5) Luan has a fondness for comedy and practical jokes. She's an aspiring comedian who often gets on the nerves of others with her tomfoolery, but never gives up. While far less mature and down-to-earth than the others, Luan means well and has a good heart, ultimately sporting not a single mean bone in her body. Well, except on April Fools' Day...


  • 10-Minute Retirement: Decides to tearfully retire from her April Fool's pranks in "Fool Me Twice" after being scared by the prank of her own family. This lasts throughout Season 4 until the Season 5 episode "Silence of the Luans", where Lily manages to snap her out.
  • Aborted Declaration of Love: Luan repeatedly tries to come up with excuses as a means of avoiding the scene in the play where she has to kiss Benny in "Stage Plight", because she's insecure of her crush.
  • Acquired Situational Narcissism: In "Funny Business", Luan admits that she was initially Not so Above It All when it came to gaining praise from the audience at children's birthday parties, despite having held Lincoln in contempt for his own narcissism about his viral pratfall. However, she learned that different audiences enjoy different forms of comedy.
  • Actually Pretty Funny: Sometimes, her cheesy puns manage to make people laugh.
  • All-Loving Heroine: Luan is an extremely optimistic individual who wants to enlighten everyone she meets with her acts of comedy. While they often express annoyance towards her, Luan simply shrugs it off and continues her goal of making everyone laugh.
  • Animal Motifs: Luan's appearance is quite squirrel-like, based on her buck teeth and swirly ponytail.
  • Animals Hate Her: When she was just a little girl aspiring to become a comedian, Luan told jokes to the family pets, which they responded to with distaste.
  • Annoying Laugh: A high-pitched chuckle preceded by her catchphrase of "Get it?", which is sometimes, though not always, seen as annoying by her siblings.
  • Annoying Younger Sibling: She plays it straight to her older siblings and inverts it to her younger siblings because they don't like her jokes or pranks.
  • April Fools' Plot: So far, there have been four episodes that focus on her extreme pranks on April Fools' Day.
  • Astonishingly Appropriate Appearance: "A Pimple Plan" reveals that Luan's hair
    The loud house the lost panties
    ◊ naturally grows in the shape of a jester's hat.
  • Attention Whore: Luan loves being the center of everyone's attention. She occasionally pulls pranks and performs tricks to get a reaction from others, such as in "Cereal Offender" where she demands the whole grocery store to watch her juggle a bunch of eggs.
  • Ax-Crazy: Luan becomes utterly relentless and ruthless with her over-the-top pranks on April Fools.
  • The Baby of the Bunch: Quite possibly the least seriously treated member of the family. Everyone regularly groans in annoyance to her comedic antics and overall view her as a nuisance. This is best exemplified in "No Laughing Matter" in which she becomes sensitive to hearing her siblings' true feelings and they feel guilty over their Brutal Honesty for no reason other than love and thus revert her back to her previous state. Even Leni and Lily (who's the literal example of this trope) blatantly detest her eccentricity.
  • Badass Adorable: "April Fools Rules", "Fool's Paradise", and "Fool Me Twice" reveal that underneath Luan's sweet demeanor is a completely psychopathic side where her pranks are borderline deadly. Even her parents are intimidated by it.
  • Banana Peel: Luan sometimes uses the classic 'slipping on a banana peel' prank.
  • Berserk Button: Stealing her thunder is DEFINITELY not a good idea.
  • Beware the Nice Ones: She's kind and perky, but you don't wanna mess with her. This studio drawing
    The loud house the lost panties
    ◊ says it all.
  • Beware the Silly Ones: She's not afraid to show off her angry side if someone messes with her. Should you be on the Loud premises on April Fools Day, then may God have mercy on your soul.
  • Big Bad: In "April Fools Rules", "Fool's Paradise", and "Fool Me Twice" as she is able to sabotage her family with her pranks.
  • The Big Damn Kiss: Luan finally gets her first kiss with Benny at the end of "Stage Plight".
  • Black Comedy: She mentions that she likes this kind of humor in "Left in the Dark".
  • Break the Cutie: Happens to her in "No Laughing Matter", where Luan becomes disheartened over hearing her siblings express annoyance towards her comedy routine, leading her to drop the act for good. Until her siblings notice the error in their ways and revert her back to her previous state.
  • Brilliant, but Lazy: It's implied that Luan isn't as dimwitted as she seems but is just too lazy and hopelessly naïve to set her mind to academics. In "Future Tense" she was able to solve Royal Woods' parking crisis while volunteering for the local government, showing that she possesses a mild knowledge of serious topics, but since comedy is her ultimate future, 90% of her brain runs on that subject.
  • Broken Ace:
    • Luan performs her job as an entertainer well in the public eyes, but when she tells jokes and pulls pranks at home, her family always crosses the line. She's also not very knowledgeable of serious topics as "Future Tense" implies. To top it all off, her reputation is not devoid of permanent scars thanks to her annual evil streak.
    • Other than "Friendzy" and "Dance, Dance Resolution", most episodes show Luan hanging around by herself and often talking to herself, whether through her puppet Mr. Coconuts or not. Not only at home but also at school. It seemed that before Benny, she was a loner who never had anyone to talk to outside of her family (and a bunch of other clowns from clown school like Giggles). If her lack of social interaction in episodes like "Stage Plight" is any indication, some of her character flaws are perhaps a result, at least partially, of her loner status.
  • Bucket Booby-Trap: Spends "Project Loud House" trying to use this prank on someone, frequently being foiled by Lincoln. She finally succeeds with Lincoln's teacher.
  • Bunny-Ears Lawyer: Despite Luan's over-the-top eccentricity, she's extremely competent when it comes to plotting pranks. She's also shown to be a responsible and capable babysitter in "Sitting Bull".
  • Butt-Monkey: Just how many times has her family groaned at her jokes? Her own pranks even backfire on her sometimes.
  • Can't Take Criticism: In "No Laughing Matter", Luan becomes upset when her siblings express opposition to her comedy and eventually retires out of insecurity.
  • Catchphrase:
    • "Get it?" - Usually after telling a joke or pun.
    • "But seriously..." - Sometimes after making a pun when a problem is at hand.
  • Characterization Marches On: Luan has gone through such a progressive phase throughout the series. She started off as a satellite Plucky Comic Relief with little purpose other than to annoy her siblings with her irritatingly lucky routine before being shown as a Green-Eyed Monster who gets jealous at the first sight of her stolen thunder. Then, she was portrayed as an utterly sociopathic monster who becomes the show's worst villain yet only on April Fool's Day. After having regressed back to her cheerful ways, she's shown to be semi-capable of going through cynical phases. Her biggest peak yet, however, comes from "Stage Plight", in which she is finally given a plot devoid of her eccentricity which instead focuses on her social anxiety and finally getting her first kiss.
  • Character Tics: "Head Poet's Anxiety" shows that water will squirt out of Luan's gag flower if startled.
  • Cheerful Child: Although she's 14/15 and thus older than most examples of the trope, Luan is a happy girl with neverending enthusiasm.
  • Childish Older Sibling: She constantly tells annoying puns and plays pranks on her younger siblings. Inverted to her older siblings.
  • Children Are Innocent: Luan is very sweet and kindhearted and averts negative behavior typical of her peers. However, on April Fool's Day, she falls into Teens Are Monsters territory.
  • Class Clown: Rare female example. She likes to make other people laugh, is an Attention Whore, and is even seen literally dressed as a clown in some episodes.
  • Cloudcuckoolander: Luan is very strange. Her entire character revolves around telling bad puns, laughing like a lunatic at her own jokes, pulling pranks when least appropriate, and anthropomorphizing her puppet like it's a friend (or boyfriend) of hers.
  • Consulting Mister Puppet: She occasionally interacts with Mr. Coconuts like he's a real person.
  • Cool Big Sis: While occasionally a nuisance to them, Luan nevertheless loves her younger siblings and likes to entertain them. She can even be moral enough to get her head out of Cloudcuckooland to support them.
    • Out of all her siblings, she seems to share the closest bond with Lily. She's occasionally seen playing with her and telling her jokes. Lily was also the only sibling who didn't fall victim to any of Luan's fatal pranks in the April Fool's trilogy; even when she did, they weren't specifically meant for her.
    • Being an entertainer for their birthday parties, she also plays this role to many children whilst exhibiting the courtesy of innocent comedy.
  • Color Motif: She's associated with the color yellow, thanks to her yellow skirt, long socks, and hair scrunchie.
  • Cosplay: Her Full Deck persona has her become the Joker. Very fitting considering her actual character as Fun Personified.
  • Crazy-Prepared: Luan knows how to pull pranks on even the most unsuspecting of victims, utilizing many prolonged methods beforehand. No wonder she did well in the clowning academy.
  • Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass: Luan may seem like a complete scatterbrain who lacks skill and talent, but on April Fool's Day, she takes her Crazy-Prepared pranking methods to an all-time high, even outwitting her parents.
  • Cuckoosnarker: Luan can easily make snarky remarks when provoked, as exhibited through her phone call with Lincoln in "Funny Business".
  • Cute and Psycho: Luan sure is sweet and Innocently Insensitive, but on April Fool's Day, she becomes a relentlessly violent sociopath who views her fatal pranks as harmless and amusing.
  • The Cutie: Her fatal pranks and annual sociopathy aside, Luan is just as much a sweet and innocent goody-two shoes as Leni.
  • Daddy's Girl: Luan has a very close relationship with her father, which he reciprocates. She inherited his immature, eccentric ways and love for puns. She shares a plot with him in "Feast or Family".
  • Deadly Prank: On April Fools Day, her pranks very much dip into this territory. She nearly drowned her family in a pool of gelatin, shaved all the pets, spilled bleach on Lucy, and trapped her family in a fatal motel...and that's just for starters.
  • Deadpan Snarker: She can surprisingly be this at times. Not as much as Lori, of course, but Luan can often snark if she's provoked enough.
  • Demonic Dummy: Her old dummy, Col. Crackers, seems to possess free will and has talked by himself. Also, maybe her current one, Mr. Coconuts.
  • Depending on the Artist: It varies by episode whether Luan has braces exclusively on her upper teeth, or on both her upper and lower teeth. Sometimes, it may even vary by shots.
  • Depending on the Writer:
    • How humorous Luan is depends on the writer. Contrary to her funny demeanor, she doesn't tell any jokes or make any puns in "Along Came a Sister", "Out on a Limo", "Back in Black", "Cheater by the Dozen", "Spell It Out", "Change of Heart", "Not a Loud", or "No Place Like Homeschool".
    • Whether her puns make people laugh or simply groan in annoyance. The former is shown in "Party Down" and "Head Poet's Anxiety", while in most other episodes it's usually the latter case.
  • Didn't Think This Through: In "Fool's Paradise", Luan failed to properly unleash her fatal pranks to make it so that her family would fall victim to them, rather she herself did in the end. She gets another in "Fool Me Twice" when her family hires stunt doubles to get pranked for them, she convinced the stunt doubles to humiliate her family in her place. But she didn't consider that her family would be humiliated in front of "other people", instead of just in front of "her", and is guilt-ridden when her family decides to move to escape the embarrassment.
  • The Ditz: Downplayed as she's not particularly dumb to the same extent as Leni, but her absurdity and eccentricity often cloud her judgment and make her naïve to rationality, leading her to clown around when least appropriate.
  • The Dreaded: She becomes this on every April Fools' Day, to the point where even Lola is terrified of her. Every year she makes a vow to escalate her pranks in the year to follow, which naturally has the family running for the hills; rightfully so as she has mounted an impressive share of potentially life-threatening traps against them.
  • Dreadful Musician:
    • Shown to be one in "Really Loud Music", where her musical number, "Luan's Laugh Parade", gains disapproval from Luna based on its quirky nature, while Luna herself is looking for the right song of her very own to sing for America's Next Hitmaker.

      Luna: Well, it can't be that one.

    • She was also the only one who didn't play an actual instrument during her siblings' performance in "House Music", instead using her whoopee cushion.
  • Dude, Not Funny!: Occasionally jokes around in inappropriate situations.
    • In "One Flu Over the Loud House", Luan makes a joke while her sisters are being infected with the flu. However, she herself is subsequently given the flu as karmic justice.

    Luan: Guys, it's snot what you think! [sneezes and suddenly gets infected with the flu]

