How To Give Supporting Characters Their Own Arcs
Most of us have written a great side character who ended up just orbiting the protagonist like a moon. They had snappy dialogue, maybe even a tragic backstory, but no real arc. And that’s a missed opportunity.
I’m not saying every barista or second lieutenant needs a full three-act structure. But if a supporting character sticks around for more than a scene or two, they should evolve—not just revolve around the main plot. A real arc gives them emotional weight, agency, and the power to shape the story.
And here’s the kicker: well-drawn arcs for supporting characters actually strengthen the protagonist’s journey. When done right, they create contrast, echo, or tension that deepens your theme. Look at Sam in The Lord of the Rings, or Shoshanna in Inglourious Basterds. Their arcs matter. They shift the emotional gravity of the story.
So let’s talk about how to actually do it.
What Supporting Arcs Actually Do for Your Story
Okay, here’s something I’ve noticed in great storytelling—supporting character arcs aren’t just “nice to have.” They’re part of the scaffolding that holds the entire narrative up.
A supporting arc isn’t just about giving a side character “something to do.” It’s about making the whole story richer, more layered, and more alive. And for that to happen, we have to think of them as functional, not just flavorful.
Let me break down a few of the key things these arcs do—with real examples that go beyond the usual “they support the main character” stuff.
1. They Reinforce or Complicate the Theme
Theme is one of those slippery things—it’s easy to slap on a moral at the end, harder to build it into the story’s bones. Supporting arcs help with that. They can echo the theme, challenge it, or push it into uncomfortable territory.
Take Fleabag. The priest isn’t just a love interest. His arc—his struggle between faith and desire—mirrors Fleabag’s own tug-of-war between self-sabotage and vulnerability. You don’t get that kind of thematic layering if he’s just a “romantic foil.”
Or look at The Wire. Every season’s ensemble arcs dissect a different institution. The supporting characters are the story’s moral and political argument. Their arcs show systems breaking people down in different, tragic ways.
So yeah—supporting arcs can be your most powerful thematic tool if you let them.
2. They Add Tension, Even If They’re Not in Conflict
We tend to think of tension as conflict, but it’s also about unpredictability. A supporting character with their own arc doesn’t just respond to the plot—they might divert it, or even derail it.
In Better Call Saul, Kim Wexler’s arc is a masterclass in narrative tension. We’re never quite sure where she’s headed. She doesn’t exist to push Jimmy forward or hold him back. She’s evolving alongside him, with her own values, risks, and fallouts. And because of that, every scene she’s in carries double meaning. We’re not just watching what she’ll do—we’re wondering who she’s becoming.
That’s tension. And it doesn’t require a gunfight.
3. They Let the World Breathe
When you give your supporting cast arcs, it tells the reader: this world doesn’t stop when the protagonist leaves the room. It gives your story depth. Consequence. Texture.
A great example? Mad Men. Peggy Olson’s arc doesn’t always intersect with Don Draper’s in direct ways. But she’s not on standby—she’s on her own path, climbing her own mountain. That makes the entire workplace feel real, not just a backdrop for Don’s existential spiral.
The same goes for ensemble pieces like Game of Thrones. Think about how much more immersive that world feels because Brienne, Davos, and Theon all have arcs of their own. You remember them because they changed.
4. They Can Reframe the Entire Story
This one’s my favorite trick. Sometimes, a supporting arc gets so strong it forces the audience to rethink the protagonist’s journey.
Ever seen The Last Jedi? Whether you loved it or hated it, Rose’s arc redefines Finn’s. Her values challenge his instincts, and her perspective gives his choices weight. He’s not the same guy by the end of the movie because of her arc, not just alongside it.
Or consider Breaking Bad. Jesse Pinkman’s emotional trajectory becomes a kind of moral compass in a world that’s falling apart. His arc doesn’t just support Walt’s descent—it counterbalances it. And by the time you get to El Camino, you realize Jesse’s arc wasn’t secondary. It was parallel, and in many ways, more human.
If we treat supporting arcs like side dishes, they’ll stay forgettable. But if we treat them like threads in the same fabric, they’ll help hold the whole story together.
Next up: I’ll show you some practical techniques I use to build these arcs without stealing focus from the protagonist.
How to Build Arcs for Supporting Characters Without Overcrowding the Story
Now that we’ve talked about why supporting characters need arcs, let’s dig into how to actually build them. The trick is to make them meaningful without stealing oxygen from your protagonist. You’re not turning your book or script into an ensemble piece (unless that’s your goal), but you’re also not letting those side characters flatline.
Here’s a framework I lean on when designing secondary arcs that enhance the main story without bloating it:
1. Anchor Their Arc to a Core Desire
This is non-negotiable. Your supporting character needs a want. And not a vague “they want to be happy” type of thing—a specific, tangible desire that propels them through the story.
Think of Dustin in Stranger Things. His arc isn’t just comic relief—he’s desperate for belonging and validation. His friendship with Steve and his role in discovering the Mind Flayer stuff give that desire a satisfying trajectory. And we feel it, even in moments of levity.
Ask yourself: What do they want? How does that want change? Even a three-scene character can carry a full mini-arc if they have a clear desire.
2. Mirror or Contrast the Protagonist’s Journey
You’ve probably heard this before, but here’s the nuance: don’t just reflect your main character—interact with them. That dynamic tension is gold.
In Black Panther, Nakia and Killmonger both serve as ideological mirrors to T’Challa. Nakia pushes for outreach; Killmonger demands revolution. T’Challa’s arc—choosing how to rule—only works because their opposing arcs frame the moral battlefield.
