Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series Writing Team


The Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series Writing Team is an award presented annually by the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences and Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. It was first awarded at the 1st Daytime Emmy Awards ceremony, held in 1974 and it is given to honored the performances of the entire writing team participating in a form of a daytime drama.
The award was previously called Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series between 1974 and 1986, where the category had various names and honored different members of the writing team. Therefore, since then, the category began to start using its current title years. The Emmy was named after an "Immy," an affectionate term used to refer to the image orthicon camera tube. The statuette was designed by Louis McManus, who modeled the award after his wife, Dorothy. The Emmy statuette is fifteen inches tall from base to tip, weighs five pounds and is composed of iron, pewter, zinc and gold.
Ryan's Hope, Guiding Light, and The Young and the Restless hold the record for most wins with six. The Young and the Restless has also received the most nominations, with a total of twenty-three. ABC has been the network the most successful, with a total of eighteen wins. In 1997, All My Children and The Young and the Restless tied, which was the first tie in this category. As of the 2016 ceremony, The Bold and the Beautiful is the most recent recipient of the award.

Winners and nominees

Listed below are the winners of the award for each year, as well as the other nominees.
Indicates the winner

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

2010s

2020s

Total awards won

WinsProgram
6Ryan's Hope
6The Young and the Restless
6Guiding Light
5All My Children
4As the World Turns
4General Hospital
4The Bold and the Beautiful
3One Life to Live
2Days of our Lives
2Santa Barbara
1Another World
1The Edge of Night