    • In "Rita Her Rights", Luan tells her mom a prison joke while she is in jail.
    • Luan plans to tell Rita jokes about how old she is on her birthday in "No Spoilers", only for Lori to act as the voice of reason and tell her that Rita probably wouldn't want to hear jokes about how old she is.
    • In "Any Given Sundae", she attempts to cheer Lily up with a string of ice-cream puns. Lola is quick to remind her that Lily had just missed her first bite of ice cream.
  • Enemy to All Living Things: On April Fools Day, no form of life is safe around Luan, if the Loud pets shivering in fear over having been shaved by her is an indication.
  • Everyone Has Standards:
    • While she enjoys filming and laughing at other people's humiliation, she would never post an embarrassing video on the web without their permission.
    • She considers knock-knock jokes to be the lowest form of humor.
    • She's completely horrified with what she's done when she believes her doppelganger prank in "Fool Me Twice" was the reason for her family deciding to move house. At that moment, she realised she went too far and promised she would do whatever she could to undo the damage. Of course, the family were just faking as part of a revenge prank.
  • Evil Laugh: Luan lets these out whenever her family falls victim to her pranks on April Fool's Day.
  • Exact Eavesdropping: In "No Laughing Matter," Luan is so excited that she plays over-the-top practical jokes, complemented with Incredibly Lame Puns on her siblings to announce her upcoming stand up gig. While she's away, they complain about how her "jokes" are not funny, and that the only one who finds humor in her pranks is her. Luan overhears from the stair case, and sadly goes up to her room. After several days of not joking, or pranking her siblings Lincoln becomes concerned, and she tells him she's quitting comedy because if she can't make her family laugh, then there's no way she'll make anyone else laugh.
  • Famed In-Story: Luan is very famous in-universe with both little kids and the elderly due to her classic puns.
  • Fatal Flaw: Luan's impulsiveness. Some scenes imply that her frequency to joke around and prank are a compulsion, and when done during inappropriate situations, karma will come back to bite her in the ass.
  • For Happiness: Luan's main goal is to make everyone happy, laugh at her comedic antics at that.
  • Friend to All Children: Luan is an entertainer for children's birthday parties, so she gets along very well with them. She also shares a close bond with her younger siblings and loves to tell them her jokes, especially Lily. Not surprising, considering she has a bit of a childlike personality herself.
  • Fun Personified: Unless it's April Fool's Day, Luan is a happy-go-lucky, optimistic girl who loves cheering others up with her comedy.
  • The Gadfly: Luan clowns around primarily to get attention from her siblings, although she's one of the rare examples where she's not doing it to annoy anyone, but rather entertain them.
  • Genius Ditz: Despite being an overall scatterbrain, Luan is extremely competent at engineering increasingly complicated pranks on April Fool's Day and can fatally outwit unsuspecting victims.
  • Genki Girl: She's extremely energetic and cheerful.
  • Girlish Pigtails:
    • A flashback in "Head Poet's Anxiety" reveals that Luan used to have pigtails held by two of her scrunchies.
    • She also wears pigtails at the back of her hair while under the alter-ego of The Jokester, one with a pink scrunchie and the other with a yellow one.
  • Green-Eyed Monster: In "Head Poet's Anxiety", Luan gets jealous of Lucy surpassing her goal of becoming the youngest performer at Royal Woods Theater and holds a grudge against her throughout the rest of the day. Of course, Luan sacrifices her goal and reconciles with Lucy the next day.
  • Hair Antennae: She has two long hair strands sticking up from the middle of her forehead, perfectly suiting her quirky nature.
  • Heroic Comedic Sociopath: When April Fool's Day arrives, she becomes utterly ruthless on this day.
  • Hidden Depths:
    • She's capable of engineering complicated traps and planning day-long prank marathons that rely on predicting her victims' actions down to the very second. It gets crazier with each April Fool's prank-a-thon.
    • "No Laughing Matter" reveals that Luan owns a diary, an item typically associated with girly girls.
    • "Director's Rut" reveals that, not only is she a talented playwright, she's skilled enough to direct it.
  • The Hyena: Just about every episode in which Luan has a speaking role, she's bound to laugh at her own jokes, sometimes even twice within the same episode.
  • Hypocrite:
    • She considers knock-knock jokes to be the lowest form of comedy, yet she herself makes them on occasion.
    • In "Head Poet's Anxiety", Luan teaches Lucy to build up a thick skin against criticism in order to pursue her life in the showbusiness, yet she herself was shown to be sensitive to criticism in "No Laughing Matter", though this could very well have been her learning from that instance.
    • Luan called Lincoln out for the pride he exhibited about his viral pratfall in "Funny Business", when she herself was narcissistic about her own fame attained from the attention children give her at birthday parties.
  • Hypocritical Humor: In "A Tale of Two Tables", Luan calls Lincoln out for attempting to tell a joke at the dinner table, telling him that such conduct is immature. This is coming from Luan of all people.
  • The Idealist: Luan thinks that life is all about fun and laughs.
  • Idiot Hair: She has a few forehead strands of hair that sprout upwards.
  • The Illegible: When Lincoln reads Luan's pun notebook in "No Laughing Matter", he has trouble deciphering her handwriting.
  • The Ingenue: Luan is very much a Nice Girl and a Kiddie Kid who, prior to "Stage Plight", had never shared a kiss with anyone.
  • Innocently Insensitive: Luan's pranks can go beyond limits at times. Make no mistake though, she has little malicious intent and just wants to make people laugh.
  • Intergenerational Friendship: The beginning of "Head Poet's Anxiety" shows that Luan is on good terms with the elderly, as she is seen on their bus entertaining them with her comedy.
  • I Regret Nothing: Despite having been served a cold dish of karma at the end of "Fool's Paradise", Luan remains immorally unaffected and plots even nastier pranks to come the next year.
  • I Reject Your Reality: Luan can't help but use her goofball antics as a defense mechanism and respond to criticism with tears, in addition to using a ventriloquist to make her feel company and being so hopelessly idealistic to the point of turning down cynicism.
  • It Amused Me: Her family is forced to suffer her many excruciating pranks on April Fool's purely for her own amusement.
  • Jerkass Ball:
    • Luan picks this up on every April Fool's Day, where she treats her family like absolute shit and pulls dangerous pranks on them without realizing they could get killed.
    • She also picks it up in the middle of "Head Poet's Anxiety", where she becomes a hostile Green-Eyed Monster towards Lucy for surpassing her dream of becoming the youngest performer at the Royal Woods Theater, showing that she mentored her All for Nothing. Luckily, Luan comes to a Jerkass Realization when Lucy plays sick out of guilt, ultimately reconciling and sacrificing her dream.
  • Jerkass Realization:
    • At the end of "Fool Me Twice", Luan realizes how cruel her behavior on April Fool's Day has been when the rest of the family threatens to move out of the house and feels sorry for her malicious actions, therefore learning her lesson.
    • The climax of "Head Poet's Anxiety" culminates in Luan realizing how much of a selfish Green-Eyed Monster she was for discouraging Lucy's record as the youngest performer at the Royal Woods Theater, courtesy of the latter faking sick.
  • Karma Houdini: Played With in "April Fool's Rules" and "Fool's Paradise". In the former, she gets pied in the face by Ronnie Anne yet that is merely a slap on the wrist. In the latter, she gets into a Humiliation Conga when she falls victims to her own pranks courtesy of Mr. Loud and Lincoln. However, none of these punishments discourage Luan from plotting even more and much worse pranks the next April Fool's Days.
  • Kiddie Kid: Among Lincoln's circle of teenage sisters, where each of them is either a Valley Girl or tomboy, Luan stands out on the middle ground, being more childlike and unique than either of them. She's 14/15 years old yet has a fondness for puns, pranking people, clowns, and childlike comedy in general. She also owns and plays with several novelty toys, most notably her ventriloquist Mr. Coconuts.
  • Kindhearted Simpleton: Luan is by default a Daddy's Girl of a Bumbling Dad and as such has a brain that runs on impulses and irrationalities. That said, she has little malice behind her actions.
  • "Knock Knock" Joke: She considers these to be the lowest form of comedy, though that doesn't stop her from making them on occasion.
  • Lame Pun Reaction: Her siblings often moan at her jokes.
  • Large Ham: Due to being a comedian, she sometimes hams things up.
  • Laser-Guided Karma: Every April Fools Day episode gives her some comeuppance one after the other.
    • Downplayed in both "April Fool's Rules" and "Fool's Paradise". In the former, Ronnie Anne pies her in face while she falls victim to her own pranks in the latter, but neither stop her from plotting even worse and more cruel pranks the next April Fool's Day.
    • Played straight at the end of "Fool Me Twice", where the rest of the Louds claim to be moving out of the house just to mess with Luan in retaliation. It is then revealed that the truck they loaded contained nothing but Luan's stuff, prompting her to chase after it.
  • Laughing at Your Own Jokes: She does this almost all the time.
  • Loon with a Heart of Gold: Luan makes up for her occasional annoyance in well-meaning nature and genuine kindness.
  • Love Makes You Dumb: Luan's crush on Benny launches her into full-on awkwardness in "Stage Plight" as she repeatedly tries to ditch the Romeo and Juliet play recital to avoid having to kiss him.
  • Masculine Girl, Feminine Boy: The Masculine Girl to Benny's Feminine Boy. Luan's hobby of pulling pranks and telling jokes aren't traditionally considered feminine, while Benny's emotional sensitivity and love of theater are. Also, while they both have their own puppets, Luan has a male ventriloquist dummy named Mr. Coconuts, who wears a boyish outfit and has a gruff, masculine voice, while Benny has a female marionette named Mrs. Appleblossom, who dresses all girly and has a sophisticated, feminine voice. It's also Luan out of the two who struggles to admit and reveal her feelings out loud, while Benny has no problem expressing his feelings and his affection for Luan in the play.
  • Motor Mouth: Occasionally, mainly in regards to her enthusiasm for jokes.

    Lincoln: Why did the chicken cross the road?

    Luan: TO GET TO THE OTHER SIDE! TO RUN AWAY FROM THE COOK! TO PROVE HE'S NO CHICKEN! [laughs maniacally]

  • Nice Girl: She loves making people happy for free and generally is cheerful and friendly. Unless it's April Fool's Day.
  • Non-Ironic Clown: Numerous episodes have shown Luan either leaving the house, or coming back in, dressed in clown attire, and considering that it is alluded to that she runs a successful business, it means that people hire her, re-hire her, and recommend her services to other parents, whose kids actually like, and laugh at, her clowning act.
  • Non-Standard Character Design: A mild case, but she's the only Loud sister with curved eyelashes, likely to emphasize her quirkiness. Also, most of the siblings' eyebrows are proportioned on their hair, while Luan's are on her face as they should be.
  • No Sense of Personal Space: Luan is shown to have shades of this, as she occasionally gets too close to others when trying to entertain them. In "Garage Banned", she invades Lori's personal space during her phone call with Bobby and makes her puppet Mr. Coconuts kiss her, roleplaying as her boyfriend.
  • Not Good with Rejection: In "No Laughing Matter", upon hearing her siblings express annoyance towards her comedy routine, Luan does not take kindly to this and becomes sad.
  • Official Couple: With Benny. They get together at the end of "Stage Plight" following the recital of the Romeo and Juliet play, and are confirmed to be dating in "A Pimple Plan".
  • Older Than She Looks: She could easily pass for a kid around Lincoln's age, given that she has no breasts, wears braces, has a high-pitched voice, and a Kiddie Kid demeanor.
  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business:
    • It makes sense that Luan would want to utilize her prankster status on a holiday like April Fool's Day, but the way she does it goes way beyond Innocently Insensitive territory.
    • A less serious example, Luan tells Lincoln that they do not tell jokes at the dinner table in "A Tale of Two Tables".
  • Performance Anxiety: Becomes a plot point of "Stage Plight". While it's not so much that Luan is nervous of performing in front of a crowd, it's the fact that she's never kissed anyone before and she's required to do just that in the play.
  • Pie in the Face: Being a prankster, she's prone to doing this, which is best demonstrated in the intro where she attempts to pie Lincoln in the face but he dodges.
  • Pink Girl, Blue Boy: She's the Pink Girl to Benny's Blue Boy. Luan wears a pink flower on her shirt and shoes, while Benny wears a sky blue jacket. Additionally, in "Stage Plight", Luan's Juliet costume is pink and Benny's Romeo costume is blue.
  • Pink Means Feminine: How feminine she is varies, but she wears a pink flower on her shirt and shoes. Furthermore, her bed sheets are pink, and flashbacks in "Hand-Me-Downer" and "Head Poet's Anxiety" respectively reveal that she used to wear a pink bike helmet and pink socks. It seems to be another color affiliated with her aside from yellow.
  • Plucky Comic Relief: She mostly acts like a comic relief in most episodes.
  • The Pollyanna: She always looks on the bright side of life.
  • Prank Call: Being a prankster, Luan loves making these.
  • The Prankster: She loves to pull practical jokes on people without warning. Her favorite methods seem to be the Bucket Booby-Trap and the Pie in the Face. This is taken up to eleven on April Fools Day, when she sets up an insane amount of pranks throughout the house. Or even beyond, when she takes over an entire motel to torment her family in "Fool's Paradise."
  • Pubescent Braces: She wears braces, the only sibling who currently wears them. A flashback in "Hand-Me Downer" shows that she's worn them at least since she was about twelve years old.
  • Pun: Most of her jokes are puns.
  • Pungeon Master: Luan could be the Trope Namer, at least of Western animation. If she says something, it'll more often than not be a pun, much to her siblings' annoyance. Around 90% of her lines consist of puns.
  • Puppy Love: She and Benny share their first kiss in the play as Romeo and Juliet respectively, and overall engage in malice-free romance.
  • Riddle for the Ages: Why does she become a villainous prankster on April Fool's Day?
  • Rise of Zitboy: "A Pimple Plan" revolves around Luan getting her first pimple and trying to cover it up in time for her date with Benny.
  • Sad Clown: Luan sometimes uses her comedy as a defense mechanism when faced with the sad truth.
  • Sadist: As seen only in the "April Fools" episodes, Luan appears to be a sadist. This is shown when she toys with her own family in order to break them emotionally, and laughs at their misery. That, and she continues pranking them even when they beg her to relent, leaving them in complete and utter fear, not knowing when they will get pranked.
  • Sanity Ball: Luan completely drops her comedy routine and starts to behave like a normal individual in "No Laughing Matter" after realizing how annoying it is. Of course, she goes back to normal in the end. She also did the same thing earlier in "The Butterfly Effect" in favor of becoming an activist, although the entire thing was revealed to just be Lincoln's imagination.
  • Shared Family Quirks: She gets her fondness for puns from Lynn Sr.
  • Signature Laugh: A light hearty chuckle preceded by her catchphrase of "Get it?" It's in fact a defining part of her character that just the sound of it is enough to recognize her. She gets a more Evil Laugh when it's April Fool's Day to show how uncaring and unsympathetic of a prankster she is.
  • Single Woman Seeks Good Man: It's implied that this is the reason why she's attracted to Benny in the first place.
  • Skewed Priorities: In "Rita Her Rights", Luan worries about not being able to find her whoopee cushion prior to heading off to class, wasting Rita's time in the process.
  • Slasher Smile: Expect her to flash these a lot when it's April Fool's Day; if she does, run.
  • Smarter Than You Look: Luan's quirky appearance and oddball behavior may suggest her to be a ditzy Cloudcuckoolander, but her intelligence is exhibited through her plots of prank-pulling, showing that she is too competent for her own good.
  • Snark Ball: Luan can easily make snarky remarks when upset, showing that there's depth beyond her eccentricity.
  • The Sociopath: She becomes this only on April Fool's Day. To be fair, given her erratic personality, she probably has some sort of Medium Awareness that makes her realize no one could really get harmed from her actions. She does look at the audience in one episode.
  • So Unfunny, It's Funny: The core of Luan's puns, which pop up at least once per episode.
  • Squirting Flower Gag: She wears a squirting flower as standart part of her attire.
  • Stepford Smiler: Don't be fooled by her cheerful demeanor, Luan doesn't always have her head in the clouds. There are in fact many scenes that explore her insecurities and low self-esteem. That said, even though she is insecure sometimes, she doesn't generally fake being happy, and her happiness is usually genuine when she's acting happy..
    • The first instance of her sadness is shown in "Ties That Bind", although she had a reason to be sad then because she was worried she might get kicked out of the mime act.
    • Pretty much reaches its epitome in "No Laughing Matter", in which she, after hearing her siblings aggressively criticize her comedic antics, retires comedy and enters a state of stoicism and sanity. Thankfully, she is brought back to normal in the end. This episode also shows that she owns a diary.
    • Also shows signs of being Love Hungry in "Head Poet's Anxiety", where Luan becomes a hostile Green-Eyed Monster towards Lucy, who she was supposed to mentor, for stealing her thunder.
    • Her musical number "Laugh Parade" from "Really Loud Music" reveals that she contemplates scary thoughts about the world around her "every now and then".
  • Suddenly Fluent in Gibberish: Translates Lily's 'house story' in "Homespun".
  • Super Strength: She was strong enough to carry Lincoln on her head in "Spell It Out". She also broke out of her cage in "April Fools Rules".
  • Talking in Your Sleep: Luan records herself sleeping in case she mutters a joke.

    Luan: [in her sleep] What do you call a sleeping bull? A bulldozer. [giggles]

  • A Taste of Their Own Medicine: In "Fool's Paradise", Luan becomes a victim of her own pranks as a form of Laser-Guided Karma.
  • Temporarily a Villain: Whenever April Fool's Day rolls around.
  • Theme Naming: She named both of her ventriloquists, Colonel Crackers and Mr. Coconuts, after food.
  • Tomboy and Girly Girl: Relatively speaking, she is the tomboy to her foil Maggie's girly girl. Despite how the fandom portrays them, in canon Maggie is a gloomy emo-type girl who is seemingly more feminine than average since she wears earrings, dark eyeliner, and a skirt, and speaks with a Valley Girl speech pattern. Luan is slightly more masculine than the average girl due to her boisterous and energetic attitude, violent and destructive tendencies when it comes to forming pranks, her Tomboyish Ponytail and mischievous nature. Downplayed as Maggie is not outright feminine and Luan has her fair share of girly traits to balance it out, but of the two, Luan is slightly more tomboyish, while Maggie is probably on a similar level to Lucy.
  • Tomboyish Name: "Luan" is a masculine foreign name, though it does sound like "Luanne", which is indeed a girl's name.
  • Tomboyish Ponytail: Luan is quite mischievous and wears her ponytail in a scrunchie.
  • Tomboy with a Girly Streak: Luan is a boisterous girl who loves playing (sometimes destructive) pranks and telling jokes, neither of which are particularly feminine hobbies. Also, she owns a ventriloquist dummy who just so happens to be male that wears boyish clothes. Despite this, Luan wears a skirt, a pink flower on her shirt and shoes, has her ponytail in a scrunchie, and owns a diary. She also joins in on the Squee with her other sisters upon discovering that Lincoln has a girl interested in him. She also had no problem wearing a dress in "Head Poet's Anxiety".
  • Took a Level in Badass: Luan is usually sweet, innocent, and cheerful, but on April Fools Day, she has shown herself to be such a life-threatening individual.
  • Took a Level in Cynic: There are times where Luan garners rationality when least expected.
    • This is a driving point on the plot of "No Laughing Matter", where Luan enters a stoic phase and begins to behave much more civilized.
    • This happened earlier in "Butterfly Effect", where she became less blind to the world's problems and mustered up the courage to become an activist. Though, the entire thing was just Lincoln's imagination.
    • In "Future Tense", Luan learns about much more serious matters by interning for the government, although she only did it because her parents told her to.
  • Took a Level in Jerkass: She takes one on every April Fool's Day, during which she unleashes meaner and more brutal pranks than usual.
  • Trademark Favorite Food: It's revealed in "Home of the Fave" that Luan's favorite food is meat stroganoff.
  • Vocal Dissonance: Despite being 14/15 years old, Luan has a high-pitched voice that sounds like that of a little girl.
  • Whoopee Cushion: She owns one which is quite frequently used in her pranks.
  • Would Hurt a Child: She's even willing to endanger her younger siblings with her Deadly Pranks on April Fool's Day.

