Summary
- House series focused on relationships, from sweet to toxic, adding depth beyond medical drama.
- Gregory House, a modern Sherlock Holmes, stood out with charm & prickly personality.
- Misanthropic protagonist House had impactful platonic & professional relationships beyond romances.
While many tuned into the popular procedural drama to watch the diagnostics team solve mysterious medical cases, the House relationships were really the beating heart of the show. The eight-season series didn't have nearly as much relationship drama as its contemporary Grey's Anatomy, but House still featured plenty of romances from the sweet and meaningful to juicy and tumultuous to the undeniably toxic.
However, it wasn't the romance that makes House one of the best medical series in television history. That honor goes to the show's misanthropic protagonist, the modern-day Sherlock Holmes himself, Dr. Gregory House (Hugh Laurie). Despite being caustic, rude, and an overall miserable human, House not only charmed audiences, but almost every character in the show — even if few itted it. He had more than his fair share of romances for such a prickly person, but his platonic and professional relationships were also some of the best in the show.

Why House Went To Jail In Season 8 & How He Got Out
The title character of medical drama House MD started the eighth and final season in jail; here's how he ended up there and how he got out.
15 Taub & Rachel
Taub Was Never Faithful To Rachel
Dr. Chris Taub was one of the more disliked characters on House MD, as he often proved to be not only antagonistic towards other doctors but unprofessional and untrustworthy to those around him, including his wife. Dr. Taub's background as a plastic surgeon remains clouded in mystery, though hints regarding NDAs and non-compete clauses are offered throughout the series. While that makes him a possibly unethical doctor, he also refuses to remain faithful to his wife, Rachel.
This relationship was toxic before he appeared on the show, as Taub had had an affair with a nurse at his former medical practice.
This relationship was toxic before he appeared on the show, as Taub had had an affair with a nurse at his former medical practice, and he was forced to sign a non-disclosure when it became public knowledge at the practice, pushing him out. He lied to Rachel about it, saying he was pushed out because a patient died, only making things worse. Ultimately, Rachel stays with Taub and puts up with his unrepentant philandering ways, keeping a problematic relationship alive.
14 Cuddy & Lucas
A Relationship Built On A Lie
It's never a good sign when a relationship starts with one person following and gathering information about the other. Yet that's exactly what happens in the case of Dr. Lisa Cuddy and her longtime boyfriend, Lucas, a private investigator hired by House to learn more about Cuddy's private life. Overall, Lucas was a good character, and Michael Weston was a great addition to the series — especially in his comedic scenes with Hugh Laurie.
However, nothing about the relationship between Cuddy and Lucas was believable, in large part because Cuddy was always so connected to House himself. Lucas seemed like a decent guy, who deserved a lot more than to be used as a pawn in the gradual development of House and Cuddy's back-and-forth relationship. When Cuddy broke their engagement and left him for House in season 6, it was a harsh lesson for Lucas.
13 House & Stacy
The Quintessential Toxic Relationship
In some sense, the very existence of the series and the character of House are indebted to the relationship between the protagonist and his ex-girlfriend, Stacy. It was during this relationship, after all, that House suffered the injury that resulted in his permanent disability, pain, and Vicodin addiction. And it was because of a medical decision Stacy helped to make on House's behalf.
In reality, nothing good came of House and Stacy's involvement with each other, even if it made House the man he is.
In reality, nothing good came of House and Stacy's involvement with each other, even if it made House the man he is. The way the series treats the relationship in the present timeline is problematic at best, with Stacy compromising her status as legal advisor to the hospital because of her past with House, and the two even engage in a brief affair with one another, despite Stacy's marriage to her longtime love, Mark.
12 Chase & House
Chase Ended Up Being The Heir To House's Job, But It Cost Him His Marriage
Robert Chase's professional relationship with Gregory House nearly ruined his life. Chase was part of House's original team, with Cameron and Foreman, with House claiming he only hired him as a favor to Chase's father. And while many considered Chase the weakest doctor on the team, he proved his credibility over time, and even found love with a colleague, marrying Cameron.
Unfortunately, as Chase worked more with House, his marriage to Cameron fell apart because she saw Chase becoming just like his boss, an uncaring doctor who only wanted to prove he was right all the time. Luckily, Chase saw this too (albeit too late) and left House's team to get a better job with the surgical team for his own mental well-being. By the end of the series, Chase was in a great spot professionally as the Head of Diagnostic Medicine, which means he was taking over House's old job. However, by this point, his marriage to Cameron was over.
