1964 (releases)

1964 was dominated by the release of seasons 1 and 2 on television. By September, the show was also running in New Zealand.

At some point in the year (probably after the broadcast of The Keys of Marinus), the first licensed tie-in food was released: Dr Who and the Daleks sweet cigarettes. The product also was associated with Doctor Who's first collectible card set. When completely collected, the set formed the first piece of licensed, original, prose fiction, a two-part short story called Doctor Who and the Daleks.

Other 1964 releases included: 1964 (estrenos)
 * 4 January - "The Escape" debuted on BBC tv.
 * 11 January - "The Ambush" debuted on the BBC tv.
 * 18 January - "The Expedition" debuted on the BBC tv.
 * 25 January - "The Ordeal" debuted on the BBC tv.
 * A recording of the Doctor Who theme by the BBC Radiophonic Workshop was released on a 45 rpm single. This was the earliest noted release of any soundtrack music from the series.
 * Another recording of the Doctor Who theme, this time by Eric Winstone and his Orchestra, was also released on Pye Records, and was probably the first non-BBC recording of the theme to be issued.
 * 1 February - "The Rescue", seventh and final episode of The Daleks, debuted on the BBC tv.
 * 8 February - "The Edge of Destruction", the first episode of the same title story, debuted on the BBC tv.
 * 15 February - "The Brink of Disaster", the second and final episode of The Edge of Destruction, debuted on the BBC tv.
 * 15 February - Radio Times printed its first-ever Doctor Who-related cover (dated February 22-28) to promote the first episode of Marco Polo, "The Roof of the World".
 * 22 February - "The Roof of the World" debuted on the BBC tv.
 * 29 February - "The Singing Sands" debuted on the BBC tv.
 * 7 March - "Five Hundred Eyes" debuted on the BBC tv.
 * 14 March - "The Wall of Lies" debuted on the BBC tv.
 * 21 March - "Rider from Shang-Tu" debuted on the BBC tv.
 * 28 March - "Mighty Kublai Khan" debuted on the BBC tv.
 * 4 April - "Assassin at Peking", seventh and final episode of Marco Polo, debuted on the BBC tv.
 * 11 April - "The Sea of Death", the first episode of The Keys of Marinus, debuted on the BBC tv.
 * 18 April - "The Velvet Web" debuted on the BBC tv.
 * 25 April - "The Screaming Jungle" debuted on BBC1.
 * 2 May - "The Snows of Terror" debuted on BBC1.
 * 9 May - "Sentence of Death" debuted on BBC1.
 * 16 May - "The Keys of Marinus", sixth and final episode of the same title story, debuted on BBC1.
 * 23 May - "The Temple of Evil", the first episode of The Aztecs, debuted on BBC1.
 * 30 May - "The Warriors of Death" debuted on BBC1.
 * 6 June - "The Bride of Sacrifice" debuted on BBC1.
 * 13 June - "The Day of Darkness", fourth and final episode of The Aztecs, debuted on BBC1.
 * 20 June - "Strangers in Space", the first episode of The Sensorites, debuted on BBC1.
 * 27 June - "The Unwilling Warriors" debuted on BBC1.
 * 30 June - The Dalek Book was published by Souvenir Press, possibly the first book tie-in with Doctor Who featuring original material.
 * 11 July - "Hidden Danger" debuted on BBC1.
 * 18 July - "A Race Against Death" debuted on BBC1.
 * 25 July - "Kidnap" debuted on BBC1.
 * 1 August - "A Desperate Venture", sixth and final episode of The Sensorites, debuted on BBC1.
 * 8 August - "A Land of Fear", the first episode of The Reign of Terror, debuted on BBC1.
 * 15 August - "Guests of Madame Guillotine" debuted on BBC1.
 * 22 August - "A Change of Identity" debuted on BBC1.
 * 29 August - "The Tyrant of France" debuted on BBC1.
 * 5 September - "A Bargain of Necessity" debuted on BBC1.
 * 12 September - "Prisoners of Conciergerie", sixth and final episode of The Reign of Terror, debuted on BBC1. The airing of this episode concluded season 1 of Doctor Who.
 * 31 October - "Planet of Giants", the first episode of the same title story, debuted on BBC1, kicking off season 2.
 * 7 November - "Dangerous Journey" debuted on BBC1.
 * 12 November - Doctor Who in an Exciting Adventure with the Daleks, a hardback novelisation by David Whitaker of The Daleks and the first-ever Doctor Who tie-in novel, was published in hardcover by Frederick Muller. In 1973, it was reprinted by Target Books as Doctor Who and the Daleks.
 * 14 November - "Crisis" debuted on BBC1.
 * 14 November - Radio Times (dated November 21-27) again featured a cover story on Doctor Who, this time announcing the much-anticipated return of the Daleks in The Dalek Invasion of Earth.
 * 14 November - The Doctor Who comic strip made its debut in the 674th issue of TV Comic, with the first part of the comic The Klepton Parasites.
 * 21 November - "World's End", the first episode of The Dalek Invasion of Earth, debuted on BBC1. For the first time, a Doctor Who episode featured extensive location filming and brought back a previously seen monster. It was also the first story to incorporate widely known London landmarks (despite being set in the future).
 * 21 November - Part two of the comic The Klepton Parasites was released.
 * 28 November - "The Daleks" debuted on BBC1, kicking off the Daleks' publicly-anticipated return.
 * 28 November - Part three of the comic The Klepton Parasites was released.
 * December - Doctor Who in an Exciting Adventure with the Daleks went into a second printing when its original 20,000-copy print run sold out.
 * December - The Go-Go's released their pop parody single "I'm Gonna Spend My Christmas With A Dalek".
 * 5 December - "Day of Reckoning" debuted on BBC1.
 * 5 December - Part four of the comic The Klepton Parasites was released.
 * 12 December - "The End of Tomorrow" debuted on BBC1.
 * 12 December - Part five of the comic The Klepton Parasites was released.
 * 19 December - "The Waking Ally" debuted on BBC1.
 * 19 December - Part six of the comic The Klepton Parasites was released.
 * 26 December - "Flashpoint" debuted on BBC1. The episode saw the first major cast change as Carole Ann Ford left the series.
 * 26 December - Part seven of the comic The Klepton Parasites was released.