Lynn L. Loud Jr. 

The loud house the lost panties

"Lincoln, think fast!"

Voiced by: (English) Jessica DiCicco
Voiced by: (Latin America) Monserrat Mendoza
Voiced by: (Brazilian Portuguese) Vitória Crispim
Voiced by: (Italian) Giada Bonanomi
Voiced by: (Hungarian) Janka Solecki
Voiced by: (Japanese) Saori Onishi
Played by: Morgan McGill (A Loud House Christmas), Annaka Fourneret (The Really Loud House)

The fifth-eldest Loud sister at 13 years old (14 as of Season 5), Lynn Jr. is very energetic and always up for sports. While a good person at heart, Lynn still has prominent tendencies of violent roughhousing and abrasiveness that make her unpleasant.


  • Affectionate Nickname: Rusty Spokes, Margo, and Luna have referred to her as "Lynn-sanity". Her family also calls her "L.J." fairly often.
  • All Amazons Want Hercules: Lynn finds it hard to pick a boy to date because no one can match her in strength, athletics, or exotic eating habits. In the end, she decided she's simply not interested in romance or dating.
  • All of the Other Reindeer: "Middle Men" reveals that she used to be her school's laughingstock until she herself decided to become a bully in order to survive middle school.
  • Ancestral Name: Named after her father, Lynn Sr.
  • …And That Little Girl Was Me: In "Middle Men", Lynn Jr. tells Lincoln and Clyde, who are touring her middle school because that's where they will be attending, that they should not ask for directions, aggressively claim the best desk in a classroom, and never admit any big mistakes. She cites the story of a sixth grader who on her first day of school got lost and was tricked by some eight graders to be even more lost, got stuck her desk and had to be greased out, and when that girl admitted to farting during a test, she got made fun of by the whole school. Lincoln and Clyde take her advice to heart, and get a bunch of kids mad at them, who challenge them to a fight after school. When Lincoln calls out Lynn Jr. on her bad advise she admits that she was the girl in her stories, and didn't want the same thing to happen to them, but when the other meet up with them at the end of the day, they make peace, and tell them they won't fight.
  • Aw, Look! They Really Do Love Each Other:
    • Although she tires of Lucy's brooding and gloomy nature, she loves her all the same, even shown to enjoy Lucy's poetry after the two have a massive falling out in "Space Invader". In this same episode, she is thrilled when they make up.
    • Also, for all her roughhousing with Lincoln, it's also shown that she enjoys playing with him. For instance, in "Job Insecurity", they are shown having fun together shooting with paint guns. Like the others, she will also stick up for him when needed.
    • Her advice in "Middle Men" was well-meant and she's clearly upset she caused her little brother trouble on his first day of middle school.
  • Babysitter from Hell: In "Sitting Bull," Lori, Leni, Luna, and Luan pride themselves as the best baby sitters in town, and Lynn Jr. convinces them to let her in on the business. They immediately regret it when one of their regular customers calls to complain about Lynn Jr.'s rough treatment of her children. When they threaten to kick her out of their group, Lynn Jr. goes behind their backs, and steals their baby sitting gigs to prove she is a good babysitter, but the elder Loud sisters get fired by their regular clients, citing Lynn Jr.'s harsh treatment of their kids. When Lori, Leni, Luna, and Luan decide to get Lynn Jr. to quit, they stick her with the Fox Quintuplets, the rowdiest kids they know. When they find that Lynn Jr. got them to behave, they let her stay in their group only because she's the only one tough enough to handle the Fox Quintuplets.
  • Badass Adorable: Lynn has the appearance of an innocent child, but is by no means above using roughhousing.
  • Berserk Button: If Lynn even thinks someone is questioning her athletic abilities, she'll make sure they pay a painful price, as an unfortunate goat learns in "Cow Pie Kid".
  • Big Eater: She loves her meatball grinders, having eaten them for ten days in a row in "Sleuth or Consequences". She can also be seen busily wolfing down a burger out of nowhere while her siblings discuss Lola in "A Tattler's Tale". In "Hero Today, Gone Tomorrow", she's described by Paula (her soccer teammate) as "always hungry", and she even eats a burger off the locker room floor.
  • The Big Girl: Lynn is indisputably the most physical and athletic of the Loud siblings. She roughhouses all the time, plays almost every sport in the book, practices kickboxing and enjoys Mexican wrestling.
  • Big Sister Bully: Sometimes (or probably rarely in Season 3 onwards) to Lincoln. Among all his sisters, she is the quickest to use threats and physical violence to get him to do what she wants. "Lynner Takes All" shows her behaving this way towards everyone in the family.
  • Big Sister Instinct: She goes out of her way to hunt down anyone who tries to mess with Lincoln. Anyone that isn't her, at any rate. This is most prominently shown in "Middle Men", where she insists on becoming Lincoln and Clyde's monitor during middle school orientation and coaches them on how to survive their first year there, confessing later that her first year of middle school was such a nightmare that she hoped to spare them the same experience.
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: With nothing more than a passing glance, Lynn seems like an innocent girl who could do little wrong. Once you get to know her, you'll realize that she'll very often use roughhousing as a means of resolution. However, she zigzags between this and Jerk with a Heart of Gold.
  • Blood Knight: Lynn is the sibling most eager to settle a dispute by resorting to fisticuffs and she shows great pleasure and enjoyment in roughhousing with her brother and partaking in rough contact sports like Kickboxing and Wrestling. Like with any other kind of competitive activity, Lynn seems to love to her fair share of scuffles.
  • Book Dumb: Apparently, Lynn can't set her mind to anything other than sports. She has horrendous grades and can't spell words correctly, such as spelling "trophy" as "trofy".
  • Bratty Teenage Daughter: A rare example of this trope that isn't a Valley Girl stereotype; Lynn occasionally throws tantrums and uses threats if she doesn't get her way or when she loses.
  • Brilliant, but Lazy: Both downplayed and implied. In terms of smarts, she's not that bright, and certainly nowhere near close to Lisa. In fact, Lincoln's dream during "Butterfly Effect" suggest she would flunk her grades if Lisa didn't tutor her. However, when she goes for a more academic approach in "Future Tense" she actually manages to ace math.
  • Broken Ace: Considering the above trope, it's possible Lynn could be this. Lynn has exceptional athletic ability and is good at pretty much every sport known to man. Plus, her excelling at math in "Future Tense" indicates the intellectual capacity is there, it's just that she has no real interest in academia so she doesn't make an effort to develop her knowledge beyond anything sports-related. Despite her talents and abilities, Lynn's experiences as a victim of bullying in middle school have turned her into a highly aggressive, hot-headed Competition Freak, with a whole laundry list of character flaws that come with such a personality. For all her athleticism and potential cleverness, Lynn is a very violent and damaged individual.
  • Celibate Heroine: It is implied Lynn could be this, as she has absolutely no interest in "romance junk" as of "Singled Out". However, it is not outright stated that she never plans on having a relationship or just isn't attracted to anyone period, or that she's simply not interested in pursuing romance at the current time.
  • Childish Older Sibling: She's the fifth-oldest sibling and she can sometimes act childish (like being a bad winner and riding her bike indoors) but usually acts her age, and again, she more only seems childish in contrast to her more mature younger siblings.
  • Childish Tooth Gap: She used to have one when she was little.
  • Competition Freak: In any competition of any kind, Lynn won't accept anything other than her being the best. Even if the competition only exists in her mind, she will still not stop until she has won. She also gloats and over-celebrates her victories. This behavior has apparently earned the ire of her siblings.
  • Color Motif: She's associated with the color red, which can be seen on her clothes and her Hot-Blooded personality.
  • Cool Bike: Has one that becomes a plot point in "Hand-Me Downer" Turns out it's a hand me down she modified herself.
  • Cosplay: Her Full Deck persona has her become the Strong Suit. Appropriate considering her strength and passion for sports and competitions.
  • Cute Bruiser: She's the most physical out of the Louds, and is a cute teenager.
  • Dark and Troubled Past: The episode "Middle Men" reveals that Lynn had a hellish first year of middle school in that she was a perpetual victim of bullying until she herself became one in order to survive the rest of the semester, which permanently scarred her personality.
  • Depending on the Writer: Lynn's personality ranges by episode from a Lovable Jock who loves her family deep down, or a full-fledged Jerk Jock with an abrasive demeanor and no redeeming qualities at all.
  • Determinator: When Lynn wants something, particularly to excel at something, expect her to go after it with full force. As she says herself in "Sitting Bull", "Lynn Loud does not accept defeat."
  • Dumb Jock: In "Butterfly Effect" Lincoln believes that if Lisa gives up tutoring Lynn, she'll flunk miserably in all of her classes. Lisa shares this opinion, claiming Lynn has ample room in her head for useless information.
  • Dumb Muscle: Lynn is apparently not very good at academia, if Lincoln and Lisa are to be believed, however, she is the most athletic and physical of all the Loud siblings.
  • Easily Impressed: Lynn gains amusement from turning the most mundane of things into sports.
  • Fatal Flaw: Her competitive and egotistical nature has constantly gotten her in trouble.
  • Fitness Nut: She spends most of her time playing sports, likes to drink protein shakes, and boasts about never skipping arm day or leg day.
  • Foil: She's this to her sister, Lola—while they are pretty similar to each other in some ways (big egos, short tempers, displaying aggressive behaviors when they want something and/or are trying to get a message across) they're still pretty different from each other in other ways.
    • Lynn's easily the most masculine of Lincoln's sisters, deals mainly with sports/athletic activities and doesn't mind getting her hands dirty (literally-speaking, that is).
  • Freudian Excuse: "Middle Men" reveals as to why Lynn is so brash and abrasive: during her first year of middle school, she kept getting in troublesome situations that made her both the school's laughingstock and punching bag. As a result, she thought that if she could act as tough as the other students, she could make it through her middle school years much more easily.
  • Gasshole: She's usually very flatulent and loves giving Dutch ovens (especially to Lincoln)... and for some reason likes receiving them as well. Unlike Lori and Lily, who only fart or poop involuntarily when in public, Lynn freely lets out farts even when she could have held them in. Sometimes, she does so with malicious intent, hence the Dutch ovens, though she apologizes for doing so in "Ruthless People". She's also no rookie when it comes to burping, if episodes like "Lynner Takes All", "Kick the Bucket List", "Hero Today, Gone Tomorrow", "Cooked!", "Predict Ability", and "Friday Night Fights" are anything to go by.
  • Genius Ditz: Lincoln and Lisa imply Lynn to be academically incompetent. Despite this, she aces math when going for a more academic approach in "Future Tense".
  • Genki Girl: She needs all that energy to play sports as often as she does.
  • Glory Hound: She has a driving need to be the ace in every sport she plays. In "Hero Today, Gone Tomorrow" his causes her friendship with Margo to become frayed when Margo is celebrated for making a one-in-a-million soccer goal.
  • Hair-Trigger Temper: She's pretty aggressive and can be rather quick to anger.
  • Hidden Depths:
    • She's quite mechanically gifted it turns out modifying the family bike into a top of the line sports bike.
    • In "Racing Hearts," she proves that she is excellent at baking, though to be fair, she was working alongside Scoots.
    • She proves herself to be quite creative in "A Dark and Story Night" where her additions to the story she and her siblings were telling included transported the characters of said tale to an outer space basketball court where she appeared as an imaginative three-eyed, muscular (and possibly masculine) alien called Tricksy. Not bad for someone who's often labelled as a Dumb Jock.
  • Hot-Blooded: She's quite the enthusiastic and energetic girl most of the time.
  • Hypocritical Heartwarming: She's protective and supportive of Lincoln when she thinks he's being bullied, but is herself extremely quick to use physical threats against him to get her way.
  • Innocence Lost: Poor Lynn really got tarnished when she entered middle school. While she's still capable of showing genuine kindness for her family when the situation calls for it, she just can't channel off her emotional aggression due to her horrific middle school experience.
  • Intergenerational Friendship: With Mr. Grouse, of all people! This is due to their mutual love of sports, from "Good Sports".
  • Jerkass to One: While Lynn is willing to pick on anyone, she targets Lincoln the most.
  • Jerkass Realization:
    • She does realize that she's a sore winner at the end of "Lynner Takes All" and promises to make efforts to change.
    • In "Net Gains" when she's forced to join the worst team in the local basketball league, she comes up with the strategy that the other girls should just pass her the ball. When she wins the first game, the other girls lament that they barely got a chance to play, which she retorts with "a win's a win, no matter who plays." When their next game ends in defeat, she brings in two older girls to help her win. When they win the game, Lynn Jr. calls them out on hogging the ball, and barely letting her play to which one girl replies "a win's a win, no matter who plays." At the championship game, Lynn supports her teammates, and passes the ball to them when she gets the chance, and though they lose the championship she was craving, Lynn Jr. learns that winning isn't everything.
  • Jerk Jock: She does love her family and is normally friendly. However, she is among the more aggressive siblings, as she loves roughhousing others and it's really not a good idea to get her angry.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: She's one of the more aggressive of the Loud siblings, but she truly loves them and will stick up for them all the same.
  • Kiddie Kid: Lynn is rather immature for a 13-year old.
    • In "Cereal Offender", she rides on a shopping cart and wrecks many aisles.
    • Her immaturity is also exhibited through her poor sportsmanship and throwing tantrums whenever she doesn't get what she wants.
    • Lynn's immaturity is a plot point of "Sitting Bull", where she's seen playing in the backyard with her younger twin siblings Lana and Lola, inducing skepticism in Lori, Leni, Luna, and Luan as to allow her to become the fifth babysitter.
    • In "A Tale of Two Tables", she's the first teen sibling to migrate from the grown-up table to the kiddie table at the end of the episode, admitting that she never thought she'd be able to escape from the former. Earlier, Lynn's initial response to Lincoln flinging peas at her was to grin and fling food back at him, but she manages to hold back. Nevertheless, it's a testament to her juvenility that she was the only teen sibling whose first instinct was to engage with Lincoln when he was being silly.
  • Killer Rabbit: With a Kiddie Kid personality mixed with having Youthful Freckles and a short stature, it may be easy to underestimate her. However, she's The Napoleon and can be very quick to resort to violence. She isn't known as the jock of the family for nothing.
  • Knight Templar Big Sister: Despite bullying Lincoln, she doesn't hesitate to beat up anyone else who bullies him. This becomes a plot point of "Heavy Meddle" where Lynn's response to learning that Lincoln was being bullied was to wander the streets for any pre-teen boy she could find, drag them back to the house, and prepare to dish out a beating on them. Thankfully for all the local boys in Royal Woods, Lincoln set her straight before she did it.
  • The Lad-ette: Tomboyish and aggressive, and it's not many gals who can execute a perfect Dutch oven. She also burps, picks her nose, takes pride in the fact that she can clog the toilet and mess up the bathroom, engages in all kinds of rough competitions and is a highly aggressive person and fierce fighter.
  • Lady Looks Like a Dude: It's hard not to mistake her for a boy at a first glance, as she has few feminine characteristics other than her ponytail and eyelashes.
  • Large Ham: Not as much as Lola, though, but still can ham it up pretty good.
  • Le Parkour: She's a surprisingly skilled Traceuse, as shown in one episode.
  • Lovable Jock: Even though she does veer into the Jerk Jock and Big Sister Bully categories at times, she is still a friendly and outgoing girl and her heart is in the right place.
  • Malicious Misnaming: Starting from season 3, she calls Lincoln "Stinkin'" when she's feeling particularly nasty.
  • Masculine Girl, Feminine Boy: The Masculine Girl to Lincoln's Feminine Boy. She's a hyperaggressive Ladette while he's an archetypal Geek who's relatively In Touch with His Feminine Side. It really shows in "The Loudest Yard". She briefly has a relationship with a little nerdy, clumsy boy named Dexter and this trope naturally comes into effect, with Lynn very much being the dominant and aggressive one of the two.
  • Muscles Are Meaningless: Has a fairly lanky and slender body type despite all of her training. Can and will excel at every sport known to man and is able to grapple with people twice her size with ease if needed.
  • The Napoleon: Is particularly short in height? Yes. Acts big all the time, like being energetic or bossy? Also check.
  • Never My Fault: She developed this mindset in Middle School. Whether it’s a lost game, being kicked out of the Royal Woods Talent Show, making mistakes in school or making a mess, she never owes up.
  • Nice Mean And In Between: She is the mean one due to her rough housing and highly competitive skills, while her next two siblings Lincoln and Lucy are nice and in-between respectively. Among them they are the middle Loud children.
  • Older Than She Looks: She could easily pass as someone around 11 years or even 8 years old despite being 13, given her short height, lack of breasts, and Youthful Freckles.
  • Passionate Sports Girl: To say that Lynn Loud Jr. loves sports would be an understatement, as she's probably the most prominent example of this trope in animation of The New '10s. She's played on teams for football, lacrosse, ice hockey, baseball, basketball, and roller derby, and has won championship games in all of them (except basketball). She even has various pre-game rituals for good luck. Additionally, she's a huge fan of Mexican wrestling and loves practicing it herself, and has stated that she's waiting for air hockey to become recognized as an Olympic sport. She plays soccer as well.
  • The Pig-Pen: Downplayed in comparison to Lana, which is why they surprisingly don't work as roommates, despite both of them being tomboys. While she enjoys roughhousing and giving some nasty Dutch ovens, Lynn is shown at times to have a notably healthy hygiene, such as keeping her feet clean of callouses and whatnot. It makes sense when you consider her passion for sports, as any good athlete knows they need to take care of their bodies.
  • Pint-Sized Powerhouse: Despite her small size, she can causally lift and carry another person who is about the same size as her, with one hand. She effortlessly lifts a drawer in "11 Louds A Leapin" and a couch in "Potty Mouth". She also does the most impressive lifting out of all the siblings in the exercise montage of "Health Kicked" where she lifts a barbell over her head with two large bags of sand on each end, and Lana and Lola sitting on it as well. One episode revealed even as a baby, she was lifting weights.
  • Potty Emergency: For some reason, she believes it's bad luck to use the bathroom in any capacity before a game, leading to her inflicting this trope on her entire team by making them all hold it in for days. She seems to be the only one not bothered by it.
  • Puppy-Dog Eyes: Showed this after Lincoln refused to let her share a room with him in "Space Invader".
  • Red Is Violent: Downplayed. Her signature color is red, and she's the roughest of the family, but not particularly violent.
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni: She's the red to Lucy's blue. Considering their personalities, though, this is not surprising. Coincidentally, red is Lynn's theme color, and she wears red as well.
    • Lynn and Margo. While both are competitive sports players with rowdy personalities, Margo doesn't take her competitive drive anywhere near as far as Lynn. Plus, Lynn is quite boastful and easily angered while Margo is more modest in her accomplishments and seems a little more reserved, at least relatively speaking.
    • Lynn and... anyone else, really. Red is her signature colour for a reason.
  • Smarter Than You Look: Despite assumptions by Lincoln and Lisa (the former possibly) that she's academically incompetent, and her moments of being a little Book Dumb like when she misspelled trophy as "trofy" in her song in "Really Loud Music" (though that was a figment of Luna's imagination, suggesting she also believes Lynn is dumb), Lynn has demonstrated moments of impressive intelligence throughout the show. For example, she has the same cunning and planning abilities as Lincoln as shown in "Friendzy", when she beat him to the idea of playing the friend card to get privileges in the house. She was also smart enough to defeat all her siblings in a variety of different board games in "Lynner Takes All", and was also smart enough to devise strategies to win in bouts where she was theoretically outmatched (like being able to talk Lincoln into being too nervous to think straight when playing an Ace Savvy question game). Then of course, there's the time she aced mathematics when she actually put work into it. In general, her competence at all the different sports she plays would require certain types of intelligence. All in all, it is probable she's not as dumb as some people think.
  • Smelly Feet Gag: Lynn is sometimes joked about having foot odor, like in "Feast or Family" when her feet are emphasized with stench lines to show how long she's been playing outside.
  • Sore Loser: She can't stand losing. "Lynner Takes All" shows that losing one board game is enough to cause a Sanity Slippage.
  • Sour Outside, Sad Inside: "Middle Men" reveals the reason she is so aggressive, confrontational and competitively driven all the time is because of her traumatic experience at the hands of the middle school kids during her first days there. It is implied she was nicer and more mild mannered before that.
  • Super Strength: Lynn is strong enough to use Leni as a giant pair of weights. She can also lift heavy furniture in such ways that would require impressive amounts of strength for a girl her age. In addition, in "Health Kicked" she is able to exercise using a barbell with 2 bags of sand plus Lana and Lola sitting on it. But her ultimate feat of strength so far is in "Camped!", where she kept her entire family (plus a large supply of gold) from falling off a cliff for about 45 seconds, using only one arm and one leg.
  • Super-Strong Child: Lynn's baby photos showcased her as strong enough to lift weights despite only being an infant.
  • Tantrum Throwing: She'll resort to throwing things alongside roughhousing if her desires are not met.
  • Teens Are Short: She's thirteen, but you wouldn't be able to tell from her height. She's noticeably shorter than Lincoln and the same height as Lucy, who are two and five years her junior. Not so much for her live-action incarnation, who is taller than Leni and around the same height as Luna and Luan.
  • Tomboy and Girly Girl: Lynn is ALWAYS the Tomboy to anyone else's Girly Girl. But some specific examples can be given.
    • Lynn is the sports loving, hyperactive, rough playing Lovable Jock of a tomboy to her roommate Lucy's somewhat feminine goth girl. Lucy is only a little feminine, but her interest in romances and secret passion for Princess Pony easily make her a girly girl in comparison to Lynn.
    • Lynn and Lola is another example. Both act as a Foil to one another since they're both the most aggressive, competitive and somewhat hostile acting of the Loud sisters. But Lola is a pageant princess while Lynn is a sports nut who loves getting her hands dirty.
    • In "Lincoln Loud: Girl Guru", she is the tomboy to Girl Jordan's girly girl. Lynn loves Dutch ovens, Jordan does not. Lincoln's false assumption that a typical Girly Girl like Jordan would take kindly to the gross tomboyish habits that Lynn enjoys ended up earning one poor boy an American wedgie. Interestingly, Girl Jordan does share Lynn's athletic, rough, competitive ways to an extent, as Lincoln's classmates often mention she is a very good and very ruthless dodgeball player.
    • Lynn is also the tomboy to Margo's girly girl, as well as the other girls in her roller derby team for that matter. Sure, they're all competitive, sporty and athletic just like her, but they're all far more into mushy romance stuff than she is. They also don't seem to be quite as outwardly aggressive, egotistical or brash as Lynn, either.
  • Tomboyish Ponytail: She wears her hair in a ponytail and is also the most tomboyish of the Loud sisters, loving pretty much all kinds of sports.
  • Tomboyish Voice: She has a rather deep and boyish voice, and she's one of the most masculine of the Loud girls. Her voice has only become even deeper and raspier in later seasons.
  • Tomboy with a Girly Streak: Lynn Loud Jr. is arguably the most tomboyish of all the girls in the Loud family, if not all the girls in the show, taking her aggressive, masculine personality to huge extremes. She plays contact sports, loves practicing Mexican wrestling, and has a rather violent, ultra-competitive disposition. She is The Lad-ette, right down to being a Gasshole, and all-around unfeminine, to the point where her male counterpart in "One of the Boys" is almost an exact duplicate of her. However, when she’s part of the whole sibling group, she isn't above doing things that are girly. Examples include joining in the Squee in "Heavy Meddle", partaking in Lucy’s makeover in "Back in Black" and watching Dream Boat with her sisters.
  • Too Much Alike: She and Lana clash despite both being tomboys.
  • Trademark Favorite Food: Meatball grinders and spicy food, but downplayed because she's not obsessed with them.
  • Unaffected by Spice: Lynn loves spicy food, and while it does sometimes make her red in the face or breathe out steam, she actually likes it. In "Singled Out", her temporary boyfriend Dexter is chosen because he is the only boy in her class who can eat a spicy burger without flinching.
  • Unsportsmanlike Gloating: "Lynner Takes All" shows that she's not a very good winner and that she loves rubbing her accomplishments in other people's faces (particularly those of her siblings). She does realize it during the episode and agrees to try to stop at the end.
  • Used to Be a Sweet Kid: If flashbacks of her with a younger Lincoln are any indication, she was definitely a warm, caring, playful, gentle little girl, until her horrible treatment in Middle School, courtesy of the other students, changed her into an aggressive, abrasive, immature and impatient jock. Though she still has a warm heart and a caring inner personality.
  • Would Hurt a Child: In "Schooled!", she was about to hit Lily for blowing a raspberry at her, before Rita stopped her.
  • Wrestler in All of Us: One of her many suggestions to take care of Lincoln's bully in "Heavy Meddle" was a Camel Clutch.
  • Youthful Freckles: She spends a lot of time outdoors playing sports, which is probably how she got them.

