10 Harry Potter Characters I hate the most
10. Severus Snape
I know this one is controversial, but I’ve never fully gotten past Snape. From the very beginning, I see him as the bitter presence hanging over Harry’s entire school life, a teacher who constantly targets a child because of a personal grudge. Even with the "Always" reveal, I still can’t ignore everything that came before it, the constant emotional distress, the way he treats Neville, and the calculated killing of Dumbledore. For me, he’s not a hero; he’s someone who happened to do the right thing for deeply personal reasons.
9. Cornelius Fudge
Fudge frustrates me more than outright villains sometimes. He’s not evil in the traditional sense, but his refusal to accept reality makes him dangerous. By denying Voldemort’s return just because it’s politically inconvenient, he allows things to spiral while dragging down Harry and Dumbledore with him. His cowardice and ego make him really hard for me to tolerate.
8. Rita Skeeter
I absolutely can’t stand Rita Skeeter. She’s basically the worst kind of media figure, someone who twists the truth just to create drama. Watching her use her Quick-Quotes Quill to damage the reputations of Harry and Hermione for a "juicy" story makes her incredibly irritating. For me, she’s the definition of someone who thrives on manipulation.
7. Vernon Dursley
Vernon represents a kind of cruelty that feels way too real. His ongoing neglect and mistreatment of Harry, forcing him to live in a cupboard and treating him like a burden for years, makes me dislike him immediately. He may not have magic, but his narrow-mindedness and lack of empathy make him one of the most grounded and frustrating characters for me.
6. Draco Malfoy
Draco is, for me, the ultimate "schoolyard bully." From the moment he meets Harry, he’s defined by arrogance, prejudice, and hiding behind his father’s influence. I get that the later films try to show him as a victim of his circumstances, but honestly, it’s hard for me to forget years of his smug behavior and constant harassment of anyone he considers beneath him.
5. Gilderoy Lockhart
Lockhart is the kind of character I go from laughing at to genuinely disliking. At first, his vanity and constant self-promotion in The Chamber of Secrets are just annoying, but the moment he tries to wipe the memories of two twelve-year-old boys to protect his fake reputation, I completely lose any tolerance for him. To me, he’s a fraud who built his entire life on stealing other people’s achievements.
4. Lucius Malfoy
Lucius is everything I hate about elitism wrapped into one character. His sneering disdain for "Mudbloods" and the Weasley family makes it so easy to dislike him. Whether he’s planting Tom Riddle’s diary in Ginny’s cauldron or hiding behind Voldemort when things go wrong, I see him as someone who uses wealth and status to cover up his complete lack of courage.
3. Peter Pettigrew (Wormtail)
I don’t think there’s a character I find more pathetic than Pettigrew. He’s cowardice in human form. Unlike other Death Eaters who at least believed in something twisted, Wormtail betrayed his best friends, James and Lily Potter, just to save himself. Watching him hide as a rat for twelve years and then literally "hand" Voldemort a new body makes him one of the most despicable characters in the entire series for me.
2. Bellatrix Lestrange
As incredible as Helena Bonham Carter’s performance is, I can’t stand Bellatrix for the sheer joy she takes in her cruelty. From her mocking role in Sirius Black’s death to her cruel treatment of Hermione at Malfoy Manor, she thrives on chaos. What really gets to me is her fanatical devotion to Voldemort; it makes her feel completely unhinged and terrifying in a way that’s hard to ignore.
1. Dolores Umbridge
I genuinely find Umbridge more loathsome than Voldemort himself, and that says a lot. To me, she represents a very real kind of evil: the bureaucratic tyrant. With her high-pitched giggle, obsession with pink, and "I shall not tell lies" blood quills, every one of her scenes in The Order of the Phoenix feels like an exercise in frustration. She doesn’t just want power; she wants to break the spirits of children under the guise of "order," and that’s what makes her unbearable to watch.