11 Chase & Chi Park
A Murky Relationship Between Two Colleagues
Chi Park was introduced in House's final season as one of the last to House's diagnostic team. Like House, her social skills weren't exactly sublime, as she was mostly defined by her anger issues and consistently saying inappropriate things. However, she clearly cared about what people thought of her, and she made a point of wanting to get closer to Chase. As she was a bit of an enigma, her reasons for pursuing her colleague were never clear.
Like many relationships in the show, this one could have been indirectly affected by House, with Chi wanting his long-time colleague, Chase, to give her tips on how to deal with him, or so she could prove to House that others like her. Chase is reticent to accept a dinner invitation from Chi, but she rightfully points out that he once married a colleague. Though these two never become close friends or lovers, Chi is still on the team when Chase takes over in the end, suggesting at least common ground between the two.
10 Foreman & Thirteen
A Workplace Relationship That Never Had A Chance
The House relationship depicted between Dr. Remy "Thirteen" Hadley and Dr. Eric Foreman was one of the series' more emotionally ambitious adventures. Thirteen knew that she had limited time left in her life after receiving the diagnosis of Huntington's Disease. But that didn't stop Foreman from doing everything within his power to try to find a way to improve her health, even if it meant compromising a double-blind medical study.
The two had an often tumultuous, but undeniably ionate relationship, featuring some of the series' most touching scenes. But in the end, things couldn't work between them, as they both had far too many trust issues and walls up. This ended after Foreman claimed Cuddy's job as head of the diagnostic department and Thirteen felt that he was growing arrogant with his new duties. Foreman then fired Thirteen to save their relationship, which backfired because she ended things with him on the spot before leaving the country.
9 Chase & Cameron
A Toxic Relationship Between Opposites
Just because a couple gets married on a series doesn't mean that they should have. Furthermore, just because two actors are romantically involved in real life doesn't mean their characters should become romantically connected, either. Few House relationships were as disappointing as the one between colleagues Dr. Allison Cameron and Dr. Robert Chase. From the very beginning, the pair clashed even though they were such a focal point.
Just because two actors are romantically involved in real life doesn't mean their characters should become romantically connected
Chase came from a privileged background and was frequently shown to be arrogant and confrontational, while Cameron hid a very emotional backstory and preferred displays of kindness and openness to confrontation. It doesn't help matters that the pair first hooked up when Cameron was impaired, or that she never got over House. Cameron left Chase when she accused him of "choosing House" over her, a decision that came after Cameron killed a ruthless dictator when he faked some tests.
8 House & Foreman
Foreman Was The Only Person To Always Question House
Foreman is the only person from House's original team to remain with him until the very end, although he ends up in a very different relationship with House by the finale. House always respected the knowledge that Foreman brought to the table when they were breaking down cases. However, House was also smart enough to keep Foreman guessing and never allow the young doctor to get too full of himself. It worked, as Foreman quickly came into his own.
Foreman is also one of only two people to know House likely faked his death.
Foreman always challenged House's opinions, which made him invaluable and made their House relationship even more important. By the time the series ended, House's prediction that Foreman would become the one doctor who could match his level proved accurate. Foreman eventually received complete authority over the hospital, and while he won't it it, his learning from House played a role in it. Foreman is also one of only two people to know House likely faked his death.
7 Cuddy & Wilson
They Share The Trauma Of Being Close To House
The relationship between Cuddy and Wilson was strong because they shared something critical in common: they both recognize House for what and who he is and realize that they need a system when it comes to dealing with him. Hence, they leaned on each other. Cuddy knows that Wilson is House's closest friend, and she also knows that Wilson has a strong moral com when dealing with House and protecting the hospital. Wilson also recognizes Cuddy's authority and works to help her as much as possible.
They are also two people who know how much damage House can do. House affected Cuddy's life for the worse with his self-destructive behaviors and eventually drove her away. However, before she left, she knew that she could go to Wilson when she needed someone to help her keep House in line, and Wilson knew that he needed to do everything he could to help Cuddy protect the hospital, which meant too much to him. This was a relationship built on need.
6 House & Cuddy
A Toxic Relationship Between A Boss & Her Employee
Characters who are at each other's throats for seasons on end usually wind up getting together in the world of television. Love-hate relationships are the bread and butter of fictional romance — and for that reason, the relationship between Dr. Gregory House and Dr. Lisa Cuddy should have worked. Alas, their relationship was consistently shown to be completely toxic, featuring multiple instances of Cuddy lying to protect House and compromising the safety and integrity of the hospital.
House stalked Cuddy, hired a private investigator to look into her life, constantly intervened in her personal life, and overstepped every possible boundary. Their toxic relationship finally came to a head when House drove his car right into Cuddy's house. She finally broke off their connection for good and House ended up spending some time in jail. Nothing about this relationship ever said it was a true love story, and while House painted it as one, it was always too toxic to survive in any healthy way.