The younger sisters:

Lucy L. Loud 

The loud house the lost panties

"Sigh."

Voiced by: (English) Jessica DiCicco
Voiced by: (Latin America) Mireya Mendoza
Voiced by: (Brazilian Portuguese) Tônia Mesquita
Voiced by: (Italian) Gea Riva
Voiced by: (Japanese) Yōko Hikasa
Played by: Aubin Bradley

The fifth-youngest Loud sister, 8-year-old (9 as of Season 5) Lucy is a gloomy goth girl with an interest in Gothic poetry. She acts cynical and insincere most of the time, but it's all rooted in her Gothic nature.


  • Acting Your Intellectual Age: Lucy is 8 years old (9 as of Season 5) and is already aware of the world's cynicism, and as a result has abandoned the fun lifestyle that most kids her age are living.
  • Affectionate Nickname: Occasionally called "Luce".
  • Aloof Big Sister: Inverted to her older siblings and played straight to her younger siblings. She's rather distant and reserved.
  • Aloof Dark-Haired Girl: Lucy has black hair and is generally distant from her family.
  • Annoying Younger Sibling: Lynn definitely thinks so. Her other siblings also hate her tendency to sneak up on them.
  • Aw, Look! They Really Do Love Each Other:
    • Has almost nothing in common with Lynn, but still misses her company whenever they argue, admitting to being unable to sleep without her nearby tossing a ball around in "Space Invader".
    • She most often smiles when Lincoln, who is often creeped out by her, does something for her and the others, and usually repays his kindness such as when she made a comic book for him for standing up for her in "Sleuth or Consequences". In "Suite and Sour", she's happy to go ghost hunting with him.
  • Behind the Black: She often spooks her siblings in this manner.
  • Beware the Quiet Ones: She's stoic, distant, and reserved, but isn't afraid to join the other sisters' brawl.
  • Big Sibling Worship:
    • Downplayed. While she has her own conflicts with Lincoln and will never hesitate to call him out when he messes up, Lucy does on occasion display a level of respect and admiration for her older brother not seen from the other younger sisters. For example, she solely goes to him for an opinion on her poems and admires the fact that he can tolerate being humiliated by their siblings unlike herself.
    • In "Head Poet's Anxiety", she displays Big Sister Worship towards Luan in gratitude towards the latter for mentoring her.
  • Boy Meets Ghoul: Lucy has a crush on Edwin, a vampire character in the Show Within a Show, Vampires of Melancholia.
  • Breakout Character: Lucy is the sister most often playable alongside Lincoln in Nicktoons crossover games, including Nickelodeon Kart Racers 2: Grand Prix and Nickelodeon All-Star Brawl.
  • Brilliant, but Lazy: Lucy seems to be this when it comes to athletics. It is notable that Lucy seems to be naturally good at a given sport when she tries it, like basketball and volleyball. However, being a Goth, she has absolutely no interest in it, except when she's relaxing on the beach in "Sand Hassles".
  • Can't Take Criticism: She becomes depressed upon having her poetry rejected by officials in "Head Post's Anxiety".
  • Cargo Ship: In-Universe. She considers Edwin's bust her "soulmate" and kisses him at one point.
  • Catchphrase: "Sigh".
  • Cloudcuckoolander: Her ungodly obession with all things scary & the undead emphasizes her creepy personality.
  • The Comically Serious: She's The Stoic in a house full of people with extreme personalities and it's played as a joke.
  • Companion Cube: She has a bond with her vampire bust, Edwin.
  • Cold Ham: She may be The Stoic in comparison to her siblings, but she still tends to act dramatic, most notably when she reads poems. She's still a Loud, after all.
  • Color Motif: She's associated with the color black, as shown in her hair and her clothes. She is a Goth, after all.
  • Cosplay: Her Full Deck persona has her become the Eight of Spades. A spade in playing cards is colored black, which fits her black Color Motif.
  • Creepy Child: She's a goth. Isn't it obvious? Here are some of her creepy moments: she voted to spend their vacation at the beach in hopes of a shark attack. When Lincoln invited a friend over for a sleepover, she asked said friend if he would volunteer to be a corpse for a casket she was making. This scares the friend away. Finally, she suggested buying twin burial plots for their parents' anniversary, reasoning "Nothing says romance like eternity". And her favorite winter game is "Corpsicle", suggesting the only way to win is to catch hypothermia. Also, according to her parents, Lucy apparently didn't cry much as a baby and the reason they let her bangs grow to cover her eyes is because they found her staring to be creepy.
  • Creepy Monotone: She usually speaks with this tone of voice from time to time.
  • Dark Is Not Evil: Despite her gloomy demeanor, she's arguably one of the sisters Lincoln gets along with the most.
  • A Day in the Limelight:
    • "Back in Black" centers on Lucy having a crush on Rocky, the younger brother of Lincoln's friend Rusty, with Lincoln's science project serving more as a B-plot.
    • "Spell it Out" is about Lucy lamenting that she has no privacy, as well as no peace and quiet, because of her siblings.
    • "Fandom Pains" revolves around her and her goth friends plotting to kill off a new character from their favorite TV show that was introduced to attract teenaged girls.
    • "Head Poets Anxiety" has Lucy becoming Luan's protege after the former had a poem rejected from a publication, and the latter teaching her everything there is to know about persevering in the performing arts.
  • Deadpan Snarker: Her standard response to her family's antics is generally sarcasm or general wit told in the most unemotional way possible.
  • Dude, Not Funny!: In "Head Post's Anxiety", she reads her grandfather Pop-Pop a poem about death, only for it to come out wrong and prompt her to tell a more touching poem instead.
  • Dull Surprise: Rarely fazed and when she is, she generally just says "Gasp!" with a slightly less monocord voice. Also noteworthy is whenever she screams, her voice goes no higher than how it normally sounds.
  • Eerie Pale-Skinned Brunette: Has much paler skin than the others and black hair, Although it’s probably dyed. She's also quite morbid and Gothic.
  • The Eeyore: She's not a very cheerful person, and she often acts gloomy.
  • Emo: Zigzagged. She's got a similar focus on negativity and wears black clothes, but she doesn't have the punk aspect.
  • Emotionless Girl: She's definitely got emotions, it's just that she doesn't emote that much, her eyes are hidden which means they can't be used as a visual indicator for what she's feeling, nor does she have much in the way of body language.
  • Eyes Out of Sight: We never get to see what her eyes look like behind her bangs. It's even implied that her eyes were apparently so creepy to her parents that they even allowed her to grow her hair longer to keep them hidden so they don't have to look at her creepy stare.
  • Fatal Flaw: Her tendencies as a goth girl, being socially withdrawn and fascinated in the macabre, can cause others some distress.
  • Girly Girl with a Tomboy Streak: She's a Girly Girl in her own right, albeit a dark and morose one. She loves romance to the point that she owns (and kisses) a bust of her crush, she regularly wears a dress, she writes poetry, and she's even an avid fan of the comic series Princess Pony (which is considered too girly even by the show's quintessential Girly Girl, Lola). But she's also expressed a disdain for the color pink—plus her stoicism, snarkiness, and interests in Horror, fake blood, bats, etc. could hardly be considered girly. She's also not above roughhousing or fighting physically with her siblings, as she's seen in "Garage Banned" being quite rough with Lynn for her chipping one of Edwin's fangs.
  • Goth: She's very gloomy, emotionless, stoic, dresses in all black (black hair included), and takes an interest in the morbid and otherworldly. She's apparently friends with many ghosts, conducts practice funerals in her spare time, and she frequently reads and writes depressing poetry.
  • Goth Girls Know Magic: Downplayed, in that she doesn't actually know any magic, but she's depicted to be interested in seances and magic spells. And at times, it's implied that they do work ("Garage Banned" and "Spell It Out").
  • Guilty Pleasure: In-Universe, she keeps her interest in the Princess Pony comic secret because her sisters (even Lola) think it's ridiculously sugary.
  • Hidden Depths:
    • Admits that even she needs a break from the dark and gloomy every once in a while, and is secretly a fan of the extremely "girly" Princess Pony series, which even Lola, the girliest Girly Girl of the ten sisters, doesn't like.
    • Also despite her seemingly casual disregard for everything, she admits that she couldn't cope with her siblings teasing the way Lincoln can, and sometimes implies she is somewhat insecure and lonely.
    • She owns a pink ribbon in the game "Lincoln's List".
    • Despite being so emotionally suppressive, gloomy and/or quiet most of the time, she has moments of being hot-blooded and violent, like when she attacked Lynn in "Garage Banned" or challenged Lola to a fight after she insulted her in "Room With a Feud".
    • She appears to have a natural talent for sports (although this could possibly just be a side effect of being roommates with Lynn for so many years). When she is forced to take up basketball in one episode, she instantly becomes a whiz. Likewise, in "Sand Hassles" she is shown to be good at Volleyball.
  • Hypocrite: At times, Lucy will lament how she is left out of her siblings' activities. Yet in episodes like "Fandom Pains" and "She's All Bat", she quickly grows resentful whenever they get involved in her interests.
  • Identical Granddaughter: As seen here
    The loud house the lost panties
    , Lucy looks exactly like her great-grandmother, Harriet.
  • Inexplicably Awesome: It's never revealed how she can sneak up on people so easily or why she appears to have telekinesis in one of the games.
  • Ironic Name: Her name means "light"; ironically, she's a dark goth.
  • Irony: Despite them being the only two stoic ones, she and Lisa are implied to have the most bad blood with each other amongst the Loud siblings. The few on-screen interactions they have (such as "Raw Deal" and "No Spoilers") are more often than not negative, Lucy attempts to cast a physically harmful curse on Lisa in "Spell It Out" (and laughs at her after doing so), and Lisa singles Lucy out individually as the sibling she celebrates not having around when she goes to the institute in "The Mad Scientist".
  • Jumping-to-Conclusions Diagnosis: She was falsely assumed to be sick twice in "One Flu Over the Loud House", just because she's pale, even though she's always pale.
  • Leitmotif: The theme song played in a minor key on harpsichord.
  • Light/Darkness Juxtaposition: The darkness to Lincoln's light.
  • Light Feminine and Dark Feminine: In "In Tents Debate", she is surprisingly labelled as one of the "girly" sisters who want to go to the beach (but only because of the possibility of a shark attack), making her the Dark Feminine in contrast to her blonde and conventionally feminine sisters' (Lori's, Leni's, and Lola's) Light Feminine.
  • Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane: States that she can still see her family despite her hair covering her eyes. The fact her spells seem to work some of the time, and how she can walk into a room without being heard or noticed, also suggest this.
  • Middle Child Syndrome: Not exactly in the middle, as that goes to Lincoln, but she's a middle daughter, and often goes unnoticed by the others. "Spell It Out" explores this deeper.
  • Mind over Matter: Apparently, she's got telekinesis: the Lazy Sunday Interactive Game shows her levitating and lifting Geo and his hamster ball with her mind.
  • Nice Girl: Downplayed. Love for creepy things aside, Lucy is one of the friendlier Loud sisters. She is one of the sisters seen to hang out with and share interests with Lincoln the most, and she's even one of the few characters to have close and personal conversations with Lynn.
  • Nice Mean And In Between: She is in-between compared to how her brother Lincoln is nice and her closest sister and roommate, Lynn Jr is mean. All of them are the middle Loud siblings.
  • Nightmare Fetishist: When Lincoln asks if she wants to go ghost-hunting with him, Lucy tells him that the ghosts are her friends.
  • Nightmare Fuel Station Attendant: Her morbid interests and Offscreen Teleportation tends to scare her siblings.
  • Noiseless Walker: Implied, judging by how nobody can notice her walking into a room.
  • Not so Above It All:
    • In "Cereal Offender", she contributes to wreaking havoc in the supermarket.
    • In "Future Tense", she's shown several times taking poses with Luan, Lori and Leni and taking pictures to post on the Internet. At one point, she makes a duckface.
  • Not So Stoic: She can get angry and happy, and still look stoic. Can be this when Lisa, the other near stoic Loud sister, isn't.
  • Offscreen Teleportation: She often appears behind her siblings when they least expect it, which freaks them out every time. Though, in Spell It Out, it shows her walking to the bathroom with her siblings not noticing her until she spoke and in Back in Black, she herself get startled by Rocky.
  • Perpetual Frowner: She doesn't smile much. In one episode, Lynn Sr. was visibly shocked and demanded someone get the camera when he saw Lucy actually smile.
  • Properly Paranoid: In The Loud House Movie, she's the only living Loud who manages to sense that something is wrong with Morag.
  • Raven Hair, Ivory Skin: Has very dark hair and is noticeably paler than the rest of her family. The movie shows that she was born with this coloration, despite the implausibility of having black hair in a family of blondes and brunettes.