So if your protagonist is choosing vulnerability over control, maybe your supporting character is doing the opposite. Or maybe they start aligned and split in act two. That fork in the road? That’s drama.
3. Give Them a Moment of Change or Crisis
A character without change is a static role, not an arc. Even if the change is small—doubt creeping in, resolve hardening, love found or lost—you need a pivot point.
In The Queen’s Gambit, Jolene starts as a dorm-room sidekick. But when she returns later, she’s changed—older, wiser, more grounded. And that shift isn’t just about Beth’s development—it’s Jolene’s arc finally hitting its stride.
Think in terms of: What challenges their worldview? What decision do they make that alters their course?
4. Let Their Actions Affect the Main Plot
You know what makes a supporting arc feel hollow? When it plays out in a vacuum. If your side character’s decisions don’t ripple outward, the audience won’t care—even if their arc is technically “complete.”
Remember how Rue’s sponsor Ali in Euphoria isn’t just there to listen—his emotional honesty with Rue shapes her recovery arc. And when she hurts him, we feel it. Because his arc is real, and his pain is real.
Make their actions matter. Even better—make them cost something.
5. Skip the Redundancy Trap
Here’s the pitfall: you give a side character a little arc, but it’s just a weak echo of the main one. Same beats, slightly different flavor. That’s not additive—it’s noise.
Instead, aim for complementary arcs. If your main character is learning to trust others, maybe a supporting character is learning to trust themselves. Same theme, different angle.
Avoid copying emotional beats—find a different flavor of transformation.
6. Integrate Through Scene, Not Word Count
This one’s big. You don’t need extra chapters or episodes to develop a side arc—you just need intention.
In The Mandalorian, Cara Dune’s arc is mostly backgrounded, but it’s there: from war veteran to reluctant protector. Her dialogue, her body language, her choices—they build that arc without taking over the show.
Look for scenes that can serve double duty—progress the plot while also nudging a secondary character forward. That’s elegant storytelling.
So: desire, contrast, change, consequence, uniqueness, integration. You don’t need to do all six for every character, but the more of these you hit, the more powerful your supporting arcs become.
Let’s move to execution—how to balance them across the full story.
Weaving Supporting Arcs into the Bigger Narrative Without Losing Focus
Now comes the tightrope walk: how do you actually execute these arcs across the story? Even if they’re well-designed, poorly timed arcs can drag or distract. You want them to hit emotionally without bloating your pacing or diluting the main thread.
Let’s talk about a few techniques I’ve used—and seen work beautifully in others’ writing.
1. Treat Supporting Arcs Like Musical Counterpoints
Think of your story like a song. The protagonist carries the melody. Supporting characters? They’re the harmony and rhythm. If the harmonies come in too loud, too soon, they drown the melody. But if they’re woven in at the right time, they enrich everything.
Watch The Leftovers. The show constantly rotates focus—one episode might center on Nora, the next on Kevin. But even when they’re not the “main event,” you can feel their arcs progressing through interactions, subtext, and silence.
The key is restraint. Don’t front-load their stories. Let them build quietly in the background, then crescendo at just the right time.
2. Use Character Intersections as Pacing Devices
Supporting arcs often shine brightest when they collide with the main one. That’s not just good drama—it’s good pacing.
In The Hunger Games, Peeta’s slow unraveling in the second and third films creates tension every time he shares a scene with Katniss. His trauma arc bleeds into hers, forcing her to adapt and evolve. Their arcs feed off each other in high-pressure moments.
Ask yourself: When do their paths cross meaningfully? Can those moments accelerate both arcs at once?
That’s efficiency. That’s precision.
3. Let Minor Characters Carry Emotional Resonance
Not all supporting arcs need to be “big.” Some are quick punches to the gut.
Think about Bob Newby in Stranger Things. His arc—from awkward boyfriend to self-sacrificing hero—is short but devastatingly effective. He’s there to build Joyce’s trust, to show what good men look like, and ultimately to break our hearts.
A single episode can complete an arc if the emotional impact lands. Especially if it reverberates in the protagonist long after.
4. Use Theme as Glue
The best supporting arcs don’t feel “tacked on” because they orbit the same thematic gravity. That’s what holds them together.
In Succession, every character is battling some version of the same existential question: What does love look like when power is always in the room? Roman, Shiv, Kendall, even Tom—each arc spins that question a different way. And that’s why they all feel essential.
So don’t just drop in a cool character with a side goal. Ask: What question are they trying to answer? Is it the same one my story’s asking—but from a different angle?
If the answer is yes, you’ve got glue. Use it.
5. Trim the Dead Weight
Here’s the hardest advice: if a supporting arc isn’t pulling its weight thematically, structurally, or emotionally—it might need to go. Or shrink.
This is the expert-level edit. You zoom out and look at the forest. Maybe that clever redemption subplot? It’s redundant. Maybe that love triangle? It’s muddying the pacing.
Don’t get sentimental. If it doesn’t enhance the protagonist, the theme, or the story’s tension—it’s probably ego, not necessity.
A Little Goes a Long Way
Remember: readers are smart. They’ll feel a character arc even if it’s only sketched in. You don’t need 10 scenes—you need intentionality. Every line, every beat, every choice should serve the arc or the plot. If it doesn’t? Cut it or sharpen it.
This is the difference between story clutter and story depth.
Final Thoughts
If there’s one thing I hope you take from all this, it’s that supporting character arcs aren’t side quests—they’re narrative power tools. When used with care, they deepen theme, heighten emotion, and reinforce the protagonist’s journey.
But you’ve got to be surgical about it. Give them real desires. Build tension. Connect them to the main story. And most of all, make them change.
Because when your side characters grow, your whole story grows with them.