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni: She's the blue to Lynn's red. It's not surprising, though, considering their personalities.
    • Both Luna and Luan are the red to her blue. Luan shares Lucy's interest in performance arts, but Luan is a giggling, prank-loving comedian who's always happy while Lucy is emotionally reserved. Likewise with Luna, who has an edgy field of interest like Lucy but is an energetic rockstar instead of a goth.
    • She's probably the most blue out of all the sisters, with the possible exception of Lisa. But even Lisa tends to have excitable moments more frequently than Lucy.
  • Saying Sound Effects Out Loud: Instead of sighing, she often says the word "sigh" out loud, and has said "groan" at least once.
  • Stealth Hi/Bye: Never does a "Stealth Bye", but sometimes she appears to say hello.
  • The Stoic: She rarely expresses any emotion besides sadness.
  • Trademark Favorite Food: Blood pudding.
    • Any food that begins with "blood". However, it's not an obsessive interest.
  • Troubling Unchildlike Behavior: Well, her fascination with the morbid could be seen as such.
  • Vocal Dissonance: Has a very deep and monotone voice for an 8-year-old girl. Justified, as she's a goth.
  • When She Smiles: When she does smile, it's rather cute.
  • Wise Beyond Her Years: It's not common for an 8-year-old to be knowledgeable in the field of the goth subculture, but Lucy surprisingly is. She's probably the third-most mature of the Loud sisters, behind Lisa and Lori.
  • Younger than She Looks: She's eight, but her appearance and overall demeanor would make you think she's around Lincoln's age.

Lana L. Loud 

The loud house the lost panties

"Hey, Lincoln, check out my mud pie! It's nice and squishy!"

Voiced by: (English) Grey DeLisle
Voiced by: (Latin America) Karen Vallejo
Voiced by: (Brazilian Portuguese) Jéssica Vieira
Voiced by: (Italian) Jolanda Granato
Voiced by: (Japanese) Yu Ayase
Played by: Mia Allan

The fourth-youngest Loud sister and Lola's older twin, 6-year-old (7 as of "Strife of the Party") Lana is a scrappy tomboy, a talented handyman, and fancier of all things yucky.


  • Adorably Precocious Child: Despite acting like an average girl her age, Lana is relied on by adults as their go-to handyman, and is usually seen as cute for that.
  • Affectionate Nickname: "Lans" by her siblings.
  • Animal Lover: Her Q&A states she wants to be a plumber/veterinarian/steam fitter, her super power of choice is talking to animals, and part of her perfect day includes saving an animal from a tree and her chore is cleaning up after the pets. In "Ruthless People", she even objects to the extermination of termites.
  • Annoying Younger Sibling: Usually this to Lincoln due to being messy.
  • Aw, Look! They Really Do Love Each Other: She and Lola can get along sometimes like practicing to be hall monitors in "Get the Message".
    • They both cry about a basement ghost in "Left in the Dark".
    • They're both fascinated by Frank, Lincoln's class tarantula.
    • Lola allows Lana to keep the crown she won at a beauty pageant after she poses as her, due to her managing to win despite not acting like a girl.
    • "Patching Things Up" is basically an episode devoted to show that, in spite of their differences, the twins are very close to each other. They end up deliberately failing their final badge tests in the Bluebell Scouts trials so one of them wouldn't have to be in the Bluebells without the other.
    • They dance and have fun together during the party in "Party Down".
    • In some episodes, even if they are not not main focus, there are scenes in which they are shown playing together, such as in "Shell Shock" when they act as if "the floor is lava" or at the beginning of "Potty Mouth".
  • Beware the Nice Ones: Lana is nice, though she is no pushover. This is hardly surprising, as she's a dirt loving tomboy who likes getting her hands dirty, is a mechanic, and wrestles with alligators in her spare time. The girl obviously had a rough and tumble side to her. While the nicer of the two twins, she has no problem duking it out with Lola.
  • Big Brother Worship: Like Lucy, there are hints throughout the series that she respects Lincoln as an older brother very much. She occasionally refers to him as "big brother," she likes showing him her pets and gross discoveries, and she tends to give him plenty of hugs.
  • Big Little Sister: While Lana is the older twin, Lola wears high heels and is thus slightly taller than her.
  • Cheerful Child: Lana is a characteristically happy 6-year-old, especially around gross surroundings.
  • Childish Tooth Gap: Lana is missing her two front teeth and is quite rambunctious.
  • Children Are Innocent: Lana has a playful outlook on natural unsanitary.
  • Child Prodigy: Not to Lisa's level, but Lana is only six and yet she is the family's go-to handyman (handygirl?) and an expert on mechanics.
  • Cloudcuckoolander: Even for a girl her age, Lana's fondness for nasty particles and bringing home natural beings is a bit too obsessive and persistent.
  • Collector of the Strange: Lana collects many bodily functions.
  • Color Motif: She's associated with the color blue, thanks to her blue overalls.
  • Cosplay: Her Full Deck persona has her become the Royal Flush. Clever wordplay that references both a powerful hand in playing cards, as well as Lana's passion for unclogging toilets.
  • Crazy-Prepared: As a handyman, she always has her tools on her person, even packing a snow shovel inside her dress in "Toads and Tiaras" even though it was not winter. She also had a stash of wood ready for Lincoln to board up his room during Luan's rampage in "April Fools Rules"; her recommendation is mahogany.
  • The Cutie: Lana is a sweet Cheerful Child with a naive and playful demeanor. Her Childish Tooth Gap just adds to it. However, it's downplayed because of her slobbish hygiene and interest in unsanitary particles.
  • Everyone Has Standards: She admits that while she does love eating gross food, there are some things even she finds too gross to eat, like Lincoln's signature peanut butter and sauerkraut sandwich and Lynn Sr.'s cauliflower cupcakes.
  • Extreme Omnivore: Will happily eat discarded food from either the trash or the ground, as well as live bugs and worms. She will even opt to catch fish with her bare hands just so she can eat the worms herself.
  • Fatal Flaw: Her gross preferences often alienate her from others, including her siblings.
  • Filthy Fun: Often plays in the mud.
  • Foil: To Lola in terms of femininity and kindness.
  • Friend to Bugs: Zigzagged. Sometimes she makes friends with bugs, sometimes she eats them.
  • Gasshole: As revealed by Lola in "Brawl in the Family", she often sleep-farts so loudly that it blocks the sound of snoring. Lana also burps as much as Lynn as shown in "Toads and Tiaras", "Frog Wild", "Strife of the Party", "Sister Act", "How Double Dare You!", "Patched Up", etc.
  • Girlish Pigtails: Though she's not very traditionally girly at all.
  • Hair of Gold, Heart of Gold: She's blonde and is usually a friendly person, especially towards most animals.
  • Hates Baths: She is shown to dislike baths, as seen in "Sister Act". In the same episode, she gets Lola to pretend to be her so she can take the bath for her. At the end of the episode, when Lola and Lana decide to stop switching places with each other, Lana takes a bath for real, and finds a couple of things to like about it, such as how brown the water gets from her getting cleaned up and the hairball in the drain.
  • Hates Being Called Cute: When arriving with Lola after a jump rope contest, Lincoln distractingly calls them the two cutest twins in town. Lana is noticably annoyed with being called that, especially from her big brother. Although she does get called cute in some episodes and doesn’t seem to mind, but those were situations in which she probably suppressed herself in order to get what she wanted.
  • Hidden Depths: Her palette might be generally yucky, but a throwaway line she shouts in "Fed Up", (specifically, while all kids shout out that they want pizza, she can instead be heard saying, "Indian!") she might actually have a taste for exotic cuisine.
  • Hot-Blooded: Lana gets pumped up quickly.
  • Innocent Prodigy: Despite being the family's handygirl and an expert on mechanics, Lana still acts like the 6-year-old she is, especially if you compare her to Lisa.
  • Ironic Name: Her name means "attractive" or "peaceful", which she is in fact, not.
  • Killer Rabbit: She's a pretty happy little kid most of the time and is quite adorable (though she doesn't quite like being referred to as such) and has the innocence to match. She also knows how to wrestle alligators and often takes part of sibling brawls. She, alongside Lola, once also beat up Clyde for messing up the sand castle they built.
  • The Lad-ette: She's only 6, but already knows how to fix cars and plumbing, has terrible hygiene and is said to wrestle with alligators.
  • Lady Looks Like a Dude: Much like Lynn, one could easily mistake her for a boy at a first glance.
  • Mistaken for Thief: In one "Listen Out Loud" installment, Lincoln thinks she stole a hammock.
  • Ms Fix It: Knows how to fix many things, including cars, toilets, and TVs.
  • Never Bareheaded: She's almost never seen without a hat on her head, mostly her red baseball cap. When she has to wear another, she wears it over her current one, as shown when she wore tiaras over her hat. She even sometimes wears her hat to bed. The only times so far she was seen bareheaded was in a picture at the start of the pilot short, throughout much of "Toads and Tiaras", and when she sleeps/is in her pyjamas.
  • Nice Girl: Typically very kind and fun-loving despite her rough and messy manner, and much more laid back compared to Lola. One of the ways Lola and her are Polar Opposite Twins.
  • Nose Nuggets: She's a nose-picker.
  • One of the Boys: Most of her peer friends are boys. In one episode, she mentions going to meet "the guys" at the mud hole.
  • Only One Who Likes Spam: She, along with her sisters, provide the page image. When their parents have them try onion-infused water, she's the only one who doesn't immediately spit it out in disgust.
  • Oral Fixation: She really loves bubble gum. So much that she'll even chew old pieces that she dug out of the garbage. Then again, she likes digging through the garbage in general, so maybe that part is more indicative of her messiness than her love of gum.
  • Outdoorsy Gal: She spends a lot of time playing outdoors.
  • Perpetual Smiler: You hardly ever see her frown.
  • The Pig-Pen: She likes digging through garbage. Cleanliness is not high on her priorities list. She loves dirt and garbage so much that she actually became obsessed with playing one of Lincoln's games just because it was about garbage, to the point where she even had a nightmare about not getting to play it.
  • Polar Opposite Twins: With Lola, being the mess-obsessed tomboy to Lola's beauty-obsessed girly girl. This proves to be an obstacle when she attempts to pose as Lola in a beauty pageant.
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni: The blue to Lola's red, being a bit more relaxed than Lola, less aggressive than her (surprisingly), and less likely to get angry. Coincidentally, Lana has blue as her theme color, and she wears blue, too.
  • She Cleans Up Nicely: In "Toads and Tiaras", while impersonating Lola at a beauty pageant, she wears one of her sister's gowns and does another hairstyle. She actually looks gorgeous. Even she ends up admitting that she kinda likes the "sparkly towel".
  • Toilet Humour: Often part of jokes about poop, mud, snot, etc.
  • Token Religious Teammate: Possibly. She was the only one seen praying before bed in "Fool's Paradise". This might have been because her prayer went on longer than everyone else's, as she was praying for each of her pets one by one.
  • Tomboy: Her interests, such as engineering and messy play, are stereotypically associated with boys.
  • Tomboy and Girly Girl: The dirt-loving Tomboy to Lola's Girly Girl; Lana loves mechanics, mud, dumpster diving, frogs, and all things filthy. Lola on the other hand loves pink, sparkles, frills, beauty pageants, and stuffed animals.
  • Tomboyish Baseball Cap: Wears a backwards red baseball cap and is DEFINITELY a tomboy.
  • Tomboyish Voice: Her voice is rather raspy and boyish for a six-year-old girl.
  • Tomboy with a Girly Streak: Lana Loud is the show’s quintessential example of a tomboy, rivaled only by Lynn Jr, and is more-or-less meant to resemble the stereotype, right down to the clothes. She’s dirty, messy, rough, tough, raspy-voiced, and contrasts spectacularly with her twin sister, who is a huge Girly Girl and likes pageants and pretty stuff. However, when she was forced into partaking in a pageant in “Toads and Tiaras”, she discovered she didn’t mind wearing a dress (though she thought it was a sparkly towel). She also has a motherly, nurturing side when it comes to her pets, or all animals in general. In addition, she sometimes joins in with the other sisters in doing girly things like watching Dream Boat, squeeing with Lola about their chance to become bluebells or the collective squee from “Heavy Meddle”. It's best demonstrated by the fact that she genuinely gets along the best with her extremely feminine and girly twin sister Lola despite having a more masculine sister in Lynn.
  • Too Much Alike: She and Lynn clash despite both being tomboys.
  • Trademark Favorite Food: Known to be quite keen on eating snot and ABC gum.
  • Vocal Dissonance: Has quite a gravelly voice for a little girl.
  • Vocal Evolution: Her voice had a rather high pitch (though not nearly as high as her twin) in the early episodes of the first season, but got progressively deeper as the series progressed.
  • Why Did It Have to Be Snakes?: She's scared of heights.
  • Wrench Wench: Likes to fix cars.

Lola Loud 

The loud house the lost panties

"I'm telling dad!"

Voiced by: (English) Grey DeLisle
Voiced by: (Latin America) Karen Vallejo
Voiced by: (Brazilian Portuguese) Lhays Macêdo
Voiced by: (Italian) Monica Volpe
Voiced by: (Japanese) Maria Naganawa
Played by: Ella Allan

The third-youngest Loud sister and Lana's younger twin, 6-year-old (7 as of "Strife of the Party") Lola is a dainty, bratty, hot-tempered fashionista who dresses in pageant attire and regularly competes in beauty pageants.


  • Adorably Precocious Child: At least when it comes to her beauty pageant career, which she treats with the seriousness of an adult professional. Otherwise, she's a typical six-year old Spoiled Brat who likes tea parties and fairy tales.
  • Age-Inappropriate Dress: Lola regularly wears an oversized dress (pageant sash included), even when out in public, and at her school.
  • Ambidextrous Sprite: Her side swept bangs tend to switch their direction often.
  • Annoying Younger Sibling: She is usually annoying to Lincoln due to blackmailing and being a general pest.
  • The Atoner: Becomes this in "A Tattler's Tale" when she blackmails all her siblings into spending time with her by threatening to spill their secrets, only to go to her parents and take the fall for all of them when they threaten to spill hers, realizing she hadn't earned their trust and instead chose to work for it. It works and she's finally allowed to join their secret club meets.
  • Attention Deficit... Ooh, Shiny!: Pretty things like glitter apparently can easily distract her.
  • Aw, Look! They Really Do Love Each Other: She and Lana can get along sometimes like practicing to be hall monitors in "Get the Message".
    • They both cry about a basement ghost in "Left in the Dark".
    • They both like Frank, Lincoln's class tarantula.
    • When Lana poses as her and wins a beauty pageant despite acting like herself instead of Lola, she allows her to keep the crown that she won.
    • "Patching Things Up" is basically an episode devoted to show that, in spite of their differences, the twins are very close to each other. They end up deliberately failing their final badge tests in the Bluebell Scouts trials so one of them wouldn't have to be in the Bluebells without the other.
    • They dance and have fun together during the party in "Party Down".
    • In some episodes, even if they are not the main focus, there are scenes in which they are shown playing together, such as in "Shell Shock" when they act as if "the floor is lava" or at the beginning of "Potty Mouth".
    • This is also a plot point in "A Tattler's Tale", where she's resentful that her siblings won't let her into their secrets' club so she resorts to blackmail to force them to play with her. When they are prepared to do the same to her, Lola has a change of heart and realizes she hadn't earned their trust, and takes the fall for all of their past offenses to prove she's willing to work for it. It works, and for it they finally accept her into their club circle.
  • Ax-Crazy: She becomes this when pushed to the point of anger. So look out when she gets "really mad" and she becomes so psychotic that her own family is scared of her.
  • Badass Adorable: Lola has the cuteness of a typical little girl, but isn't afraid to exhibit an Ax-Crazy side if the plot demands it.
  • Big Little Sister: Lola is the younger twin, but is slightly taller than Lana due to wearing high heels. This seems to be zigzagged, as sometimes she'll be taller than Lana or the same height as her.
  • Big Sister Bully: While she plays this straight towards Lisa and Lily, she mostly inverts this and is a Little Sister Bully to her older siblings. Regardless, she bosses her siblings around and yells at them for small things.
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: At a first glance, she may seem like an innocent little girl, but needless to say, she isn't innocent at all.
  • Bratty Half-Pint: She is short tempered, rude, and demanding. Downplayed in later seasons.
  • Breaking the Fourth Wall: The ending of "A Tattler's Tale" has her being the first sister to talk to the audience.
  • Bring My Brown Pants: Implied in "April Fool's Rules", where she mentions needing a new pair of underwear.
  • Character Development: Her mean tendencies have been downplayed in later seasons.
  • Cheated Angle: Even though Lola's cowlick is combed at the right, it sometimes alters between shots.
  • Childish Tooth Gap: Lola is missing her two front teeth and is the brattiest of her siblings.
  • Child Prodigy: Not to the same extent as Lisa, but in the episode “No Place Like Homeschool”, none of her siblings are prepared for a test they must ace in order to continue homeschooling. She manages to get all of them to pass after one night of tutoring (however, she doesn’t pass due to exhaustion from helping everyone else). Keep in mind that she was 6 years old at the time.
  • Cool Car: Her ride-on toy car, which, thanks to Lana, can function like an actual mini car.
  • Cool Crown: She usually wears a tiara on her head.
  • Color Motif: She's associated with the color pink, as can be seen on her dress, and almost everything else she owns. To her, Princesses Prefer Pink.
  • Cosplay: Her Full Deck persona has her become the Queen of Diamonds, fitting of her overall princess personality and love of valuable jewelry.
  • Creepy Child: Lola most often lashes out at her siblings, but "Toads and Tiaras" takes the cake.
  • Cute Bruiser: She makes a terrifyingly effective security guard, and often partakes in the siblings' brawl. In "No Guts, No Glori", Lori and Lincoln opt to distract her rather than trying to overpower her.
  • Cute and Psycho: DON'T piss her off, or you'll regret doing so for the rest of your life.
  • Deadpan Snarker: Lola is capable of delivering sarcasm to signify her stress.
  • Deliberately Cute Child: Lola sometimes uses her endearing nature as a manipulation tactic.
  • The Dentist Episode: In one of the podcasts, she gets a dentist appointment.
  • Determinator: Shown in full during the bet in "Undie Pressure", she is very determined for her age.
  • Drama Queen: Highly dramatic and hammy.
  • The Dreaded: The Loud siblings try to avoid making her upset. The possibly fake stories in "Sound of Silence" demonstrate why.
  • The Dreaded Pretend Tea-Party: Hosts those occasionally, either with her stuffed animals or (often unwilling) members of her family.
  • Drives Like Crazy: She does not treat her toy car with any care, and frequently drives it around inside the house with little recourse on her part.
  • Enfant Terrible: She's the third-youngest Loud, but is also very aggressive.
  • Everyone Has Standards:
    • She does have her limits when it comes to being "girly", as she feels Princess Pony is too much even for her to stomach.
    • She's also somewhat able to tell when her antics have crossed the line and is generally remorseful once she realizes this.
  • Face of an Angel, Mind of a Demon: She's absolutely adorable...and also terrifying and diabolical when crossed.
  • False Teeth Tomfoolery: Occasionally wears a retainer with false front teeth, like when she's competing in a pageant.
  • The Fashionista: Clothes are a high priority for her and she doesn't like getting her outfit dirty.
  • Fatal Flaw: Her arrogance and selfishness has gotten her in more trouble than they're worth.
  • Friend to Bugs: Downplayed. She doesn't normally like bugs, but she's on good terms with Frank.
  • Foil: She's this to her sister, Lynn—while they are pretty similar to each other in some ways (in that they both have big egos, are quick to anger, display aggressive behaviors when they want something and/or are trying to get a message across) they're still pretty different from each other in other ways. The main differences between them —
  • Gasshole: As shown in "Come Sale Away", she is apparently the best burper in the family.
  • Girls Love Stuffed Animals: Has a good number of stuffed animals in her and Lana's bedroom.
  • Girly Bruiser: Undeniably girly, but also undeniably scary and violent. In fact, she's one of the most aggressive of all the Louds, which is saying a lot. She fights hard and has a massive Hair-Trigger Temper. She shows absolutely no fear of leaping towards and taking on her much older siblings like Lori or her more physically strong and imposing siblings like Lynn.
  • Girly Girl: Obviously so. Her interests in princesses and beauty pageants are stereotypically feminine.
  • Girly Girl with a Tomboy Streak: Lola Loud is arguably the most feminine out of all ten of Lincoln's sisters. She loves the color pink and is obsessed with princesses, to the point where she regularly dresses like one! She also likes throwing tea parties, competes in beauty pageants, prefers keeping her appearance clean, plays with dolls, and has a lot of stuffed animals. However, she actually thinks Lincoln's class tarantula is cute. Also, despite being so girly, Lola isn't interested in the Princess Pony series since even she has standards. She also won the family Burping Contest and was quite proud of herself for it. Moreover, she can often be seen playing scrappily and rough with her extremely tomboyish twin sister Lana, as well as genuinely getting along best with her, despite having several more feminine sisters like Lori and Leni.
  • Hair-Trigger Temper: Lola really isn't that difficult to set off, especially if you interfere with her possessions or pageant career. When she gets angry, the results aren't pretty. Fortunately, all the other Loud siblings know to avoid making her mad.
  • Hates Reading: In the episode "Read Aloud", the rest of her family engages in a quiz at the library that requires every member to read a book, but Lola refuses to participate. In the end, it turns out the only reason she didn't like books was because she found reading difficult. After Lincoln helps her with this problem, she ends up liking it.
  • Heroic Comedic Sociopath: Lola can be this at times (especially Season 1 episodes). Some fans depicted her as an arrogant sociopath.
  • Hidden Depths:
    • Despite her "girliness", she's not averse in joining some of the cruder antics of the siblings, such as burping contests.
    • She's pretty good with stick-based weapons, such as golf clubs. Probably from all those ribbon dances she's doing for beauty pageants...
    • For a six-year-old, she's very mature when it comes to working independently with minimal supervision, since she's homeschooled during the main competition season for beauty pageants.
  • Homeschooled Kids: Lola is a downplayed example. She does attend a public school like her siblings most of the time, but she's homeschooled during the main competition season for beauty pageants (which ranges from 1-6 weeks depending on the year) because it allows her to have a very flexible schedule for all the prep, practice, and performances she has to do. The Loud parents have allowed her to do this as long as she keeps up with her studies because the deal they made is that if Lola even fails so much as one of her weekly homeschooling tests, she has to go back to attending a regular school, pageant season or not.
  • Improbable Age: Lola is adorable, being a 6 year old pageant princess and all. Don't get on her bad side, though. She can get very angry and dangerous. She is also generally a lot tougher physically and mentally than most Bratty Princess-types you find in cartoons. While not quite brainy in high brow faculties like Lisa and Lincoln are, the kinds of tricks that would work on stock bratty little girl characters in other cartoons would have a much harder time working on Lola as she is less gullible, foolhardy and oblivious to the world around her than even many adults around her. She does have a weakness to shiny, pretty and glittery things, though.
  • Injured Limb Episode: In "Toads and Tiaras", she breaks an arm and a leg.
  • In-Series Nickname: Lana and Lori have both referred to her as Lols.
  • It's All About Me: Justified, because she's only six. However, she's selfish even by the standards of most kids her age.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: At her worst, she can be very nasty and vindictive. However, sometimes; her siblings tend to bring out the best in her just as much as they bring out her worst.
    • She actually thanks Lincoln for various small things, like the tea party snacks in "Left in the Dark" and solving disputes between her and Lana in "Project Loud House".
    • She genuinely feels sorrowful for the "death" of Frank, going so far as to scold Cliff and Lana for disrespectfully coughing up hairballs at Frank's "funeral" and picking up said hairball in "Along Came a Sister".
    • And she buys Lincoln the pair of cozy underwear he asked for, if he won the bet and releases him from his end of the bet, realizing it's unfair for him to give up his annoying habit while the others didn't in "Undie Pressure".
    • Lola was panicked in "Out of the Picture" when a bad photo might threaten her pageant career. She was demonstrably grateful to baby Lily for taking a perfectly cute photo of her. She was effusively grateful to Lincoln and Clyde for putting that same cute photo in the yearbook instead of the terrible one the coach took.
    • She doesn't start off her appearance in The Loud House Movie in a very good light, slapping Lincoln's hand at one point and seemingly pushing him away in a "Loud Sisters" poster. Despite this, she later goes on to be surprisingly accepting of Lincoln being the monarch of Loch Loud rather than her (even acknowledging this), and rushes to his aid along with everyone else during the climactic battle against Morag.
  • Kids Are Cruel: For a 6-year-old, she has a short temper and coldhearted streak that can venture into Ax-Crazy territory at times.
  • Killer Rabbit: A six-year-old just like her twin sister, she's pretty adorable. That being said, she also has an incredibly short temper to the point that everyone else in the family is afraid to provoke her, fearing what she may do to them out of revenge.
  • Large Ham: One of the biggest ones among the Loud siblings, owed in no small part to her fierce temper.
  • Long Hair Is Feminine: Lola's down hair separates herself from her pigtailed twin Lana.
  • The Napoleon: She is a very short young girl, but boy, is she bossy.
  • Narcissist: She has a high opinion of herself. In "Undie Pressure," she continuously stared at herself in her compact mirror, and almost lost it while trying to go without looking at herself over the family bet.
  • Neat Freak: She hates getting dirty or getting her possessions dirty.
  • Never Bareheaded: Like Lana, she almost never takes off her tiara.
  • Never Learned to Read: Downplayed — as revealed in "Read Aloud," the reason why she doesn't want to read anything is because she is still learning how to read, and because of that, she is quite slow at it.
  • No Indoor Voice: Sometimes speaks in a vindictive tone of voice due to her bad temper.
  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business: Lola is usually the one scaring her siblings with her aggressive and domineering behavior, so whenever she gets scared, be very afraid.
  • Pink Means Feminine: Literally everything she owns is pink (except her pony toy and her crown).
  • Pint-Sized Powerhouse: True to her nature, she can be a force to be reckoned with. Aside from the siblings' usual fights, Lola in her worst moments can overpower her much stronger siblings, including Lori.

    Lori: (During a scuffle) How are you so freakishly strong?!?!

  • Polar Opposite Twins: With Lana, being the beauty-obsessed girly girl to Lana's mess-obsessed tomboy.
  • Positive Friend Influence: She helps Meli come out of her shell and Cricket be introduced to an environment where she can let loose, and they in turn help her become a kinder person.
  • Precocious Crush: Presumably to Clyde, as she complements his underwear in the short “10-Headed Beast.”
  • Princess Phase: Lola is clearly going through hers, since she dresses up like a princess with a long pink dress, sash and tiara.
  • Princesses Prefer Pink: She likes to dress and act like a princess, and most of her outfits are pink.
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni:
    • Even though they're twins, Lola is generally the red to Lana's blue, since she's got a really short temper and is more likely to get angry than Lana (surprisingly), while also being a lot more aggressive than her (also surprisingly).
    • Her and Meli in "Community Disservice" are this. Lola wears bright colors, is confident and socially outgoing, while Meli is a shy and nervous Shrinking Violet who wears grey clothes.
  • Slasher Smile: This was a running gag in "Sound of Silence".
  • Slobs vs. Snobs: She's an arrogant neat freak who often argues with Lana, who's slobby and likes getting dirty.
  • Small Name, Big Ego: Her Q&A answer for the best thing about having several siblings is they're lucky to have her.
  • Spoiled Brat: With her own toy car, her own princess bed, her dad getting her a subscription to the Princess Channel, and acting like a spoiled princess most of the time, she comes across as this, since she's the one who's most determined to get her way and gets extremely angry when she doesn't.
  • The Stool Pigeon: As the above quote suggests, her first response when one of her siblings does something wrong is usually threatening to tell their parents.
  • Sweet Tooth: Loves sugary food.
  • Tea Is Classy: Lola is the most posh of the Loud siblings, and she is commonly seen drinking tea, often while role-playing as a wealthy noblewoman.
  • Tiny Tyrannical Girl: She is a cute little 6-year old, but for the love of god, do not make her angry. The best examples of this are probably "A Tattler's Tale", where she uses the fact that she knows her siblings secrets to make them do stuff for her they really don't want to do, and "Mall of Duty" where she actually takes over part of the mall and 'rules' over several other children as their 'queen'.
  • Token Evil Teammate: Downplayed. She is not evil since she has nicer moments, but she is easily the meanest and most vicious of the Loud siblings under normal circumstances, usually being the first to suggest an immoral solution to any problem her family faces.
  • Tomboy and Girly Girl: She's the Girly Girl who loves pink, sparkles, frills, beauty pageants, and stuffed toys to her twin sister Lana's Tomboy, who loves mechanics, mud, dumpster diving, frogs, and all things filthy.
  • Took a Level in Kindness: In Season 2 and onwards, the negative aspects of her personality usually tend to be downplayed.
  • Too Much Alike: She and Carl Casagrande clash due to their shared egos, mischievousness, and tendency to scheme.
  • Troubling Unchildlike Behavior: Her Q&A says her idea of a perfect day involves world domination. Also, according to a line of hers in "April Fools Rules", she occasionally watches mob movies (Which may actually explain where she got the idea to break Lincoln's leg with her car) and "Friendzy" reveals that she really likes watching TV shows involving people in prison.

    Lola: Get out of my way, or I'll find you in your cell after lights out!
    Lana: Lola, you really gotta stop watching those prison shows.

  • Villain Protagonist: One of the main characters, and, though not a villain per se, she's quite a Bratty Half-Pint.
  • Villain Respect: She has had her moments of this; just when she was about to throttle Lincoln for having Lana pose as herself in a pageant behind her back, Lana won the entire competition hands down. In her own words, she "respects a winner", and for this lets Lana and Lincoln keep the prize.
  • Your Size May Vary: Sometimes she's taller than Lana, while at other times she's the same height as her.

Lisa Loud 

The loud house the lost panties

Voiced by: (English) Lara Jill Miller
Voiced by: (Latin America) Alondra Hidalgo
Voiced by: (Brazilian Portuguese) Louise Schnachter
Voiced by: (Italian) Giuliana Atepi
Voiced by: (Japanese) Mutsumi Tamura
Played by: Lexi Janicek

The second-youngest Loud sister at 4 years old (5 as of season 5), Lisa is a prodigy who is usually invested in research, projects, and experiments.


  • Acting Your Intellectual Age: Lisa is extremely intelligent for a 4-year-old. As a result, she is also very mature and has trouble relating to other children around her age.
  • Adorably Precocious Child: Lisa is a Child Prodigy genius who tends to have the most maturity out of all her siblings, yet that doesn't stop her from occasionally joining in on the fun, as exemplified when she engages in food fights and goes trick-or-treating.
  • Affectionate Nickname: Her family tends to call her "Lis" (pronounced like the word lease).
  • Bad Liar: Whenever she tries to lie about something, she always has a nervous look on her face when she does. Even half-truths can make her react like this.
  • Bespectacled Cutie: She's a cute, nerdy little girl who wears big round glasses.
  • Big Sister Instinct: In "Dream a Lily Dream", she seeks to save Lily from her nightmares, blaming herself for her having them.
  • Black Bead Eyes: Whenever she's seen without her glasses such as in "Picture Perfect".
  • Blind Without 'Em: She cannot see without her huge glasses, as revealed in "Picture Perfect". She actually performs laser eye surgery on herself in "Making the Grade" to remove the problem, but goes back to wearing glasses at the end, presumably because she likes the look despite no longer needing them.
  • Blunt "Yes": Whenever using her Brutal Honesty. This is a flaw that she can't help having.
  • Book Smart: In addition to being highly intelligent, Lisa is also very academically competent.
  • Borrowed Catchphrase: She says, "Poo-poo" when pretending to be Lily in "Potty Mouth".
  • Boyish Short Hair: She is among the less traditionally feminine of the Loud sisters, and her hair (which is actually a wig in at least some episodes) is fashioned in a short, scruffy, unkempt bob cut.
  • Brainy Brunette: She has brown hair and is the smartest of all the Louds.
  • Brutal Honesty: Lisa does not mince words. It is utterly impossible for her to keep secrets.
  • Character Tics:
    • Giving a forced smile whenever she lies.
    • She has the tendency to name things in Sesquipedalian Loquaciousness, then identifies them by their "street name", which is usually how everybody else phrases it.
  • Child Prodigy: Exaggerated Trope—at only four years old (a year before most children start kindergarten), Lisa has already finished school up through getting a doctorate degree. However, "Making the Grade" shows that she attends kindergarten as anybody of her age.
  • Cold Equation: In "Friday Night Fights", she cuts Lynn's friends from the football team and replaces them with complete strangers, on the grounds that the new players' physical attributes will win them more games.
  • The Comically Serious: She's so serious and stoic at such a young age that it's weirdly endearing and hilarious.
  • Color Motif: She's associated with the color green, referring to her green sweater, as well as some of her experiments that involve corrosive green liquids of sorts.
  • Compulsory School Age: Despite already having graduated from university with a PhD, she still has to go to school in the same grade as everyone else her age.
  • Cosplay: Her Full Deck persona has her become the Card Counter, referring to a machine of the same name, something that Lisa would specialize at using.
  • Covert Pervert: She's usually stoic and reserved, but in "Study Muffin", she smiles with glee when Hugh asks what they're going to study...which was his abdominal muscles. Then Lisa wanted to "examine" his gluteus.
  • Crazy-Prepared: Being a genius, she seems to have something on hand for virtually anything; even making an underground bunker to keep Luan away in "April Fools Rules".
  • Creepy Child: Not as much as Lucy or Lola, but either way, Lisa is a 4-year-old Mad Scientist who is prone to making invasive and dangerous experiments on her family. Her "smile" isn't much better.
  • Deadpan Snarker: She is constantly deadpan to go with her unemotional habits, and likewise speaks sarcasm as if it was a second language.
  • Deconstructed Character Archetype: Episode "The Mad Scientist" has Lisa Loud deconstruct being a four-year-old Child Prodigy who's Wise Beyond Their Years by showing it the downsides.
    • When Lisa calls her family to tell them that she wants to stay at the Institute permanently, Rita argues that it's not a good idea—she elaborates by noting that while Lisa's always been very smart and mature for someone her age, she is still Just a Kid. Rita also claims that Lisa's never really been away from home like this prior to being at the Institute.
    • Rita's ultimately proven right because, after Lisa decides to stay at the Institute permanently, she ends up really missing her family, particularly for two reasons:
      • 1.) Outside of science-related matters, Lisa really doesn't have anything in common with the rest of the people at the Institute.
      • 2.) For all her intelligence and maturity, Lisa ends up having quite a bit of trouble performing certain tasks on her own without her siblings and/or her parents around to help her (like putting on her pajamas or making herself a sandwich).
  • Didn't Think This Through: In "School of Shock", she creates a living dinosaur for her class, but quickly realizes she didn't think of a way to control it. Said dinosaur subsequently rampages through the school.
  • Ditzy Genius: Between doing taxes for her parents, giving university lectures, and owning a Nobel Prize, Lisa's academic finesse cannot be questioned. But for all her accomplishment in book smarts, she's a bit lacking in a mundane sense, like being incapable of making a PB&J sandwich. She also fails to see why experimenting on a one-year-old baby would be a bad idea and her experiments often fail spectacularly over trivial mistakes. She's basically a female Dexter in this regard.
  • Dork in a Sweater: She wears a green turtleneck and is nerdy.
  • Emotionless Girl: She speaks with hardly any sign of emotions and gets emotional only in very special cases.
  • Exposition Fairy: In two licensed games, "Summer School" and "Germ Squirmish", she takes the role of standing by and offering tips to Lincoln (who's the player character in both games) and the player.
  • Extra Digits: Lisa grew a sixth toe due to a drastic nuclear experiment.
  • Fatal Flaw: If she tries something new and likes it, then she has a tendency to go overboard with it.
  • For Science!: Her main motivation in life is to further her research and human understanding. In fact, she's willing to go as far as using her own siblings as lab rats and is revealed in "Sleuth and Consequences" to keep track of her entire family's bathroom habits for another unexplained study.
  • Full-Name Ultimatum: In "April Fools Rules", her full name is stated by Rita to be "Lisa Marie Loud". Subverted as her parents are not mad at her but are trying to convince her to let them into her bunker to hide from Luan. And then there's the fact that they use that name when kids are in trouble, so it's probably not real.
  • Gadgeteer Genius: "Snow Bored" shows she has a talent for creating gadgets as well, like a battle robot, various firearms for shooting snowballs, and a snowball tank.
  • Genius Sweet Tooth: "Party Down" reveals that Lisa really likes chocolate and owns a fountain of it. She gets a sugar high from eating too much of it.
  • Good Is Not Nice: She's on the side of good, but she's brutally honest and she often performs invasive or dangerous experiments on her siblings without their consent.
  • Hairstyle Malfunction: "Room with a Feud" reveals she lost her hair due to an accident in her lab. Due to this, she now wears a wig, as shown at least in that episode, "Potty Mouth", "School of Shock", and "Appetite for Destruction" among other episodes, and underneath the wig, her brain is visible, as well as green and pulsating (even though it wasn't visible in "Potty Mouth").
  • Heterosexual Life-Partners: She developed a friendship with a girl in her preschool class named Darcy, despite their contrasting maturity. Lisa's maturity level in fact regresses into that of a socially-expected Cheerful Child whenever around her.
  • Hidden Depths: For a scientific genius, she's implied to have an appreciation for music. In "For Bros About To Rock", she enjoys opera music, and "Potty Mouth" has her appreciating rap music. She also demonstrated that she can play a xylophone flawlessly, implying that Luna mightn't be the only musically gifted Loud.
  • Hollywood Atheist: Implied.

    Lisa: "Oh, being the residence genius is both a blessing and a curse, though I believe in neither."

  • Hollywood Tone-Deaf: As shown in "Potty Mouth", she's a surprisingly passionate singer, but not a very good one.
  • Improbable Age: She's four and already out of college.
  • Innocent Prodigy: In "House of Lies", she is convinced that making her family say nothing but the truth will only make their lives better. She soon learns that a few white lies every now and then actually help to keep the peace.
  • Insufferable Genius: Prone to being boastful about her intellectual superiority.
  • Irony: Despite them being the only two stoic ones, she and Lucy are implied to have the most bad blood with each other amongst the Loud siblings. The few on-screen interactions they have (such as "Raw Deal" and "No Spoilers") are more often than not negative, Lucy attempts to cast a physically harmful curse on Lisa in "Spell It Out" (and laughs at her after doing so), and Lisa singles Lucy out individually as the sibling she celebrates not having around when she goes to the institute in "The Mad Scientist".
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Despite being extremely blunt and often performing dangerous or invasive experiments on her siblings, she loves each one of them dearly and is a well-meaning person overall.
  • Little Professor Dialogue: She's four and speaks using large and technical words. It comes with the territory of being a Child Prodigy.
  • Lovable Nerd: While her stoic nature and Mad Scientist tendencies can be creepy for a four year old, she's a very likable and endearing character.
  • Mad Scientist: While not evil, she does have shades of this, such as using her siblings as guinea pigs for her experiments, and outright creating a monster out of trash in "Chore and Peace". Lincoln even caught her manically laughing just before she pulled a huge lever on a series of electrodes attached to Lily in "Changing the Baby".
  • Mature Younger Sibling: Lisa is the most intelligent of the Loud siblings despite being the second-youngest and frequently uses Sesquipedalian Loquaciousness, as opposed to her other siblings' more casual diction. She's also very calm, which makes her older siblings seem more immature, as they're all rather emotional (besides the similarly stoic Lucy). Played with to an extent, though, as there are several things she doesn't know how to do without help from an adult, given her young age.
  • The Medic: Downplayed. While she isn't normally a doctor/healer/etc, and she's no use to cure the flu in "One Flu Over the Loud House", she does occasionally do medical things. For instance, in "Potty Mouth" she wants to do an operation on Lily, and in another episode, she tries to cure strep throat.
  • Mood-Swinger: Of a sort. While she's stoic almost all the time, when she feels, she really feels.
  • Music/Age Dissonance: She listens to a song with the word "dammit" in it in "Potty Mouth".
  • My Brain Is Big: Downplayed. Her brain is not ridiculously big, but pulsating when she's not wearing her wig in "Room With a Feud".
  • Nerd Glasses: Always wears a large pair of very thick glasses, and it's implied she can't see properly without them. The only times she doesn't wear them are when Lincoln takes them away in "Picture Perfect", when she dresses up as her sisters in "Cover Girls", and when she performs Self-Surgery to remove the problem in "Making the Grade". She still wears them afterwards, however, presumably out of choice rather than necessity.
  • Nerdy Nasalness: She's the Child Prodigy of the family and speaks with a nasally voice and a pronounced lisp.
  • Non-Standard Character Design: The only Loud sibling with Black Bead Eyes.
  • No Social Skills: Having a genius I.Q., and shown to be an accomplished researcher and lecturer, she believes that intimate interpersonal relationships are a waste of time. Case in point, she sees no reason why her family should not be exposed to dangerous chemicals, or make them part of a potentially risky experiment. In "Friend or Faux?" when she protests to her teacher that the failing grade in "Social Skills" is wrecking her prefect academic record, her teacher says that she'll give Lisa a passing grade if she makes a friend. Lisa makes the Friend-Bot 1000, to which her teacher says she has to befriend one of her classmates. Lisa then responds that at most she sees the other kids in her class as co-workers, or at least as subjects in her experiments. She does make a friend in that episode, though.
  • Not so Above It All:
    • Despite being the genius in the family, she still has a tendency to indulge in childish fun like food fights.
    • She also loves to go trick-or-treating on Halloween.
  • Not So Stoic:
    • A more prominent example than Lucy, but she doesn't react to much. That said, even she cannot help but squeal in delight when she and her sisters assume (correctly) that the girl Lincoln has been having trouble with is a Loving Bully. She does actually lampshade how she normally doesn't care for these things before proceeding to squeal.
    • She cries in several episodes like "11 Louds a Leapin'" and "The Green House".
  • Omnidisciplinary Scientist: Lisa has been shown to work with robotics, chemistry, engineering, the handling of radioactive materials, and more.
  • The Omniscient: Downplayed. Thanks to her genius, she's very knowledgeable about almost everything she's learned, and she's intelligent enough to be very wise for her age.
  • Only Sane Woman: Lisa tends to be the most rational and adult-like of the Loud siblings, sometimes even more than Lincoln, courtesy of being a Child Prodigy who's already graduated college.
  • Perpetual Frowner: Usually she is frowning or has a neutral expression.
  • Pretty Fly for a White Guy: Whenever she explains something using scientific jargon, she tends to refer to its common name as its "street name". She also enjoys listening to West Coast Rap, and will sometimes drop a beat.
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni:
    • She's the blue to Lily's red.
    • She's also the stoic and scientifically minded blue to the excitable and cheerful, emotionally sensitive Darcy's red.
  • Self-Surgery: Performs laser eye surgery on herself in "Making the Grade" to help build a "cool" image. While she goes back to wearing glasses at the end, there's no indication that she reversed the process.
  • Sesquipedalian Loquaciousness: Uses big words for simplest things (such as "natrium sodite" instead of "salt").
  • Skintone Sclerae: This is what she looks like without her glasses on.
  • The Smart Girl: She is the most academic of the siblings, having already finished school up through getting a PhD at the age of 4. She has an incredible knowledge of science and mathematics, to the point where she does the family's taxes and gives lectures at the university.
  • Smart People Wear Glasses: The only one of her family to wear glasses and is a Child Prodigy.
  • Speech Impediment: She speaks with a lateral lisp.
  • Squee: Her reaction to Lincoln apparently having a Loving Bully.
  • The Stoic: She is almost completely unemotional, and generally reacts to the family's antics with disinterest. She tends to fulfill this role when Lucy doesn't. She even describes herself as "normally [not caring] for inane human emotions…"
  • Stoic Spectacles: A rare female example. She wears big glasses and is unemotional.
  • Suddenly Fluent in Gibberish: According to the comic, she can understand Lily.
  • Sugar-and-Ice Personality: She prefers to be emotionally distant, but went into Squee mode when she and sisters found out that Lincoln had a Loving Bully and does love her family.
  • Terrified of Germs: Often has some kind of cleaning fluid handy to disinfect anything likely to be riddled with germs.
  • Toilet Humour: Sometimes, she studies poop.
  • Tomboy with a Girly Streak: She's got Boyish Short Hair, an unkempt appearance, an affinity for physical sciences and experiments involving explosions and poop, and a very stoic and snarky demeanor. Despite being more on the tomboyish side, she does have a soft spot for soap operas, and she is overjoyed (along with the rest of her sisters) at the prospect of a girl having a crush on Lincoln.
  • Tomboy and Girly Girl: The Tomboy to her kindergarten friend Darcy's Girly Girl. She's stoic, snarky, brutally honest, likes science, and has an unkempt appearance. Darcy, on the other hand, is very sensitive, likes cute things (evidenced by how she let out a Squee when she thought Lisa had a cat), wears pink, and has a much girlier appearance accentuated by a flower on her shirt.
  • Tomboyish Voice: She's tomboyish and has a deep (though still nasally), somewhat gruff sounding voice, especially for her age.
  • Too Clever by Half: Lisa is so certain of her own brilliance that she overlooks crucial intelligence.
    • In "How Double Dare You!", she enters the competition with her "Dare-bot" (which she had initially created to train the others), believing they can win the contest themselves. But she not only neglected to program any sports trivia into Dare-bot (costing them a chance to win points), but also never made it waterproof, causing it to malfunction during the physical challenges.
    • In "School of Shock", she is convinced that she can teach her first grade class better than Miss Allegra. But in practice, she is unable to teach them due to using far too advanced subject matter. And her attempt to "bring learning to life" drives her to create a dinosaur that rampages through the school.
  • Troubling Unchildlike Behavior: While her precocious Child Prodigy personality is often seen as a positive aspect of her character, she goes really beyond limits with her science experiments on occasion. Special mentions go to electrocuting baby Lily and trying to harvest Lincoln's kidney (she already took his appendix) just to satisfy her curiosity.
  • Took a Level in Jerkass: While Lisa was always the one to conduct experiments, her actions became a lot more sinister in Season 2. This is the type of person who would electrocute a baby and secretly experiment on her family to satiate her curiosity. Also, she is quite sneaky and often lies about her human experimentations, such as changing the subject in regards to DNA samples or microchips.
  • The Un-Smile: When she does this, it's a sign that she's being dishonest.
  • Vocal Dissonance: Lisa has not at all the voice of a 4-year-old girl, rather a stoic, deep, lispy one. Justified though, as she's a Child Prodigy.
    • She has a near-operatic singing voice as well, courtesy of her voice actress.
  • When She Smiles: She looks pretty darn cute when she smiles. Except when she doesn't.
  • Wise Beyond Her Years: Being a Child Prodigy, Lisa is among the more sophisticated of the Loud children.
  • Younger than She Looks: Downplayed; Lisa has the height of a regular 4-year-old, but her Nerd Glasses and stoic demeanor make her look older, a 7-year-old at the most.

Lily Loud 

The loud house the lost panties

"Lily stay home forever!"

Click here to see her in Seasons 1- 4 

Voiced by: (English) Grey DeLisle
Voiced by: (Latin American) Abril Cataño
Voiced by: (Brazilian Portuguese) Hannah Buttel
Voiced by: (Italian) Giada Bonanomi
Voiced by: (Japanese) Maria Naganawa
Played by: Charlotte Ann Tucker and Lainey Jane Knowles (A Loud House Christmas), August Michael Peterson and Emily Ford (The Really Loud House)

The youngest Loud sibling at only 15-months-old (2 years as of Season 5), baby Lily, while normally very playful and cheery, is notorious for her hazardously toxic-smelling dirty diapers. In Season 5, she's gone through potty training and has been given a more regular set of clothes to wear.


  • Abandoned Catchphrase: She used to say "Poo-poo!" as a catchphrase until Season 5, where she's been potty-trained and gotten a wider vocabulary.
  • The Baby of the Bunch: Literally-speaking—she's the youngest of her siblings at just over a year old.
  • Baby See, Baby Do:
    • Zig-zagged in "Potty Mouth". Lily says, "Dannit!" and her older siblings think she meant "dammit" (aka the "D-word"), and think that she is copying them because all of them (except Lucy and Luan) once said the D-word in front of her. They try to recreate the accidents without swearing to have her imitate that instead. Later, it's revealed that she was trying to say, "doughnut" because she wanted a doughnut. She does say a real swear (bleeped) but that's never stated to stem from copying. At one point, she also imitates Lana singing Jingle Bells, Lynn cheering, Lori and Leni sharing, and Lisa Irish dancing.
    • In "Room With a Feud", Lily copies Lori's "literally" tic.
    • In "Changing the Baby", Lily's older siblings try and get Lily to copy them so they'll have someone who shares their interests.
    • In "The Crying Dame", she copies Fenton's dance.
  • Baby Talk: Due to her young age, she mainly just babbles and says things like "Poo-poo" or "Linky". Being 2 years old by Season 5, she starts speaking in more complete sentences, but still often addresses herself by name.
  • Badass Adorable:
    • At times she joins the siblings' brawl; in "A Tattler's Tale", she can be seen biting Luan's leg while Lynn was pulling her diaper.
    • "Appetite For Destruction" shows that she can even bite off wood and throw around couches when constipated.
  • Belly Buttonless: Lily is not depicted with a belly button despite always being shown topless.
  • Beware the Nice Ones: Surprisingly devious when she wants to be; in one episode, after Lori messes with her phone, Lily retaliates by posting unflattering shots of her double chin online, Evil Laugh and everything.
  • Blank Slate: In "Changing the Baby" Lincoln realizes that since she's just a baby, she has no real interests or hobbies, so he spends the episode trying to mold her into becoming more like him. However, her sisters catch on and start trying to make her share the same interests as well.
  • Brainy Baby: Downplayed. She's not as intelligent as her roommate Lisa, but she has proven herself to be smart enough to have some idea of what's going on around her, particularly when she gets in on the family shenanigans. And it's proven greatly as she can actually get angry when Lincoln does something bad, or annoyed when any one of the siblings, usually Leni, says or does something foolish. She's also intelligent enough to know how to use a phone and camera. As of Season 5, she's not only speaking in full sentences more frequently, but is shown to be quite crafty in her efforts to avoid having to go to preschool. She also has her own Loud quirk: painting.
  • Catchphrase: "Poo-poo!" Until Season 5, that is.
  • Charlie Brown Baldness: She only has a small stub of hair, while the rest of her head is completely bald. Well, she's just a baby.
  • Child Prodigy: Downplayed as she doesn't come anywhere close to Lisa's extent of intelligent, but Lily definitely has some awareness of what's going on around her and occasionally joins in on her siblings' antics. She also seems to be technologically proficient, as she knows how to use a phone and camera.
  • Color Motif: She's associated with the color lavender. However, in Seasons 1-4, her default clothing of choice (just a simple white diaper) did not indicate this, but she did occasionally wear more clothes that are lavender-colored, such as shirts, coats, and pajamas, and she owns a lavender-colored blanket, as shown in her image above. As of Season 5, following her potty-training, Lily's default attire is now a white t-shirt over lavender shorts.
  • Cosplay: Her Full Deck persona has her become the Deuce. This is further emphasized by how her main method of attack is to fling a seemingly limitless amount of her own dirty diapers at her enemies.
  • Crocodile Tears: Can make herself cry on demand whenever she needs to. It's a given, though—she IS a baby, after all.
  • Cuteness Proximity: She will sometimes get an "Awwww!" reaction from others when she does something adorable.
  • The Cutie: While all of the Loud kids are varying degrees of adorable, she stands out as the most adorable. Granted, that's because she's still a baby.
  • The Diaper Change: Her dirty diapers are a running gag.
  • Diaper Check: Usually not needed as they can smell her dirty diapers, although someone (namely Lisa) does check her diaper in "The Crying Dame".
  • Distaff Counterpart:
    • In "Two Boys and a Baby", she resembles a female version of Billy, a baby boy who Lincoln and Clyde bring home by accident.
    • Also counts as this for Carlitos Casagrande, who acts just like her.
  • Does Not Like Shoes: She's the only one of the family who regularly goes barefoot. Justified, as she's just a baby.
  • Dung Fu: She sometimes tosses her own dirty diapers as a weapon when pushed. It's exemplified by her Ace Savvy persona of the Deuce.
  • Everyone Has Standards: Even Lily finds Luan's jokes/puns/pranks to be unfunny.
  • Evil Laugh: Lets out one in "Room with a Feud" when she leaks embarrassing photos of Lori out on the internet after her sister accidentally stepped on her phone.
  • Gamer Chick: Big time. Though Lincoln realizes that she has her own interests and that he can't mold her, she seems to like playing video games with her older brother, and is even capable of beating him in a video fighting game.
  • Genki Girl: Lily is a cheerful and playful baby. But then again, she is just that; a baby.
  • Graceful Ladies Like Purple: She sometimes wears purple footie pajamas to bed.
  • Heroic BSoD: In "The Crying Dame" when the kids take Fenton away so they don't have to hear his annoying song, it causes Lily to fall into an increased depressive state, so sad at the thought of missing Fenton she refuses to do anything, not even cry about it.
  • Informed Flaw: In "Undie Pressure," Lincoln says that her habit is to cry a lot, but Lily's rarely shown crying.
  • Innocently Insensitive: Since Lily is just a baby and still in the process of being raised, anything bad she does is justified since she doesn't know any better.
  • Innocent Prodigy: Make no mistake; while Lily may know how to use technology and participate in her siblings' antics, she's nowhere near as precocious as other cartoon babies like Stewie Griffin or even Maggie Simpson, and thus behaves like an average baby would.
  • Innocent Swearing: In "Potty Mouth", the siblings think that they heard Lily say the "D" word (dammit). Double-subverted, as she was actually saying, "dannit" and trying to say, "donut". However, at the end of the episode, she says a bleeped swear.
  • Intelligible Unintelligible: In the first four seasons, only Luan can understand her gibberish. As of Season 5 she's outgrowing this, and can speak more clearly in full sentences.
  • Later-Installment Weirdness: As of Season 5, Lily consistently wears a white shirt and lavender pants, can speak in complete sentences, and is potty-trained, meaning no more Toilet Humor involving her soiling herself (though she still says "Poo-poo" on occasion). However, the show's opening isn't updated to include her new clothes for Season 5 episodes and onwards, as she remains shown in her original white diaper.
  • Living Prop: Give or take, given that she's a baby with limited speech.
  • Locked Out of the Loop: Lily is sometimes the only one of the siblings not to partake in the recent trend or important family task.
  • Morality Pet: She's effectively this to her ten older siblings—for example;
    • In "Chore and Peace," when Lincoln and the other nine sisters believe that she's trapped underneath all their garbage (in reality, she was simply picked up by their parents), they decide to clean up the house so that they can find her.
    • In "It's a Loud, Loud, Loud, Loud House," Lincoln and the rest of the sisters make a point of keeping their fight/search as quiet as possible when they see that Lily's sleeping.
  • Naked People Are Funny: She loves to go without her diaper.
  • Nice Girl: Lily's an innocent and cheerful baby. Until Season 5, that is.
  • No Brows: Prior to the end of Season 3, she does not have eyebrows, although there are moments in which she is briefly seen with them. From Season 4 onwards, she's been consistently depicted with eyebrows.
  • Ocular Gushers: When Lily does cry, this trope is how she cries.
  • Off-Model: Until she got consistently portrayed with eyebrows, she does not usually have eyebrows, but has been occasionally seen with eyebrows in a few episodes. She's also been shown with a full set of teeth in "Changing the Baby."
  • Only One Finds It Fun:
    • She's the only one of the family who actually likes the annoying song of Fenton the Feel-Better Fox, like Lori did in her childhood. When Fenton is taken away, she immediately drops into Heroic BSoD territory.
    • By the time of Season 5, she's grown to actually like Luan's April Fool's pranks and devises a plan to get back at her family for scaring her out of them.
  • Perpetual Smiler: A smile is her default expression, unless she's really mad or upset.
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni: She's the red to Lisa's blue.
  • Security Blanket: She owns a purple blankie which she very often carries around. It becomes a plot point of "Come Sale Away".
  • Shown Their Work: Lily is fifteen months old and knows how to walk by herself. Most babies can walk independently by that age.
  • The Silent Bob: Since Lily is just a baby, she generally conveys her emotions through body language.
  • Silent Snarker: Being a baby doesn't stop her from giving exasperated looks and raspberries to her family's insanity.
  • Smarter Than You Look:
    • She seems to be very intelligent for someone who's only fifteen months old. Granted, out of any of her other siblings, her roommate just so happens to be Lisa, of all people! Lily's just a baby, so it's possible that Lisa could've taken her under her wing, and Lily could've learned from her smartest sibling to be more aware of everything that's going on around her.
    • In the Season 5 premiere "Schooled!", she fakes not being potty-trained to get kicked out of her preschool and stay home with her parents. This, along with her diabolical pranking in "Silence of the Luans," shows how much of a schemer Lily can be for a 2-year-old at this point.
  • Tag Along Kid: She's a baby and likes to join in on the others' adventures.
  • Toilet Humor: Whenever there's a poop joke, she's usually the (literal) source. As of Season 5, she's potty-trained, so this is no longer the case.
  • Token Mini-Moe: Lily stands out as the cutest of the Loud kids.
  • Took a Level in Jerkass: Has this in later episodes.
    • "Breaking Dad" shows she can only be amused when Mr. Grouse or Lynn Sr. do a pratfall and land on some jacks. Mr. Grouse also had a difficult time getting her to eat, pushing anything he served off her high chair.
    • "A Star Is Scorned" has Lola filming her not so cute moments to knock her out of the running for a cutest kid mascot in the Reininger's clothing store. The footage Lola obtains has Lily throwing her food at her older sisters, riding on a muddy Charles in the kitchen, rolling toilet paper, and throwing a tantrum instead of going to sleep.
    • The biggest ordeal is "Silence of the Luans" where she is the diabolical pranking mastermind to reignite Luan's love of April Fool's. Showing that Lily's terrible twos are going to be a nightmare for her family, which continues onto "Appetite for Destruction".
  • Troubling Unchildlike Behavior: It should be incredibly strange to know that a baby would know how to use technology.
  • The Unintelligible: Due to being a baby, she only speaks in baby babbles. In Season 5 though, she starts talking eligibly more often.
  • Walking Shirtless Scene: She hardly ever wears a shirt (or pants or shoes for that matter). This is averted in Season 5, where she now regularly wears a white t-shirt over lavender-colored shorts.


Alternative Title(s): The Loud House Lincoln Loud, The Loud House Lori Loud, The Loud House Luan Loud